Healing spaces: a retrospective cohort study on the effect of outdoor spaces in psychiatric inpatient units on PRN medication use, seclusion/restraints, and constant observation
Kevin Liu, Ema Saito, Howard Linder

TL;DR
This study found that lack of outdoor space in psychiatric units is linked to increased use of medications and restrictive interventions, especially in general adult patients.
Contribution
The study empirically investigates the correlation between outdoor space accessibility and aggression-related outcomes in psychiatric inpatients.
Findings
Outdoor space inaccessibility in Unit B was associated with increased IM PRN use, seclusion/restraint, and decreased constant observation.
Geriatric patients (Unit A) showed increased PO PRN use during outdoor space inaccessibility, but no significant changes in restrictive interventions.
General adult psychiatric patients were more affected by outdoor space inaccessibility, leading to higher reliance on coercive measures.
Abstract
This retrospective chart review investigated the differential correlation of outdoor space accessibility with as-needed(PRN) medication use, constant observation(CO), and seclusion/restraint across a geriatric psychiatry unit (Unit A) and a general psychiatry unit (Unit B). While the influence of psychiatric facility design on patient aggression has been explored, empirical investigation specifically into the correlation of outdoor space accessibility with aggression in psychiatric inpatients, remains limited. We compared the use of oral and intramuscular PRN medications, seclusion/restraint, and CO during periods of outdoor space accessibility (2022-2023) versus inaccessibility (2024). Outdoor space was inaccessible for Unit A from January 31 to April 18, 2024, and for Unit B from February 12 to May 6, 2024. The analysis was conducted assuming no other significant confounding changes…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealthcare Decision-Making and Restraints · Urban Green Space and Health · Psychopathy, Forensic Psychiatry, Sexual Offending
