PROD-ALERT: Psychiatric restraint open data-analysis using logarithmic estimates on reporting trends

Aims and MethodsRestraint reporting varies, which undermines regulation, obfuscates analyses, and incentivises minimisation. The English Mental Health Units Use of Force Act 2018, "Seni's Law" mandates reporting. This paper analysed open data from all psychiatric and learning disabili...

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Main Authors: Keith Reid (Author), Owen Price (Author)
Format: Book
Published: Frontiers Media S.A., 2022-08-01T00:00:00Z.
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100 1 0 |a Keith Reid  |e author 
700 1 0 |a Keith Reid  |e author 
700 1 0 |a Owen Price  |e author 
245 0 0 |a PROD-ALERT: Psychiatric restraint open data-analysis using logarithmic estimates on reporting trends 
260 |b Frontiers Media S.A.,   |c 2022-08-01T00:00:00Z. 
500 |a 2673-253X 
500 |a 10.3389/fdgth.2022.945635 
520 |a Aims and MethodsRestraint reporting varies, which undermines regulation, obfuscates analyses, and incentivises minimisation. The English Mental Health Units Use of Force Act 2018, "Seni's Law" mandates reporting. This paper analysed open data from all psychiatric and learning disability institutions in England from September 2020 to August 2021. We correlated logarithms of "people restrained per month", against "bed days" per month and "people under legal mental health detention" per month, per institution. We designated institutions reporting some restraint for at least 11 of 12 months as reporting "completely" and used their trend to infer rates from non-"complete" institutions. Allowance was made for size. Our a priori manual can be shared on request.ResultsLogarithms of people restrained per month and bed-days per month correlated among complete reporters: R2 0.90 (2.s.f). Persons detained per month also correlated with restraint: R2 0.78. "Partial" institutions reported intermittently. "Joiner" institutions reported firstly null, then substantive reporting. "Null" institutions (including the largest) reported no restraint. Precisely-reporting institutions with high inverse variance between months reported similar restraint-rates but less-precise reported lower rates. In institutions reporting no restraint, two independent "true rate" estimations, by bed-days or people detained, correlated across institutions: R2 0.95. Inference from size suggested non-complete reporters restrained 1,774 people in England per month 95% CI (1,449-2,174).Clinical implicationsRestraint remains under-reported. Institutional size explains most restraint variation among complete reporting institutions, 90% of R2. Institutional restraint reports can be compared per-bed per-month. Rates of people detained are a useful independent "checking" comparator in England. 
546 |a EN 
690 |a human rights 
690 |a law 
690 |a restrictive practice 
690 |a statistical methodology 
690 |a open data 
690 |a Medicine 
690 |a R 
690 |a Public aspects of medicine 
690 |a RA1-1270 
690 |a Electronic computers. Computer science 
690 |a QA75.5-76.95 
655 7 |a article  |2 local 
786 0 |n Frontiers in Digital Health, Vol 4 (2022) 
787 0 |n https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdgth.2022.945635/full 
787 0 |n https://doaj.org/toc/2673-253X 
856 4 1 |u https://doaj.org/article/8be4057a196c4f7e93cc0e84ecaf3d3e  |z Connect to this object online.