Project 'BANGED’ – A Bedside Tool to Aid Post Head Banging Reviews
Jemima Cohen, Sathya Vishwanath

TL;DR
Project 'BANGED' is a tool designed to help resident doctors confidently assess patients after headbanging incidents by providing a structured, easy-to-use acronym.
Contribution
The novel contribution is the creation of the 'BANGED' acronym as a practical, bedside tool for post-headbanging reviews in psychiatry.
Findings
Most resident doctors were unaware of helpful tools for post-headbanging reviews before 'BANGED'.
100% of respondents in the post-intervention survey would recommend the 'BANGED' tool.
The tool improved confidence and was seen as relevant to clinical practice by users.
Abstract
Aims: Project ‘BANGED’, a Quality Improvement Project (QIP) aimed to enhance confidence, consistency, and clarity, when completing post headbanging reviews (PHBR). The world of psychiatry is often the first-time (and perhaps only time) resident doctors (RDs) are exposed to such behaviour thus request. This can be daunting, often inducing a ‘CT head reflex reaction’. A tool to strike balance between true neurology vs over medicalisation seemed pressing. Thus, the bedside tool ‘BANGED’ was created. A guiding acronym for RDs to use, designed for inpatient settings. Aimed at the general adult population, however, has relevance to other areas such as Intellectual Disability. QIP carried out at Humber Teaching NHS Foundation Trust (HTNFT). ‘BANGED’ Each letter represents key areas of focus for PHBRs and is as follows: B – bruising, bumps (swelling), breakage of skin, bleeding (?…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealthcare Decision-Making and Restraints · Family and Patient Care in Intensive Care Units · Emergency and Acute Care Studies
