Strategies used to defuse a volatile situation, to assist a child to regain behavioral control and to avoid a physical restraint or other behavioral intervention.
What is De-escalation?
Has a maximum time limit of 1 min.
What is a short personal restraint?
A set of functional skills or age specific tasks that most children perform within a certain age range.
What are developmental milestones?
A type of emergency behavior intervention that involves the involuntary separation of a child froom other residents and the placement of the child alone i an area from which the resident is prevented from leaving by physical barrier, force, or threat of force.
What is seclusion?
When is a Serious Incident Report for Restraints due ?
24 hours
These two emotions can be the result of both internally and externally produced conflicts.
What is Anger and Fear?
For a child of any age: 30 min
What is a personal restraint?
How someone acts. It is what a person does to make something happen, to make something change or to keep things the same.
A response to things that happen internally/externally
What is behavior?
Placing a child in a chest up restraint hold.
What is a Supine Restraint?
-Limited Parental avalability
-Distress when left
-Craves close relationships but struggles to trust
-Need for reasssurance from partners
-Feelings of anxiety and jelousy are common
What is ambivalent attachment?
Level 1: Support
Level 2: Limit Setting
Level 3: Physical Intervention
What are the 3 levels of Intervention?
15min
Behavior serves a purpose and has a reason, including;
What is communication and function?
placing a child in a chest down restraint hold.
What is a prone restraint?
-Healthy Relatiionship with Primary Caregiver
-Shows appropriate dstress when left alone
-Able to seek support inn relationships
-Can regulate emotions and manage conflict in close relationsips
What is secure attachment?
-Acceleration tends to be more gradual
-Social withdrawal (ie decrease in motor activity, speech production, avoidance or eye contact, quiet, moody..)
-Ruminating or repeating thoughts with depressive suicidal or violent themes
-Clinically depressed
What is Tension Relased Inwardly?
Interventions used in an emergency, including personal restraints, mechanical restraints, emergency medication, and seclusion.
What is Emergency Behavior Intervention?
We must begin to connect with children at this "age" and stop expecting them to behave at their chronological age.
What is emotional age?
A type of emergency behavior intervention that uses chemicals or pharmeceuticals through topical application, oral administration, injection, or other means to modify a child's behavior.
What is Emergency Medication?
-Incconsistent parenting
-Intimate relationships feel confusing
-Feelings of unworthiness
-Tendency towards aggressive or antisocial behavior
What is disorganized attachement?
-Acceleration is more rapid, impulsive and usually over a short timeframe
-History of destruction/abuse of property and assaults
-Instigating others to the above
What is Tension Released Outwardly?
-Avoid blaming youth
-Talk in a safe location that is not in front of other children or adults
-Make sure that the child is calm and in control
-Ask for permission to discuss the situation
-What are some replacement behaviors the child has learned?
-Reassure the youth
-Provide opportunities to rebuild the relationship
What are strategies for debriefing?
-Abuse of neglect from caregiver
-no preference for parental preference
-Independent
-Pattern of withdrawal
-Tendency to minimize the feelings of others
-Preference for casual relationships
What is avoidant attachment?
A type of emergency behavior intervention that uses the application of a device to restrict the free movement of all or part of a child's body in order to control physical activity.
What is Mechanical restraint?
-Calm -Understanding
-Unafraid -Able to listen
-Centered -Verbally reassuring
-Balanced - fair
-Empathetic -Non threatening
What are the qualities of a Solid Object?