Patient Safety Tools and Resources: Preventing Self Harm and Ligature Risks

Hospitals and health systems are working to address the environmental risks associated with the care of patients at risk for suicide and self-harm. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is currently creating comprehensive interpretive guidance, which will incorporate Joint Commission patient safety recommendations. To help hospitals and other health care facilities understand and implement these recommendations, ASHE is developing tools and resources for members.

Key Resources

Just Ask ASHE (video screen)

ASHE On Demand: 2019 Q2–Just ASK ASHE High Risk Video Monitoring

Watch the Video

Read the Alert

 

 

Safe Helth Care Environment (video screen)

  • ASHE On Demand: A Safe Health Care Environment
    This recording focuses on the process of risk assessment and mitigation of behavioral health patient safety physical risks

 

 

Acute Patient Care Room

ASHE Virtual Rounding Tools

 

 

Acute Patient Care Bathroom

 

 

 

 

Three-step ligature risk guidance for general acute care or emergency departments

ASHE recommends a three-step approach to managing ligature risks and preventing patient self-harm in general acute care or emergency departments. These steps do not apply for psychiatric units.

step 1

Step 1: Identify
Identify patients who are currently at risk for intential harm to themselves or others. Steps 2 and 3 only need to be taken with patients who are identified as a risk.

 

 

 

step 2

Step 2: Observe
Provide 1:1 monitoring of at-risk patients with continuous visual observation. The person observing the patient needs to be able to intervene immediately. Video observation is not appropriate since the video monitoring process cannot provide immediate intervention.

Some states require privacy in certain situations, such as when the patient is using the bathroom. In these instances, since 1:1 observation is not possible, the bathroom used by the patient must be ligature resistant. Converting a bathroom to a ligature-resistant environment can affect fire and life safety regulations and ADA compliance issues. Health care organizations should conduct a careful review of the rules and regulations that apply to their specific facilities.

 

step 3

Step 3: Remove
In any cases where 1:1 continuous observation is not feasible, hospitals must remove or clinically mitigate all environmental risks. Loose items should be removed from the patient area. Fixtures installed in the room do not need to be removed; however, patient access to certain areas may need to be restricted to prevent patients from reaching items that they could use for self-harm.