Feature

Not always implemented or enforced: Harassment policies at work


 

More education needed

Dr. Rohr-Kirchgraber said that protection against harassment goes beyond the employer’s policies and procedures. Building an overall consciousness of what harassment is should begin with employee onboarding, she said.

“The harasser may not even recognize that what they’re doing or saying is a form of harassment, so we need better education,” Dr. Rohr-Kirchgraber emphasized.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Using live pigs in residency training sparks heated debate
Federal Practitioner
Three wishes: The changes health professionals want
Federal Practitioner
Three wild technologies about to change health care
Federal Practitioner
Cardiac monitoring company settles DOJ false claims allegations
Federal Practitioner
A doctor intervenes in a fiery car crash
Federal Practitioner
Doctors and dating: There’s an app (or three) for that
Federal Practitioner
New challenge for docs: End of COVID federal public health emergency
Federal Practitioner
Could ChatGPT write this column?
Federal Practitioner
Physicians don’t feel safe with some patients: Here’s how to reduce the danger
Federal Practitioner
Breast cancer exacts high financial toll worldwide
Federal Practitioner