In a national survey by the Emergency Nurses Association, more than half of emergency-department nurses reported that theyâve been physically assaulted on the job. For many nurses, being assaulted is a recurring problem: Approximately one-fourth of the 3,465 respondents reported experiencing physical violence more than 20 times in the past three years. While all hospital staff are at risk of both physical assault and verbal abuse, the problem is particularly severe in EDs, and against ED nurses in particular.Â
In their article in the July/August Journal of Nursing Administration, the authors (Jessica Grack-Smith et al) explain whoâs assaulting ED nurses and what the contributing factors are [references omitted]:
The 24-hour accessibility of EDs; the lack of adequately trained, armed, or visible security guards; and a highly stressful environment are some of the reasons why EDs are especially vulnerable to violence. The overwhelming majority of perpetrators of ED violence are patients and their family members and visitors. Patient pain and discomfort, as well as the tension, stress, and anger of patients, family members, and visitors, are often escalated by cramped space, lack of privacy, and long waiting times. The resulting frustration and vulnerability may incite physical and verbal abuse against ED staff. In addition, verbal abuse and physical assault in the ED can come from disruptive, intoxicated patients who are sometimes accompanied by other intoxicated or disruptive individuals.
Some of these factors are unavoidable â we need emergency departments to be available 24 hours a day, and emergency situations are inherently stressful. Psychiatric patients and patients under the influence of drugs or alcohol are more likely to lash out against those trying to help them. Beyond these factors, though, thereâs a lot that both hospitals and our healthcare system as a whole could do to reduce the risk of violence against ED nurses.
The survey found that barriers to reporting ED violent incidents are associated with an increased risk of experiencing those incidents frequently. Barriers to reporting include ambiguous policies about reporting violent incidents, fear of retaliation, and a lack of support from administration or management. The authors have several recommendations for hospital administrators:
As indicated by the nurses in this study, a strong administrative commitment is imperative to reducing ED violence and eliminating barriers to reporting incidents of violence. Staff and ED managers need to know that senior administrators are aware of the violence issue and support efforts to prevent and mitigate violence. Nurse executives must be proactive in taking steps to make the workplace safe. Establishing a culture of acceptance for reporting violent incidents is a positive step toward creating a safer work environment. Procedures for reporting violent incidents should be clear and consistent, and ED staff should have access to medical care and follow-up counseling if needed. Another essential strategy to addressing ED violence is convening an interdisciplinary task force to identify vulnerabilities in the ED and develop a plan for preventing, mitigating, responding to, and reporting violence. This task force should include the chief operating officer, chief nurse executive, ED medical director, ED manager/director, security personnel, risk management personnel, local police, and most importantly, ED nurses.
While the authors focus mainly on what hospitals can do to reduce violence against ED nurses, itâs also worth noting that high rates of ED violence are another symptom of our countryâs dysfunctional healthcare system. Crowding, long wait times, patient boarding, and a shortage of ED nurses â which the nurses identified as factors in ED violence â are all results of the economic pressures that emergency departments face. High rates of uninsurance and underinsurance mean that EDs routinely go uncompensated for the care they provide, and reductions in beds and staff are logical outcomes. (See this post for more on ED issues.)
This USA Today article about the survey notes that laws designed to protect nurses from violence vary from state to state (with some states having no laws at all), and that the Emergency Nurses Association is working to strengthen and expand protections for nurses in all states. If healthcare reform efforts succeed in slashing rates of uninsurance and underinsurance, that will also relieve some of the pressures on emergency departments and make it easier for nurses to do their jobs without fear.
What a great post Liz!
Nurses are true unsung every-day heroes … not only for the physical and emotional violence they face in their work routines but also because of their caring dedication to patient care amidst a challenging work environment (including the violent patients, families and bureaucracy they face!)
Just a few observations from a safety professional. recently my wife and I were called late at night by her elderly mother who had just falln in the bathroom. Upon our arrival we decided that she may have broken her arm and transported her to the local hospital ER a short distance away. Upon arrival at the ER entrance I dropped off my wife and her mother at the door and went to park the car. when I returned I had to walk though approximately 15 to 20 people standing outside smoking cigerettes because there was no designated smoking area. I found them standing at a counter, with no one there and a sign that said sign in here, and you will be called shortly. Well we signed in and then waited for over an hour before we were seen. In the mean time My mother-in-law was in a great deal of pain, there were no empty chairs or seats and no one was gentlemanly enough to even offer her a seat. When we were called it was by a young woman who was obviously not an over achiever, or a willing hospital employee we sat at her desk for 45 minutes before she came and asked for our insurance information, she left and came back in about 30 minutes with some forms for us to fill out. I couldn’t help but notice she was flirting with a doctor or orderly in the back where she thought we couldn’t see. When she came back to us she was very impersonable, rude and it was obvious she had no people skills at all.
She would not talk to anyone and told us to take a seat and we would be called as soon as there was an opening. we waited another 2 hours before my mother-in-law was seen, and the another hour and a half before she received treatment. When we left the hospital it was 8am the next morning.
While waiting I found out the the waiting room had 30 seats, there was no designated smoking area outside, and all of the seats in the waiting room were filled by two yes two families, who had brought the whole family even small children, to the ER, because one adult had a running nose. I know this is a cultural thing and seems to me that they and those in the waiting room could have given the situation a little more thought.
However the ER staff and the waiting room staff were young and not properly trained or supervised. I did not see one security officer or supervisor in the ER that night, however police and firemen were shuffled through the area as if they were gods or something. In the mean time people were just left there to wait.
I willsay this when she was finally seen it was obvious the doctors and nursing staff were tired and physically exhaused, but they were professional and treated everyone with dignity.
With a little more preperation and selection of nightime personnel, a little traning in the area of communication and people skills and some supervision things might have been a lot different. I know I would have come away with a little more respect for the hospital than I did. In fact I wrote them a very scathing letter, which is another story. Good Luck
Recently, when I had my daughter in Houston Texas, I witnessed a nurse being attacked by a patient. It took almost 10 minutes for security to come and restrain the person that was attacking her, meanwhile bystanders were trying to get him off of her. I think that hospitals need to have actual officers with tasers to keep patients under control.