The application of a violence risk assessment tool among Chinese psychiatric service users: a preliminary study

2011 ◽  
Vol 19 (5) ◽  
pp. 438-445 ◽  
Author(s):  
X. YAO ◽  
Z. LI ◽  
D. ARTHUR ◽  
L. HU ◽  
G. CHENG
2017 ◽  
Vol 47 ◽  
pp. 114-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey Seal ◽  
Bernard Lee ◽  
Mark Leary ◽  
Nicholas Riano ◽  
Christina Mangurian

AAOHN Journal ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 54 (11) ◽  
pp. 481-487 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rakel Kling ◽  
Marc Corbière ◽  
Rebecca Milord ◽  
Janet G. Morrison ◽  
Kevin Craib ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Karina Konstantinova ◽  
Alina Kuznecova

Evidence-based future community violence risk assessment is a crucial issue in psychiatry. It is a cornerstone of safeguarding the rights of persons with mental health issues. Authors aimed to analyse the modern methods of risk assessment in psychiatry and the current practice and legal framework. Authors undertook a scoped review of the literature with search terms related to future community violence risk prediction for mentally disordered offenders in Latvian, English, German, and Russian languages. Main difficulties in future community violence risk assessment are demonstrated via Latvia’s court decisions analysis. Marked differences were identified: there are no standardized methods available/registered in Latvia, therefore risks assessment is performed via clinical assessment only. In Germany, the risk assessment is performed via structured evidence – based risk assessment tools and clinical assessment; nevertheless, the choice of the assessment tool remains challenging.  


Author(s):  
Patrick Callaghan ◽  
Andrew Grundy

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine empirical, epistemological and conceptual challenges and clinical narratives in the application of risk assessment and management in mental health. Design/methodology/approach The authors used a narrative review of empirical, conceptual and clinical literature. Findings The worldwide prevalence of violence in mental health settings remains high. Risk assessment and management approaches, while well intentioned as an attempt to reduce harm and increase people’s safety, have negligible effect on both. They are invariably individual centric, ignore wider environmental, societal and behavioural influences that foment violence and have a stigmatising effect on people using mental health services. They also reinforce the myth that people who are mentally unwell threaten society and that through current risk assessment and management approaches, we can minimise this threat. Research limitations/implications There is a need to reconsider the study and application of violence risk assessment in mental health. Practical implications The practice of risk assessment and management in mental health is marred by an overuse of risk assessment measures that are limited in their predictive efficacy. As a result, they have little value in preventing, reducing and/or managing harm. The language of risk punishes and stigmatises service users and reinforces the image of menace. An alternative language of safety may nourish and protect. A collaborative approach to safety assessment based upon recovery-focussed principles and practices may fuse professionals and service users’ horizons. Combining service users’ self-perception, professionals’ sound clinical judgement, assisted by electronically derived risk algorithms and followed by evidence-based risk management interventions, may lessen the threat to service users, reduce harm and transform the practice of violence risk assessment and management. Social implications Risk appraisals discriminate against the small number of people who have a mental illness and are risky, an example of preventive detention that is ethically questionable. On the basis of the limitations of the predictive efficacy of actuarial measures, it is ethically dubious to subject people to interventions with limited benefits. Risk assessment processes tend to reinforce stigma by classifying individuals as risky, sanctioning society’s prejudices and fear through scientific authority. Originality/value The increasing focus on risk assessment and management to tackle violence in mental health is fraught with empirical, conceptual and practical concerns; the authors have suggested ways in which these concerns can be addressed without compromising people’s safety.


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