06676nam 22007215 450 991030414270332120200920054613.03-319-17569-610.1007/978-3-319-17569-0(CKB)3710000000442861(EBL)3567503(SSID)ssj0001534533(PQKBManifestationID)11879551(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001534533(PQKBWorkID)11496454(PQKB)10682783(DE-He213)978-3-319-17569-0(MiAaPQ)EBC3567503(PPN)187686505(EXLCZ)99371000000044286120150701d2015 u| 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrReducing Restraint and Restrictive Behavior Management Practices /by Peter Sturmey1st ed. 2015.Cham :Springer International Publishing :Imprint: Springer,2015.1 online resource (253 p.)Autism and Child Psychopathology Series,2192-922XDescription based upon print version of record.3-319-17568-8 Includes bibliographical references and index.Preface; Contents; About the Author; Part I; Foundational Issues; Chapter-1; Definitions and Rationales; 1.1 Restrictive Behavior Management Practices: Some Examples; 1.2 Definitional Issues; 1.2.1 Restraint; 1.2.2 Acceptable and Unacceptable Restrictive Procedures; 1.2.3 Van Houten's Seven Dimensions of Restraint; 1.2.4 Seclusion and Locked Room Time-Out; 1.2.5 PRN Medication, Psychotropic Medication and Rapid Tranquilization; 1.2.6 Related Concepts; 1.3 Rationales; 1.3.1 Rights and Values; 1.3.2 Safety; 1.3.3 Restraint and Stress in Animal Models; 1.3.4 Restrictive Procedures as Treatment1.4 SummaryChapter-2; Epidemiology; 2.1 Specific Populations; 2.1.1 Mainstream School Settings; 2.1.2 Incarcerated Youth; 2.1.3 Adults with Mental Health Problems; 2.1.4 Persons with Intellectual Disabilities; 2.1.5 Seniors; 2.1.6 Brain Injury; 2.1.7 Dentistry; 2.1.8 Detained Immigrants; 2.2 Conclusions; Chapter-3; Ethics and Legal Aspects; 3.1 What Are Ethics?; 3.2 The Law; 3.2.1 International Law; 3.2.2 American Law; 3.2.3 British Law; 3.3 Professional Ethics; 3.3.1 General Principles; 3.4 Conclusions; Chapter-4; Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century History; 4.1 Chiarugi; 4.2 Pinel4.3 Tuke and Moral Treatment4.4 Gardiner Hill; 4.5 Thomas Prichard; 4.6 John Connolly; 4.6.1 Reaction to Connolly's Work; 4.6.2 Community Services; 4.6.3 Other Examples; 4.6.4 From 1860 to 1940; 4.7 Learning from John Connolly; Chapter-5; Recent History; 5.1 Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century Institutions; 5.1.1 Christmas in Purgatory; 5.1.2 US Department of Justice; 5.1.3 British Institutions; 5.2 Deadly Restraint; 5.3 Response to Deadly Restraint; 5.3.1 Databases; 5.3.2 The US Response; 5.3.3 British Response; 5.4 Summary; Chapter-6Failing to Learn from John Connolly: Current Use of Restraint and Seclusion6.1 Contemporary Education; 6.1.1 British Education System; 6.1.2 US Schools and Treatment Centers; 6.1.3 Australia; 6.1.4 Conclusion; 6.2 Youth Facilities; 6.2.1 British Youth Facilities; 6.2.2 US Facilities for Troubled Youth; 6.2.3 Rikers Adolescent Unit 2011-2014; 6.2.4 Conclusion; 6.3 People with Intellectual Disabilities; 6.3.1 Institutional Scandals; 6.3.2 Current Community Scandals and Restraints; 6.3.3 Nursing Homes; 6.4 Police and Restraint-Related Deaths; 6.5 Immigration Services; 6.6 Bouncers6.7 Psychiatric Hospitals6.8 Families and Foster Parents; 6.8.1 Parents Keep Child with Autism in Cages; 6.9 Conclusions; Part II ; Interventions; Chapter-7; Applied Behavior Analysis: General Characteristics; 7.1 Functions of Restraint; 7.1.1 Consequence Functions; 7.1.2 Restraints Sometimes Increase Problem Behavior; 7.1.3 Antecedent Functions; 7.1.4 Summary; 7.2 Self-Restraint; 7.2.1 Description and Definition; 7.2.2 Functions of Self-Restraint; 7.2.3 Self-Restraint as Compulsive Behavior; 7.2.4 Functional Analyses of Self-Restraint; 7.2.5 Summary; 7.3 Conclusions; Chapter-8Applied Behavior Analysis InterventionsThis book presents an evidence-based framework for replacing harmful, restrictive behavior management practices with safe and effective alternatives. The first half summarizes the concept and history of restraint and seclusion in mental health applications used with impaired elders, children with intellectual disabilities, and psychiatric patients. Subsequent chapters provide robust data and make the case for behavior management interventions that are less restrictive without compromising the safety of the patients, staff, or others. This volume presents the necessary steps toward the gradual elimination of restraint-based strategies and advocates for practices based in client rights and ethical values. Topics featured in this volume include:   The epidemiology of restraints in mental health practice. Ethical and legal aspects of restraint and seclusion. Current uses of restraint and seclusion. Applied behavior analysis with general characteristics and interventions. The evidence for organizational interventions. Other approaches to non-restrictive behavior management. Reducing Restraint and Restrictive Behavior Management Practices is a must-have resource for researchers, clinicians and practitioners, and graduate students in the fields of developmental psychology, behavioral therapy, social work, psychiatry, and geriatrics.Autism and Child Psychopathology Series,2192-922XDevelopmental psychologyBehavioral therapySocial workDevelopmental Psychologyhttps://scigraph.springernature.com/ontologies/product-market-codes/Y20010Behavioral Therapyhttps://scigraph.springernature.com/ontologies/product-market-codes/H54018Social Workhttps://scigraph.springernature.com/ontologies/product-market-codes/X21000Developmental psychology.Behavioral therapy.Social work.Developmental Psychology.Behavioral Therapy.Social Work.610.73Sturmey Peterauthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut781682MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910304142703321Reducing Restraint and Restrictive Behavior Management Practices1995421UNINA