Conference Coverage

Preparing to respond to workplace violence


 

REPORTING FROM CCC47


Many in-hospital incidents are marked by failures in communication, patient observation, noncompliance with workplace violence policies or lack of such policies, and perhaps most importantly, an inadequate assessment for the violent potential of the perpetrator, according to Dr. Kaplan.

In a 2017 survey of 150 trauma nurses, 67% said they had been the victim of physical violence at work, though many did not report the incidents, Dr. Kaplan noted. Some reasons nurses gave for not reporting violence included the feeling that it was “just part of the job” in 27% of cases, and concerns about patient satisfaction scores in 10% of the cases.

Active shooter events in the workplace are of particular concern, though they are relatively rare; one recent report identified 160 events that occurred during 2000-2013 in which 1,043 individuals were injured, according to Dr. Kaplan.

Other presentations in the late-breaking session covered issues related to disaster preparedness and the Charlie Gard case.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Will Indiana Medicaid work requirements pass legal muster?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Evaluations of Medicaid experiments by states, CMS are weak, GAO says
MDedge Internal Medicine
Preoperative penicillin allergy tests could decrease SSI
MDedge Internal Medicine
Supreme Court declines to hear DACA case
MDedge Internal Medicine
Expert argues for improving MACRA, not scrapping it
MDedge Internal Medicine
Americans support the right to affordable health care
MDedge Internal Medicine
Never too late to operate? Surgery near end of life is common, costly
MDedge Internal Medicine
Study finds AD accounts for hundreds of thousands of annual ED visits
MDedge Internal Medicine
Risking it all on the miracle of teamwork
MDedge Internal Medicine
CMS issues split decision on Arkansas Medicaid waiver
MDedge Internal Medicine