Feeling coerced during psychiatric hospitalization: Impact of perceived status of admission and perceived usefulness of hospitalization.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_1DB777BF4C5F
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Feeling coerced during psychiatric hospitalization: Impact of perceived status of admission and perceived usefulness of hospitalization.
Journal
International journal of law and psychiatry
Author(s)
Golay P., Morandi S., Silva B., Devas C., Bonsack C.
ISSN
1873-6386 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0160-2527
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2019
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
67
Pages
101512
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Perceived coercion is not exclusively related to the patient's legal status at admission. Patients are not always aware of their correct status and voluntary patients often report having felt coerced. Moreover, involuntary patients commonly report that their hospitalization was justified. The first goal was to disentangle the contribution of the legal and of the perceived status of admission in predicting perceived coercion. The second goal of this study was to investigate to which extent perception of the usefulness of the hospitalization affected perceived coercion.
152 inpatients were interviewed about their knowledge of their legal status of admission, perceived need for hospitalization and subjective improvement. They completed the MacArthur's Admission Experience Survey and the Coercion Experience Scale.
6.6% of voluntarily admitted patients and 30.4% of involuntarily admitted patients reported an erroneous status of admission. 88.2% of voluntarily admitted patients and 44.7% of involuntarily admitted patients felt that they needed hospitalization during their stay. Levels of perceived coercion at admission and during hospitalization were mostly predicted by their perceived legal status. While involuntary patients frequently perceived the need for hospitalization and reported subjective improvement after admission, their perception of coercion markedly differed from voluntary patients.
Perceived coercion was marginally related to the legal admission status, which leaves room for interventions that reduce the patients' feeling of being coerced and avoid its negative effects. If many patients revised their belief on the need for and benefits of hospitalization during their stay, their perception of coercion was left partially unchanged.
Keywords
Adult, Coercion, Female, Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data, Hospitals, Psychiatric, Humans, Inpatients/psychology, Involuntary Commitment, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Admission, Surveys and Questionnaires, Switzerland/epidemiology, Compulsion, Involuntary admission, Perceived coercion, Psychiatric hospitalization
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
22/10/2019 9:20
Last modification date
18/06/2020 5:21
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