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Safety And Contagion In Acute Psychiatric Wards: how the milieu is implicated in the occurrence of clustered safety incidents

Canvin, Krysia; Brierley-Jones, Lyn; Ramsey, Lauren; Baker, John; Berzins, Kathryn

Authors

Lyn Brierley-Jones

Lauren Ramsey

John Baker

Kathryn Berzins



Contributors

Abstract

In psychiatry, clustered safety incidents are often attributed to behavioural contagion. Drawing on Kindermann and Skinner’s conceptual work in our analysis of staff accounts, we explored whether clustered safety incidents could be attributable to contagion and the role played by staff and the psychiatric milieu (as a physical, cultural, and therapeutic space). Our analysis suggests that whether the clustered incidents identified by staff are attributable to contagion depends on how broadly the “incident” is defined, with clear implications for the over or under identification of contagion. We also identified the role of staff and the milieu in what was often perceived as contagion. We argue that the pursuit of safety by creating a predictable milieu may paradoxically contribute to this clustering of safety incidents and staff’s perception of them as contagious via the mechanisms of risk amplification, involuntary convergence (increased exposure to safety incidents), and depletion of the milieu’s therapeutic potential.

Citation

Canvin, K., Brierley-Jones, L., Ramsey, L., Baker, J., & Berzins, K. (2024). Safety And Contagion In Acute Psychiatric Wards: how the milieu is implicated in the occurrence of clustered safety incidents. Theory and Psychology, https://doi.org/10.1177/09593543231225636

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 28, 2023
Online Publication Date Feb 14, 2024
Publication Date Feb 14, 2024
Deposit Date Jan 23, 2024
Journal Theory & Psychology
Print ISSN 0959-3543
Electronic ISSN 1461-7447
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/09593543231225636
Keywords History and Philosophy of Science, General Psychology
Publisher URL https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/09593543231225636