Quality Management in Mental Health. II. Managing Risk of Dangerousness
- 1 December 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in American Journal of Medical Quality
- Vol. 11 (4) , 227-235
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0885713x9601100412
Abstract
In 1995 R. L. Coleman and D. E. K. Hunter described a quality management approach that produced measurable improvements in quality of care in a state-operated psychiatric hospital. Continued evolution of this approach has subsequently enabled the development and implementation of effective processes for managing risk of dangerousness among patients throughout the hospital. Supported by management principles that promote hospital-wide quality improvement, clinicians and managers produced an environment that was conducive to promoting quality. The hospital-wide quality improvement context involved integrating multiple activities designed to promote quality of care, including significant collaborations with other health care organizations. The hospital's mission as an acute care psychiatric facility has required that it focus on assessing and managing risk of dangerousness in a systematic manner. This was done through developing and utilizing a predictive risk assessment instrument and indicators for managerial oversight. This was accomplished in these steps. First, clinical leaders rated potential criteria according to estimates of their ability to predict dangerousness behavior and reviewed their estimates in relation to clinical findings. Second (and concurrently), clinicians and managers implemented procedures to monitor clinical risk and performance. Finally, outcome data were reviewed. They suggested that this approach was effective in reducing risk of dangerous behavior among patients on all psychiatric wards.Keywords
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