Behavior:
•pacing
•inability to sit still
•sudden cessation of motor activity
Comment: These are attempts to discharge aggression via large muscle activity. This can easily escalate into acting out behavior.
Criteria: Threatening verbalizations or gestures toward real or imagined objects
Behavior:
•retaliation toward actual persons who are seen as threats
•aggressiveness in response to threatening visual or auditory hallucinations
•aggressiveness in response to expansion of delusional thinking
•dementia causes a decline in all areas of mental ability, including a person’s understanding of is going on around them
Comment: Such hallucinations are bizarre, threatening, unfamiliar, or confusing. Many psychotic individuals do live comfortably with an entourage of familiar “voices.”
The degree of violence is related to how desperately client perceives the need to protect the self. Because there may be no obvious connection between the cause of the patient’s anger and the resulting violent incident, workers may see the patient’s behaviour as completely unprovoked.
Criteria: Intensification of affect
Behavior:
•very tense expression
•jumpiness
•elated expression
Comment: Such intensification indicates loss of control, especially if accompanied by laughing.
Criteria: Alcohol & drug abuse and withdrawal
Behavior:
•intoxication with drugs or alcohol
•withdrawal from drugs or alcohol
Comment: The need to provide care to substance abusers, and the widespread awareness that medications such as opiates are available in health care facilities contribute to violence.
Chemically dependent clients present risk while intoxicated or in withdrawal stages. The transition period is of high risk for violence. The client can act out rage with their inhibitions dissolved from either intoxication or withdrawal from drugs and/or alcohol. Violence is due to irritability of the central nervous system. There can be neurological damage to the cerebral cortex. The anxiety, suspicion, and sense of helplessness that comes with being in a hospital or treatment centre, as well as the distress caused by the detoxification or treatment itself, can cause clients to become aggressive towards workers.
Withdrawal will be difficult to detect if you are unaware that the client has a chemical dependency problem. Some research would indicate that up to 30% of admissions to acute care facilities have a chemical dependency problem as a secondary diagnosis.
Additional Assessment Criteria:
In addition to formal screening devices, consider the following general indicators which may point to a dependency problem:
•Smell of alcohol on breath or person
•Flushed face, blood shot eyes, bulbous nose, or facial telangiectasia (small red spider veins radiating about a center core)
•Dilated or constricted pupils
•General appearance: poor hygiene, disheveled
•Intoxicated visitors
•Is patient confused, restless, defensive, hypersensitive, anxious to leave hospital, impulsive or rebellious?
•Signs of depression: any past suicide attempts?
•Poor employment record
•No fixed address or frequent address changes
•Weekend partner: someone with a penchant for chemically fueled social experiences
•Check old charts/clinical records for frequent emergency visits, medications, broken bones, prior laboratory indicators
•Lifestyle habits
•Impaired charges or roadside suspensions
•Smoker
•Unhealthy looking due to lifestyles: too thin or overweight
Many healthcare facilities have integrated this questionnaire into the nursing assessment forms.
CAGE has proven to be a reliable tool for preliminary assessment.
C Do you ever feel you ought to CUT down on your drinking?
A Do you ever feel ANGRY or ANNOYED if somebody comments or questions you about your drinking?
G Do you ever feel GUILTY about your use of alcohol, or how you behaved under the influence?
E EYEOPENER Do you take a drug or drink first thing in the morning to steady nerves or get rid of a hangover?
One affirmative response indicates that further assessment is required.
With two positives, an 80% likelihood of dependency exists and with three positives, there is a 99% chance the patient is chemically dependent.
Withdrawal Assessment:
Stages of alcohol withdrawal are characterized by the following symptoms:
1)Earliest or Mild Withdrawal: sensation of uneasiness, consciousness of visceral function, nausea, churning, tightness, anxiety, and insomnia.
2)Minimal: fidgeting, agitation, chain smoking, drinking many cups of coffee.
3)Moderate: severe agitation, difficult to keep patient in bed, attention lapses, involuntary tremors, diaphoresis, tachycardia, elevated blood pressure, nausea, vomiting, malaise.
4)Severe: auditory/visual hallucinations, delirium tremens (DT’s), irrational fears, sensitive to noise, extreme agitation, difficult cooperating, muscular hyperactivity, severe diaphoresis.
5)Extreme: all of stage 4 symptoms, totally irrational, extreme diaphoresis and tachycardia, convulsions
Criteria: Medications (prescription & over-the-counter)
Effects of Medications: Certain medications can alter client’s perception, medical condition, and actions. Because medications have different and sometimes unexpected effects on individuals, they may cause clients to become aggressive or violent towards workers. Medications such as the benzodiazepines, can have a disinhibiting effect that can result in uncharacteristically violent behaviour.
Changes in Medications: Changes in or combinations of, medications require constant assessment of client behaviour and condition. The distress of substituting one medication for another and the required time intervals between medications can frustrate clients and cause them to act out.
Irreversible: dementia related to long standing alcohol use, Alzheimer's disease
When assessing elderly clients with difficult behavior, the fundamental question to ask of the behavior is “why?” Psychiatric and physical illness will produce physical and behavioral symptoms. Learning to ask “why?” may give the care-giver answers to questions about the elderly client’s aggressive behavior leading to treatment of the conditions triggering the difficult behavior.
Criteria: Presence of acute organic brain syndrome
Behavior: