Flannery, Raymond B. Jr.Fisher, William H.Walker, Andrew P.Littlewood, Karla B.Spillane, Michael J.2022-08-232022-08-232001-04-112011-01-05Psychiatr Q. 2001 Spring;72(1):19-27. DOI: 10.1023/A:10048538022850033-2720 (Linking)10.1023/A:100485380228511293199https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/45210Health care staff on psychiatric inpatient units are at high risk for work-related assaults by patients. Recent studies have begun to document similar patient assaults toward staff in community-based residences. Earlier community studies did not control for the level of patient assault prior to community discharge, and it remains unknown whether the community residence assaults were a function of community placement or a reflection of ongoing control issues by the recently discharged patients. This preliminary inquiry retrospectively tracked the nature and frequency of assaults by patients newly discharged to community residences from a state hospital setting where there had been no assaults by these patients for a two-and-one half-year period. While base rates remain to be determined, the findings in this study suggest the assaultive patients to be younger males with diagnoses of schizophrenia and histories of violence toward others, substance abuse, and violence toward self. Nine patients committed the majority of the assaults. There was a significant decline in the frequency of assaults nine months post-discharge. The implications are discussed.en-USAdultCommunity Mental Health ServicesCrime VictimsFemale*Health PersonnelHumansMale*Mental DisordersMiddle AgedOccupational ExposureRetrospective StudiesViolenceHealth Services ResearchMental and Social HealthPsychiatric and Mental HealthPsychiatryPsychiatry and PsychologyNonviolent psychiatric inpatients and subsequent assaults on community patients and staffJournal Articlehttps://escholarship.umassmed.edu/psych_cmhsr/3101718667psych_cmhsr/310