Partner with Family |
If the patient is escalating, ask parents/caregiver what has helped during an escalation in the past. Ask parent/caregiver if there is anything that could cause further escalations.
|
Respect Personal Space and Establish Verbal Contact |
- When a person is in distress, consider maintaining two arms lengths distance, an open-nonthreatening body posture and positioning yourself off to the side to help support safety.
- Limit the number of additional staff in the room.
- Only one person should speak with an escalated child at a time.
- Multiple people speaking can be overwhelming.
- Speak calmly, slowly and moderate the tone of your voice.
- Ask the question, “will you let me help you.”
|
Environmental Adjustment |
- Dim lights and minimize unnecessary noise.
- Consider noise reducing headphones.
|
Set Clear Limits and Be Concise |
- Use simple and concise age-appropriate directions and explanations.
- Allow time for the child to process your question or commands.
- Limit choices and lower demands during an escalated event.
- Consider communicating limits in matter-of-fact way, not as a threat.
- Choose your limits wisely, be flexible and avoid setting unrealistic expectations. If they do not accept the boundaries, it is ok to end the encounter and get additional help.
|
Validate Feelings and Provide Specific Praise |
- Restate or Paraphrase what you hear the child in distress say.
- “What I hear you saying is" (repeat back what they said to you).
- “Please tell me more so I better understand how to help you.”
- Reinforce importance of feelings with statements such as, “That must be scary.”
- Identify a positive behavior and provide specific praise. “Great job holding onto your dad.”
|
Empathic Listening |
- Provide your undivided attention, no multi-tasking during an escalation. Ask eliciting questions and make uninterrupted time to listen to the escalated person.
- Validate concerns. Remain neutral and calm. Engage in a non-judgmental manner. “Tell me if I have this right…” (summarize what they have said)
|
Agreement |
- Remain professional and agree, or agree to disagree with three ways to agree.
- Agree in truth. “Yes, the phlebotomist has stuck you 3 times.
Do you mind if I try?”
- Agree in principle. “I believe everyone should be treated
respectfully.”
- Agree with odds. “There probably are other patients who
would be also.”
- If you cannot agree, then agree to disagree.
|