HELSENORGE

Sammenhengen mellom nattesøvn og aggressiv adferd hos pasienter innlagt ved intensivavsnittet på psykiatrisk akuttpost

Forskere fra St. Olavs Hospital, NTNU og Karolinska Institutet har i denne studien undersøkt hvordan varierende søvnlengde hos pasienter (n=40) innlagt ved intensivavsnittet på psykiatrisk akuttpost er assosiert med aggressiv adferd. Resultatene indikerer at både kort søvnlengde samt variasjoner i søvnlengde mellom to netter er assosiert med økt aggresjon.

Sleep at night and association to aggressive behaviour; Patients in a Psychiatric Intensive Care Unit

Knut Langsrud, Håvard Kallestad, Arne Vaaler, Roger Almvik, Tom Palmstierna, Gunnar Morken

Studien er publisert i Psychiatry Research

Abstract:

Evaluations of associations between sleep at night and aggressive behaviour in Psychiatric Intensive Care Units (PICU) are lacking. The aims were to explore if sleep duration or night-to-night variations in sleep duration correlated with aggressive behaviour and aggressive incidents the next day and through the whole admission. Fifty consecutive patients admitted to a PICU were included (521 nights) and the nurses registered the time patients were sleeping, aggressive behaviour with The Brøset Violence Checklist (BVC) and aggressive incidents with The Staff Observation Aggression Scale-Revised (SOAS-R). At admission, short sleep duration the first night correlated with aggressive behaviour the next day and admissions with violent incidents had a median of 4.0 h difference in sleep from night one to night two compared to 2.1 h for the rest of the admissions. During the stay, large absolute difference in sleep duration between two nights correlated with aggressive behaviour the next day and short sleep duration was associated with violent incidents. Short sleep duration and night-to-night variations in sleep duration are both associated with increased risk for aggression in PICUs. This observation might help to predict and prevent aggressive incidents.