The impact of facility relocation on patients' perceptions of ward atmosphere and quality of received forensic psychiatric care
Journal article, 2016

In recent years, large groups of forensic psychiatric patients have been relocated into new medium-and maximum-security forensic psychiatric facilities in Sweden, where a psychosocial care approach is embedded. From this perspective and on the assumption that physical structures affect the therapeutic environment, a prospective longitudinal study was designed to investigate the impact of the facility relocation of three forensic psychiatric hospitals on patients' perceptions of ward atmosphere and quality of received forensic psychiatric care. Participants were patients over 18 years of age sentenced to compulsory forensic psychiatric treatment. Data were obtained by validated questionnaires. Overall, 58 patients (78%) answered the questionnaires at baseline with a total of 25 patients (34%) completing follow-up 1 at six months and 11 patients (15%) completing follow-up 2, one year after relocation. Approximately two-thirds of the participants at all time-points were men and their age range varied from 18 to 69. The results of this study showed that poor physical environment features can have a severe impact on care quality and can reduce the possibilities for person-centered care. Furthermore, the study provides evidence that the patients' perceptions of person-centered care in forensic psychiatric clinics are highly susceptible to factors in the physical and psychosocial environment. Future work will explore the staff's perception of ward atmosphere and the possibilities to adapt a person-centered approach in forensic psychiatric care after facility relocation. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd and Faculty of Forensic and Legal Medicine. All rights reserved.

centered climate questionnaire

psychometric evaluation

satisfaction

Environment

environment

dementia

alzheimers-disease

long-term-care

Person-centered care

nursing-home

Forensic psychiatry

elderly patients

Legal Medicine

health-status

Ward atmosphere

Author

Eirini Alexiou

University of Gothenburg

Alessio Degl'Innocenti

University of Gothenburg

Anders Kullgren

University of Gothenburg

Helle Wijk

University of Gothenburg

Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine

1752-928X (ISSN)

Vol. 42 1-7

Subject Categories

Clinical Medicine

Health Sciences

DOI

10.1016/j.jflm.2016.04.014

More information

Created

10/10/2017