In-Custody Deaths: Excited Delirium
Excited delirium is a medical emergency that can lead to a sudden in-custody death. It is paramount that law enforcement officers can recognize the symptoms of excited delirium and insidious sudden death to respond immediately and appropriately.
Excited delirium is a medical emergency that requires acute medical care. Excited delirium causes a person's sympathetic nervous system to shift into overdrive. The sympathetic nervous system is responsible for the up or down regulation of most of the body's homeostatic functions, including the release of adrenalin, heart rate, body temperature, and pain perception. Physical restraint compounds these effects on the sympathetic nervous system. The subject was already in a medical crisis before you arrived on scene. It is likely he is near complete exhaustion, despite how he presents. Excited delirium is associated with a number of dangerous physical effects including hyperthermia, changes in blood acidity, electrolyte imbalances, a breakdown of muscle cells, cardiac arrhythmias and ventricular fibrillation. The typical excited delirium death involves the subject slipping into a state of sudden tranquility, either during or after the struggle and restraint, followed by cardiac arrest. It is essential that law enforcement officers recognize the symptoms of excited delirium and sudden death so that appropriate emergency medical care is initiated early. If you are not sure if someone is exhibiting excited delirium behavior, err on the side of caution.
Ten Suggestions for Law Enforcement Officers and Agencies
- Protocol: Law enforcement agencies must establish a protocol in advance for dealing with subjects in excited delirium.
- Dispatch: Dispatchers should be trained to recognize indicators of excited delirium and ask the reporting party follow-up questions. If excited delirium is suspected, the dispatcher should alert officers for their safety. They should notify paramedics to be on standby.
- Backup: If the first officer on scene believes that he/she is dealing with an individual experiencing excited delirium, they should call for backup (several officers if possible) immediately. Advanced life support paramedics should be called to stand by. If feasible, wait for paramedics to stage before attempting to control the subject.
- Containment: The first officers on scene should focus on containing the subject, making sure he cannot hurt any other individuals. Unless there is an immediate public safety threat, officers should not approach the individual until substantial law enforcement backup has arrived and paramedics are nearby.
- Control: The quicker control can be established, the better. The longer the physical confrontation goes on with an excited delirium suspect, the higher the risk of an in-custody death.
- Restraint Position: Officers are traditionally trained to place a controlled subject in a prone position. However, the prone position may make it more difficult for an individual to breathe. This is especially true for a person experiencing excited delirium. Once the excited delirium subject is in custody, and during paramedic transport in an ambulance, the individual should be placed in a supine position or on their side (left side is preferred). If the restrained subject suddenly stops resisting, monitor him for pulse and breathing. Initiate CPR as indicated.
- Maximum Restraint: There is a strong correlation between the use of maximal restraint (hog-tie) and sudden in-custody deaths. If feasible, this type of restraint should not be employed on subjects experiencing excited delirium.
- Use of Force Options: Part of the excited delirium protocol for any agency should include tactics and use of force options for establishing control of the excited delirium subject. Subjects with excited delirium may have superhuman strength and can be impervious to pain, making pain-based techniques relatively ineffective.
- Empty hand techniques should be applied as part of a multiple-officer takedown team
- Pepper spray may be ineffective on an individual who does not respond to pain
- Impact techniques (i.e. batons) may be sufficient to stop movement in a subject's leg or arm, but these techniques may not result in pain compliance.
- TASERs may be effective, as they temporarily override the central nervous system, providing officers a window of opportunity to control and restrain the subject. Research has linked multiple TASER applications with an increased risk for sudden death of subjects in excited delirium. One TASER firing in the probe mode is suggested.
Psychological issues
Recent drug/alcohol use
Incoherent thought processes
Off (clothes) and sweating
Resistant to presence/dialog
Tough, super-human strength
Yelling
Make an informed decision
Enlist backup
Disturbance-resolution model
Intervene (TASER with caution)
Contain
Attend medical needs
Least amount of force necessary
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