“…Discussions of absconding are often couched in a rhetoric of risk management and prevention, characterizing it as a challenging behaviour (Cullen, Bowers, Khondoker, & Pettit, 2016;Muralidharan & Fenton, 2006). Existing literature often focuses on demographic and behavioural characteristics of patients who abscond, for example age, ethnicity, gender, diagnosis, recent medication refusal, seasonal variation or environmental disruption (Bowers et al, 1998(Bowers et al, , 2000Gerace et al, 2015;James & Maude, 2015;Martin et al, 2018;Meehan et al, 1999;Mezey, Durkin, Dodge, & White, 2015;Mosel et al, 2010;Muir-Cochrane & Mosel, 2008;Muir-Cochrane et al, 2011;Wilkie et al, 2014). Some of the literature also examines measures to reduce absconding through restrictive interventions, such as locking ward doors (Nijman et al, 2011;Stewart & Bowers, 2011;Van der Merwe, Bowers, Jones, Simpson, & Haglund, 2009), enhanced observations (Stewart, Bowers, & Ross, 2012) and using GPS location devices to monitor patients' whereabouts (Hearn, 2013).…”