Violence and agitation can be triggered by many different factors. These factors can be categorized in various ways. The list of triggers below is divided by responses to healthcare provider behavior and communication, environmental factors, and symptoms of patient illness. Understanding what causes disruptive behavior can help prevent and de-escalate it.1
Disruptive behaviors can be triggered by what you say, how you say it, and how you behave, which can be colored by the patient’s perceptions, for example:2,3,4
What you say
How you say it
What you withhold
How you behave
Disruptive behaviors can be triggered by the patient’s environment, for example:2,3,4
Disruptive behaviors may be caused by the patient’s current illness or underlying medical condition, for example:2,3,4
Knowing when a patient is likely to become violent is ideal, but difficult. Patients may signal they are getting ready to lash out against their healthcare team members through nonverbal communication, including:5,6,7
Body Movements
Pacing, gesturing in an exaggerated or violent manner, assuming a boxer’s stance, removing excess clothing, opening and closing fists, tensing the body, trembling, shaking, stretching to relieve tension, invading your personal space
Facial Expressions
Voice Signals
Eye Contact
Physiological Changes
Of course, all these nonverbal cues may indicate something other than imminent violence. One of the challenges of healthcare violence prevention is successfully anticipating it without unjustly profiling a patient who is not prone to violence; therefore, it is important to judge a situation by the totality of circumstances and not just on nonverbal cues. There are multiple risk assessment tools to help in the early identification of aggressive behavior, which can be paired with early de-escalation intervention. The STAMP (Staring, Tone and volume of voice, Anxiety, Mumbling, and Pacing) Tool8 and the Broset Violence Checklist (BVC)9 have been shown to be effective, and have been validated for reliability in different settings.10
More information About Addressing Disruptive Patients
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References
1. Judith E. Arnetz, et al. “Understanding Patient-to-Worker Violence in Hospitals: a Qualitative Analysis of Documented Incident Reports.” Journal of Advanced Nursing. 2014; 71(2): 338-48. DOI: 10.1111/jan.12494.
2. Martin Salzmann-Erikson, Lilly Yifter. “Risk Factors and Triggers That May Result in Patient-Initiated Violence on Inpatient Psychiatric Units: An Integrative Review.” Clinical Nursing Research. 2020; 29(7): 504-520. DOI: 10.1177/1054773818823333.
3. California Society for Healthcare Risk Management. “Understanding and Preventing Violence in the Healthcare Environment.”. September 11, 2011. [Webinar] (not available online at the time of publication)
4. U.S. Department of Labor. Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Guidelines for Preventing Workplace Violence for Healthcare and Social Service Workers. OSHA Publication 3148, (2015). [PDF]
5. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “Unit 6: Be Attuned to Patient Behaviors.” Workplace Violence Prevention for Nurses. Last reviewed: February 7, 2020.
6. Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety. “Violence and Harassment in the Workplace – Warning Signs.” Last revised: December 16, 2022
7. Dwan M. Sweet, Rebecca G. Burzette. “Development of the Nonverbal Cues of Interpersonal Violence Inventory: Law Enforcement Officers’ Perceptions of Nonverbal Behavior and Violence.” 2018. Criminal Justice and Behavior. 45(4): 519-540. DOI: 10.1177/0093854817753019.
8. Lauretta Luck, et al. “STAMP: Components of Observable Behavior that Indicate Potential for Patient Violence in Emergency Departments.” Journal of Advanced Nursing. 2007; 59(1): 11-19. DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2648.2007.04308.x
9. Family Practice Notebook. “Broset Violence Checklist.”
10. Natalie Calow, et al. “Literature Synthesis: Patient Aggression Risk Assessment Tools in the Emergency Department.” Journal of Emergency Nursing. 2016; 42(1): 19-24. DOI: 10.1016/j.jen.2015.01.023