Evidence for specialist treatment of people with acquired brain injury in secure psychiatric services: systematic review and narrative synthesis
Shaw, E; Nunns, M; Briscoe, S; et al.Mosley, A; Dalton, D; Anderson, R; Thompson Coon, J
Date: 31 August 2020
Publisher
NIHR Journals Library
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Abstract
Patients with acquired brain injury (ABI) may experience various physical, cognitive or
emotional sequelae and are at increased risk of mental health difficulties. They may display
aggressive, sexually inappropriate or disinhibited behaviour which challenges those
supporting them and poses a risk to themselves or others. Such ...
Patients with acquired brain injury (ABI) may experience various physical, cognitive or
emotional sequelae and are at increased risk of mental health difficulties. They may display
aggressive, sexually inappropriate or disinhibited behaviour which challenges those
supporting them and poses a risk to themselves or others. Such individuals may need
assessment, care and/or treatment within secure settings. There is limited availability of
secure placements and referral must be based on the patient meeting certain criteria.
Objectives
To systematically review evidence that can inform the arrangements for the specialist care of
adults with ABI who may require secure psychiatric services.
Data sources
Seven bibliographic databases (CINAHL, HMIC, MEDLINE, MEDLINE In-Process & Other
Non-Indexed Citations, PsycINFO, Social Policy & Practice, ASSIA) were searched on 27th
June 2019, date-limited to 2000. Database searches were supplemented with citation
searching; inspecting relevant reviews; searching ClinicalTrials.gov and WHO International
Clinical Trials Registry Platform, searching relevant websites; liaising with clinical experts
and affiliation searches.
Review methods
We sought evidence about adults with non-degenerative ABI placed in, eligible for referral
to, or being assessed for eligibility for referral to secure psychiatric services in any highincome country. Eligibility for referral to secure services was based on assessment or
observation of challenging behaviours. Psychometric studies of tools used in assessments
were eligible for inclusion. Study selection, data extraction and quality assessment were
completed independently by two reviewers. Given the heterogeneity of studies, outcomes and
data, a narrative synthesis approach was used. We were interested in identifying patient,
diagnostic or symptom characteristics associated with requiring care in secure settings.
Findings
6297 unique titles and abstracts were screened against inclusion criteria, leading to full-text
screening of 325 papers. Forty-six observational and case-control studies and one systematic
review were included; however none were set in, or referred explicitly to secure settings.
Thirty-eight of the primary studies evaluated patient characteristics associated with
challenging behaviour. Eight primary studies and the systematic review evaluated the
psychometric properties of measures used to assess challenging behaviour. Narrative
synthesis indicated a highly heterogeneous set of studies providing uncertain evidence about
patient characteristics which may be associated with challenging behaviours. Whilst tentative
associations were found between certain patient characteristics and occurrence of challenging
behaviour, the conflicting nature of this evidence reduces confidence in these findings. There
was no strong evidence to recommend the use of specific patient assessment tools.
Limitations
We found no evidence regarding referrals to secure treatment settings and thus were not able
to directly answer our research questions. Studies investigating associations between patient
characteristics and challenging behaviours varied in methodological rigour and evidence was
highly heterogeneous.
Conclusions
There is no direct evidence to support decisions about the suitable setting for the care of
adults with ABI who display challenging behaviour. There is tentative evidence about patient
characteristics associated with risk of challenging behaviour.
Future work
Primary research is needed to inform evidence-based decisions on the appropriate setting for
the care of people with ABI who display challenging behaviour.
Institute of Health Research
Collections of Former Colleges
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