Guides acute agitation management with de-escalation and emergency medication protocols. Use when managing psychiatric crises, treating acute agitation, or implementing emergency interventions.
Guides acute agitation management with de-escalation techniques, emergency medication protocols, seclusion/restraint documentation, and disposition planning in compliance with CMS Conditions of Participation and Joint Commission standards.
Acute psychiatric crises — severe agitation, psychotic decompensation, suicidal behavior in progress, catatonia, and behavioral emergencies — require rapid assessment and intervention to prevent harm to the patient and others. The AAEP/ACEP guidelines on the management of acute agitation establish a stepwise approach: verbal de-escalation first, followed by voluntary oral medication, then involuntary parenteral medication, and seclusion/restraint as last resort. CMS Conditions of Participation (42 CFR 482.13) and Joint Commission standards (PC.03.05) impose strict requirements on the use of restraint and seclusion including physician orders, time limits, face-to-face evaluations, and continuous monitoring.
Inadequate management of psychiatric crises leads to patient injury, staff injury, prolonged hospitalizations, litigation, and regulatory sanctions. The most common adverse outcomes in psychiatric emergencies are death or serious injury from restraint-related positional asphyxia, medication-related respiratory depression, and failure to identify and treat underlying medical emergencies (delirium, intoxication, metabolic crisis) presenting as behavioral disturbance.
Immediate safety priorities (first 60 seconds):
Medical clearance priorities (concurrent with behavioral management):
Agitation severity assessment (use BARS — Behavioral Activity Rating Scale or equivalent): 1 = Difficult or unable to rouse 2 = Asleep but responds to verbal/tactile stimulation 3 = Drowsy, appears sedated 4 = Quiet and awake 5 = Signs of overt activity, calms with verbal instructions 6 = Extremely or continuously active, not requiring restraint 7 = Violent, requires restraint
Verbal de-escalation should ALWAYS be attempted before medication or physical intervention unless there is imminent risk of harm that does not permit delay.
AAEP 10 Key Elements of De-Escalation:
Environmental modifications:
Principle: Calming, not sedation. The goal is to achieve a calm, cooperative, awake patient — not unconsciousness.
Seclusion and restraint are last-resort interventions. CMS Conditions of Participation (42 CFR 482.13) require:
Order requirements:
Monitoring requirements:
Documentation:
After acute crisis stabilization: