Accessible summary
What is known on the subject?
Absconding refers to patients leaving psychiatric hospitals in an unexpected and/or unauthorized way and is often recognized as a form of challenging behaviour.
There is some research about the rates of absconding, risks associated with it and interventions to try and reduce it; however, relatively little is known about the experience from the perspective of patients and this evidence has not previously been systematically reviewed.
What this paper adds to existing knowledge?
Patients abscond to find relief, to regain power and control over their lives and/or to address unmet needs.
Absconding can therefore be viewed as a means of seeking freedom.
What are the implications for practice?
Nurses need to be aware that absconding is a positive act from the patient perspective and work collaboratively with them to reduce factors which motivate this behaviour.
From the point of admission, nurses have an important role to play in reducing the sense of fear, isolation and powerlessness which motivates patients to abscond.
Practical interventions such as giving patients the time and information necessary to be involved in decision‐making, or asking about their responsibilities and commitments outside of hospital, may have a significant impact on the experience of admission and reduce the risk of absconding.
AbstractIntroductionAbsconding from psychiatric hospitals is associated with significant risks, but is difficult to assess. It is often considered a form of challenging behaviour for mental health nurses, yet there is little evidence considering the behaviour from the patient perspective.AimTo identify and review evidence pertaining to the experience of patients who abscond from hospital, paying particular attention to their reasons for doing so.MethodA systematic review and thematic synthesis of eight peer‐reviewed studies.ResultsThe meaning patients associated with absconding is best characterized as an act of seeking freedom. Within this, four sub‐themes were identified: 1) seeking freedom to find relief, 2) to regain power and control over their lives, 3) to address unmet needs and 4) opportunistically.DiscussionPerspectives on absconding are markedly different between nurses and patients. Nurses may view absconding as challenging or deviant behaviour, whilst patients understand it as a positive experience. This is because the hospital environment is not meeting their needs.Implications for practicePatients decide to abscond from hospital for valid and rational reasons. Mental health nurses are in a position to understand and address the issues underpinning them with a view to reducing absconding. Further research on absconding from hospital, taking the patient's perspective, is needed.