Safewards: improving safety in Victorian mental health units
Safewards, a program designed to reduce conflict and create a safer environment for patients, staff and families, is being rolled out in Victoria after a successful pilot.
The $2.4 million Safewards program is being rolled out across all Victorian public mental health units under a partnership between the Victorian Managed Insurance Authority and the Department of Health and Human Services.
Planning is also underway to extend the model to emergency departments and medical units.
Safewards is based on a successful evidence-based model used in the United Kingdom that aims to reduce harm to patients, staff and families caused through conflict in health services.
It identifies situations that lead to conflict and provides practical strategies to avoid it.
Using a train-the-trainer, skills-based simulation program, Safewards empowers staff to de-escalate conflict situations and reduces the need for stressful interventions.
The program was successfully piloted in 2016 across 18 Victorian inpatient units. The pilot program reported a downward trend in seclusion episodes and up to 50% of staff reported feeling safer in the workplace following its introduction.
Every year, one in five Australians experiences some form of mental illness or disorder.
For more information on the Safewards program, visit health.vic.gov.au/safewards.
Originally published here.
New public health campaign to improve pregnancy outcomes
The Preterm Birth Prevention campaign 'See, Stop, Scan' aims to promote engagement...
Feedback sought on genomic-led cancer control
The framework is designed to guide health professionals, researchers, health services and policy...
Can you die from long COVID? The answer is not so simple
Nearly five years into the pandemic, COVID is feeling less central to our daily lives.