PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Juliette Brown AU - Waleed Fawzi AU - Cathy McCarthy AU - Carmel Stevenson AU - Solomon Kwesi AU - Maggie Joyce AU - Jenny Dusoye AU - Yasin Mohamudbucus AU - Amar Shah TI - Safer Wards: reducing violence on older people's mental health wards AID - 10.1136/bmjquality.u207447.w2977 DP - 2015 Jan 01 TA - BMJ Quality Improvement Reports PG - u207447.w2977 VI - 4 IP - 1 4099 - http://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/4/1/u207447.w2977.short 4100 - http://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/4/1/u207447.w2977.full SO - BMJ Qual Improv Report2015 Jan 01; 4 AB - Through the Safer Wards project we aimed to reduce the number of incidents of physical violence on older people’s mental health wards. This was done using quality improvement methods and supported by the Trust’s extensive programme of quality improvement, including training provided by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement. Violence can be an indicator of unmet needs in this patient population, with a negative effect on patient care and staff morale. Reducing harm to patients and staff is a strategic aim of our Trust.We established a multi-disciplinary group who led on the project on each ward and used a Pareto diagram to establish the focus of our work. We established a dashboard of measures based on our incident reporting system Datix, including number of incidents of violence, days between incidents, days of staff sickness, days between staff injury, use of restraint, and use of rapid tranquilisation (the last two being balancing measures in the reduction of violence). Each team identified factors driving physical violence on the wards, under headings of unmet patient needs, staff needs and staff awareness, which included lack of activity and a safe and therapeutic environment.Using driver diagrams, we identified change ideas that included hourly rounding (proactive checks on patient well-being), the addition of sensory rooms, flexible leave for patients, and a structured activity programme. We also introduced exercise to music, therapeutic groups led by patients, and focused on discharge planning and pet therapy, each of which starting sequentially over the course of a one year period from late 2013 and subject to a cycle of iterative learning using PDSA methods.The specific aim was a 20% decrease in violent incidents on three wards in City and Hackney, and Newham. Following our interventions, days between violent incidents increased from an average of three to an average of six. Days between staff injury due to physical violence rose from an average of eight (one violent incident resulting in staff injury every eight days) to 22 (one incident every 22 days). Incidents of physical violence reduced from 63 in 2013 to 39 in 2014. We were also able to quantify reduced costs associated with reduction in violence.The success of this project in our view lay in the involvement of ward staff in understanding the problems and generating local solutions which were also broadly evidenced based. Patients were also closely involved in generating ideas. We are currently incorporating much of this work into routine practice in order to sustain improvement, as well as continuing to generate new ideas for further improvement while using the skills learnt in this process to address other problems.