Violence Against ER Nurses, Other Medical Professionals Increases

Violence against nurses and other medical professionals appears to be increasing as more drug addicts, alcoholics and psychiatric patients go to emergency rooms for help, The Associated Press has found.

And with cash-strapped states cutting back support for public hospitals, mental health jobs, addiction programs and other services, experts say that the problem is becoming worse.

Visits to ERs for drug- and alcohol-related incidents climbed from 1.6 million in 2005 to 2 million in 2008, and the number of those visits resulting in violence increased from 16,277 to 21,406, according to the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.

Noting that “violence no longer stops at the doors” of an emergency room, the American College of Emergency Physicians has recommended the installation of panic buttons, direct phone lines to local police and bulletproof glass. Detroit’s Henry Ford Hospital started using a metal detector and, in the first six months, it confiscated 33 handguns, 1,324 knives and 97 Mace sprays.

Efforts have picked up recently to strengthen penalties for assaults against health care workers. Part of the impetus came after the Emergency Nurses Association reported last year that more than half of the 3,465 emergency room nurses polled in an online survey said they had been assaulted at work.

“It came as news to me that they are one of the most assaulted professions out there,” said Denise Driehaus, an Ohio state representative who is pushing for tougher nurse-assault penalties.

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2 comments to “Violence Against ER Nurses, Other Medical Professionals Increases”

  1. Kip Teitsort

    I am so thankful the media is FINALLY starting to take assaults on those in the medical profession as serious as the subject really is.

    I have been speaking and training EMS/Fire and Healthcare Providers on this subject for 14 years. The stories I hear every time I travel and teach make me sick……..employers hiding the actual numbers of assaults occurring at the workplace……telling staff ” It’s part of the job”………..

    Times are changing!

  2. Frank Mirer

    I believe that most injuries are suffered in long term and custodial care facilties, not emergency rooms.

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