The University of Melbourne and The Royal Children's Hospital

Guidelines for the use of Restraint in young people with Anorexia through Collaborative Engagement (grace)

Chief InvestigatorClosing Date
Dr Jenny O'Neill30 Nov, 2024
Chief InvestigatorDr Jenny O'Neill
Closing Date30 Nov, 2024

About the research trial

This project is about the use of restraint in providing nutrition during the treatment for Anorexia Nervosa and Atypical Anorexia Nervosa in young people in children’s hospitals or children’s wards in Australia.  We know through lived experience, our professional practice and the research evidence, that being held or restrained for a procedure can cause distress and trauma. However healthcare professionals have no specific guidance about restraining young people with AN or AAN for feeding in children’s hospitals in Australia. \
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Therefore in this project we would like to interview young adults with lived experience of being held or restrained as an adolescent for tube placement or feeding in the context of treatment of AN or AAN, and parents/carers, to form an understanding of how restraint for feeding is experienced. We then propose to write a guideline informed by this lived experience. We hope that a guideline will help reduce the need to restrain young people with AN or AAN during feeding, and if restraining is required, we will have guidance to do this in a way that causes the least distress and trauma.\
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This project has been developed through collaboration with three young people and two parents with lived experience of restraint for feeding during the treatment of AN and AAN. All interviews will be facilitated by an experienced mental health nurse.

Recruitment details

Young adults over the age of 18, who have previously experienced restraint (as defined by them) for NGT placement and/or feeding as inpatients under the age of 18 admitted with AN/AAN in an acute paediatric hospital setting in Australia.\
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Parent/carers of YP with AN/AAN who have had restraint for NGT placement and/or feeding as an adolescent in an acute paediatric hospital setting in Australia.

Attachments

Jenny O'Neill