The physical restraint of a disturbed person is a subject constant of psychiatry and is a
challenge that particularly faces nurses working in acute inpatient settings. While other
approaches to psychiatric treatment have been discarded (e.g. punishment, blood letting,
trepanation, deep insulin therapy and so on) or evolved into new treatments (the use of
medication), the act of physical restraint has remained largely unmodified. Given the ubiquity
of physical restraint in psychiatry, particularly as a nursing procedure, the absence of
a sustained body of research is notable. This essay examines some of the historical underpinnings
of the use of restraint in psychiatry brought into sharp focus by the David Bennett
Inquiry Report (2003) and the National Institute of Clinical Effective (NICE) guidelines
(2005) on the management of violence