OBJECTIVES: To investigate the effectiveness of a risk assessment system in reducing the risk of violence in an acute care hospital in the Canadian province of British Columbia. METHODS: Hospital violence incident rates (number of incidents/100,000 work hours) were calculated and compared pre, during and post implementation of the Alert System, a violence risk assessment system, at one acute care hospital. Poisson regression models were used to examine the effect of the Alert System on hospital-level violent incident rates. Multivariable, conditional logistic regression was used to examine the effect of the Alert System on the individual-level risk of violent incidence using a case-control study. RESULTS: The violent incident rate decreased during the Alert System implementation period only, but subsequently returned to pre-implementation levels. In the case-control analyses, the Alert flag was associated with an increased risk for a patient violent incident (odds ratio=7.74, 95% CI=4.81-12.47). CONCLUSIONS: Although useful at identifying violent patients, the Alert System even though offered in conjunction with violence prevention training, does not appear to provide the resources or procedures needed by healthcare workers to prevent a patient from progressing to a violent incident once flagged. Violence in healthcare should be studied and prevented using a multifaceted approach.
OBJECTIVES: To investigate the effectiveness of a risk assessment system in reducing the risk of violence in an acute care hospital in the Canadian province of British Columbia. METHODS: Hospital violence incident rates (number of incidents/100,000 work hours) were calculated and compared pre, during and post implementation of the Alert System, a violence risk assessment system, at one acute care hospital. Poisson regression models were used to examine the effect of the Alert System on hospital-level violent incident rates. Multivariable, conditional logistic regression was used to examine the effect of the Alert System on the individual-level risk of violent incidence using a case-control study. RESULTS: The violent incident rate decreased during the Alert System implementation period only, but subsequently returned to pre-implementation levels. In the case-control analyses, the Alert flag was associated with an increased risk for a patient violent incident (odds ratio=7.74, 95% CI=4.81-12.47). CONCLUSIONS: Although useful at identifying violent patients, the Alert System even though offered in conjunction with violence prevention training, does not appear to provide the resources or procedures needed by healthcare workers to prevent a patient from progressing to a violent incident once flagged. Violence in healthcare should be studied and prevented using a multifaceted approach.
Authors: Judith E Arnetz; Lydia Hamblin; Jim Russell; Mark J Upfal; Mark Luborsky; James Janisse; Lynnette Essenmacher Journal: J Occup Environ Med Date: 2017-01 Impact factor: 2.162
Authors: Lydia E Hamblin; Lynnette Essenmacher; Mark Luborsky; Jim Russell; James Janisse; Mark Upfal; Judith Arnetz Journal: J Occup Environ Med Date: 2017-09 Impact factor: 2.162
Authors: He Liu; Siqi Zhao; Mingli Jiao; Jingtao Wang; David H Peters; Hong Qiao; Yuchong Zhao; Ye Li; Lei Song; Kai Xing; Yan Lu; Qunhong Wu Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2015-06-16 Impact factor: 3.390
Authors: Caroline Vieira Cláudio Okubo; Júlia Trevisan Martins; Tatiana da Silva Melo Malaquias; Maria José Quina Galdino; Maria do Carmo Fernandez Lourenço Haddad; Alexandrina Aparecida Maciel Cardelli; Renata Cristina de Campos Pereira Silveira Journal: Rev Lat Am Enfermagem Date: 2022