Creative Weapons

Specialties Psychiatric

Published

What are some everyday items/materials your patients have used to hurt themselves, other patients, or staff?

I'm doing an in-service soon on the importance of patient and environmental safety checks in inpatient mental health facilities. I need your input, experiences, and stories! We all know how creative patients can be!

Thanks!

Specializes in Pediatrics/Developmental Pediatrics/Research/psych.

Fingernails: this patient was on a 1:1 and multiple medications. However, the patient succeeded in causing multiple infected wounds by persistent scratching. Apparently she figured out how to use friction. She had been working in healthcare for a while, and she successfully caused herself to get systematic MRSA.

Specializes in Forensic Psychiatry.

We had a patient once who found really tiny rocks out on our patio and use them to cut himself. Despite the multiple room searches we did we never found where he would hide the rocks he found. Eventually he confessed that he hid the rocks in a safety pen.

Specializes in Psychiatry, Forensics, Addictions.

Pencil lead in the light socket will spark enough to light a paper on fire. We had a major fire on the unit.

Specializes in psych, addictions, hospice, education.

The little mesh screens that are on faucets to aerate the water...a patient used one of those to cut her wrists.

Specializes in Forensic Psychiatry.
Pencil lead in the light socket will spark enough to light a paper on fire. We had a major fire on the unit.

Also little bits of paper torn up can also cause fires.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

When I was IP one guy snapped his plastic toothbrush in half and used it to cut his wrists.

Specializes in retired LTC.

Hairbrushes! Seems innocuous enough, but the bristles cause nasty scratches topically. Can also be used for injury to others & self-injury when used in body orifices.

Specializes in Nursey stuff.

An older women was admitted for new onset delirium and tried to strangle me with her Jobst hose. She was only about 90 pounds soaking wet, but she had the strength of Hercules and those hose are super tough with little stretch.:eek:

We also have had to move the code carts with the monitor/ defibrillator into the med room, because we had a bad incident where a patient, who claimed to be a member of the Justice League was using his super powers and the defibrillator paddles to deflect bullets and ward off wifi mind reading. It was both a safety and cost issue...when security tackled him, they accidentally ripped some wires.

Specializes in Psychiatric.

I work in recovery where residents live in their own unit in a complex (one unit in the centre is the office). We have people who do become quite unwell and have access to a range of things to self harm (or attempt suicide). Although we take all knives/scissors etc we had one resident buying razor blades online and delivered directly to her. Another resident drank Ajax Spray'n'Wipe because she felt 'dirty inside'. We have a very fine balance of keeping people safe but allowing them to have control over their environment.

Had a patient make a shank out of pork chop bone.

Wow! Thank you guys for your feedback! Keep it coming! :up:

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