“…Restraint use has been a common nursing practice in acute inpatient mental health care settings (Chieze et al, 2019;Garriga et al, 2016;Landeweer et al, 2010). For decades, the common practice on acute inpatient mental health units was guided by guidelines and educational material for mental health staff that highlighted the coercive use of psychotropic Pro Re Nata (PRN) medication to subdue patients who pose a safety risk, most notably violence risk (Emmanuel et al, 2013;National Consumer and Carer Forum, 2009;Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario, 2012), despite little published formal research on the use of chemical restraint interventions until recent years (Hu et al, 2019;Muir-Cochrane, 2020;Muir-Cochrane et al, 2019;Muir-Cochrane, Oster, Gerace, et al, 2020). Direct care nurses are most often the health care providers who initiate and administer the coercive interventions of restraints on mental health inpatient units (Bigwood & Crowe, 2008;Cunha et al, 2016).…”