Escapes and absconding from secure psychiatric units

A prominent radio news programme reported on escapes from secure psychiatric units in the UK and linked that with subsequent offending by psychiatric patients. The report cited did not distinguish between escapes and absconding but, it is argued here, these are very different activities. The acceptable rate both for escapes and absconding from secure psychiatric units is not defined. A certain level of absconding is a consequence of the therapeutic use of leave, which, as part of rehabilitation, is likely to be linked with a reduced reoffending rate post-discharge.


Escape or absconding?
Escapes and absconding are very different activities.Escapes involve a breach of the physical secure perimeter of the building, be it a hospital or a prison.Absconding is generally taken to refer to breaking the conditions of regulated authorised absences from the psychiatric unit (the prison service reserves the term for prisoners gaining their liberty unlawfully while unescorted).Reframing the above in terms of the three aspects of security (physical, procedural and relational security), 3,4 escapes involve breaches of physical and possibly procedural security.By contrast, absconding is a breach of relational and procedural security.
Radio 4's report does raise several important questions.What is an acceptable level for either breach?What is the offending rate while patients are absent without leave as a result of either escaping or absconding (it is very low according to one study 5 )?In general terms, what is the balance between security and therapy for secure hospital units?

Security v. therapy
It is clearly a grave concern when someone escapes or absconds from any secure setting and goes on to commit a serious offence.Ostensibly, 'secure units' might be expected to prevent any escape, but the term refers to any hospital unit that is not unlocked and potentially includes both medium and low secure units as well as psychiatric intensive care units.Should the last two have the same success rate in preventing escapes/absconding as the first when, by definition, their level of security is not as high?Is the more important factor the probability of the escape taking place or the likelihood of that person causing harm once he or she has escaped?
Similarly, what level of absconding is acceptable?It could be argued that a unit operating perfectly would have an absconding rate of zero, but this is unlikely to happen in practice.Security itself may be seen in a therapeutic context, both in terms of therapy improving (relational) security, 6 and safe containment being essential for treatment. 6,7The use of leave, too, is inherently therapeutic in secure hospital units and the means by which otherwise sterile risk assessments are gradually tested out in a controlled fashion, something alien to the culture of the closed prison system.Patients are encouraged gradually to resume responsibility for their behaviour and they demonstrate that by adhering to the boundaries of leave.The reconviction rate for those leaving secure units is 15% within 2 years, 8 compared with 61% within 2 years for those leaving prison. 9Might not the therapeutic use of leave be of central importance to this difference?
Authorised leave should be preceded by an assessment of the level of risks posed by that individual.A very low absconding rate could imply an excessively cautious approach to granting leave and consequently the inappropriate detention of patients who no longer require that degree of security.Conversely, an absconding rate that is too high may suggest a flawed approach to granting leave.

Conclusions
A wider, informed debate is required about an acceptable level of escape or absconding.Unfortunately, this possibility has been severely hampered by the response of the National Patient Safety Agency to these issues, insisting that the escape (not absconding) of a prisoner transferred to a medium or high secure psychiatric unit should be a 'never event'. 10This effectively sets the escape rate at zero for all patients in such units.
We would argue instead for the collection and monitoring of data on these events routinely at a national level.The data would need to incorporate some measure of the 'time at risk', together with a clear idea of the denominator involved (3 cases of absconding from a trust with only 5 secure beds would clearly be more concerning that 20 cases in a trust with 300 secure beds).Statistically outlying performances by individual organisations could then trigger further investigation, just as it happens with surgical mortality data.Such an investigation would then take a more qualitative approach in examining processes and procedures.Even the best risk assessments are probabilistic, so that an adverse event does not necessarily mean the risk assessment had failed or had been done wrongly.Therefore, a unit might get a clean bill of health when its decision-making was shown to have been acceptable, a more sophisticated approach than relying on numbers alone.We would argue that process may be more important than outcome, and examining this rather than over-relying on the raw figures would lead to more benefit for patients overall.

About the authors
Dr Tim Exworthy is Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist at Memorial Hospital and Visiting Senior Lecturer in Forensic Psychiatry at the Department of Forensic Mental Health Science, Institute of Psychiatry, London; Dr Simon Wilson is Visiting Senior Lecturer in Forensic Psychiatry at the same department and Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist at Chaucer Community Mental Health Resource Centre, London.