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Behavioral Contracting in a Burn Care FacilityA Strategy for Patient Participation

 

作者: ROBBI SIMONS,   ADRIENNE MCFADD,   HUGH FRANK,   LINDA GREEN,   RUTH MALIN,   JAMES MORRIS,  

 

期刊: The Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care  (OVID Available online 1978)
卷期: Volume 18, issue 4  

页码: 257-260

 

ISSN:0022-5282

 

年代: 1978

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

Behavioral contracting is a valuable tool for resolving persistent behavioral problems interfering with the treatment and recovery of severely burned patients. Coercive bidding of the patients for more control occurs in an environment where they experience extreme forms of loss of control and associated enforced regression. The ensuing conflicts between patient and staff often lead to breakdowns in mutual cooperation, with deleterious effects on patient-staff morale. Staff experience highly ambivalent feelings toward a problem patient and may wish to withdraw from him, feeling threatened in their image of themselves as competent professionals. Beyond reducing disruptive conflicts on the ward, behavioral contracting aims to mobilize patient and staff around common and explicit goals, and to maximize patient cooperation and productive control in the recovery process.Contracts are valuable because: 1) they facilitate productive communication about issues which underlie patient-staff conflict; 2) they facilitate solutions to problem interactions between patients and staff; 3) they afford both patients and staff a sense of self-control.We provide a rationale for behavioral contracting and discuss the indications for initiating contracts with hospitalized burn patients, and describe methods for developing, implementing, and managing behavioral contracts in order to improve communication and effectiveness in patient-staff interactions.

 

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