| Literature DB >> 32552677 |
Kevin Davey1, Veda Ravishankar2, Nikita Mehta2, Tania Ahluwalia3, Janice Blanchard2, Jeffrey Smith2, Katherine Douglass2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Emergency department (ED) workplace violence is increasingly recognized as an important issue for ED providers. Most studies have occurred in developed countries with established laws and repercussions for violence against healthcare providers. There is a paucity of data on workplace violence against ED providers in less developed countries. The aim of this study was to learn more about workplace violence among healthcare providers in EDs in India.Entities:
Keywords: Developing emergency care systems; Healthcare workplace violence; India; Violence against healthcare workers
Year: 2020 PMID: 32552677 PMCID: PMC7301447 DOI: 10.1186/s12245-020-00290-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Emerg Med ISSN: 1865-1372
Fig. 1Interview guide—workplace violence
Coding scheme
| Theme | Sub-themes |
|---|---|
| Types of violence | Verbal violence, physical violence |
| Experiences of violence | Between patients and doctors, between attendants/bystanders and doctors, between patients and nurses, between bystanders and nurses, between patients and other hospital staff, between bystanders and other hospital staff |
| Causes of violence | Financial, health literacy, communication challenges, emotional factors, perpetuation based on media/prior events, gender factors, ED factors (crowding, noisiness, long wait times, etc), age factors, intoxication |
| Description of events | Timing, involving physicians, involving nurses, involving other ED staff, involving patients, involving family or attendants/bystanders |
| Consequences | On doctors or providers, on patients and their care, on society |
| Responsibility | Patients, bystanders/attendants, nurses, doctors, other hospital staff, hospital, society |
| Prevention strategies | Improved communication, improved knowledge and skills (among physicians/providers), improved patient and societal education, improved security, hospital interventions, government interventions |
Fig. 2Map of hospital locations
Response frequencies and relative frequencies
| Sub-theme: verbal | 167 | 81.4% |
| Sub-theme: physical | 38 | 18.5% |
| Sub-theme: between attendants/bystanders and doctors | 69 | 54.8% |
| Sub-theme: between attendants/bystanders and nurses | 16 | 12.7% |
| Sub-theme: between attendants/bystanders and other hospital staff | 16 | 12.7% |
| Sub-theme: between patients and doctors | 15 | 11.9% |
| Sub-theme: between patients and nurses | 4 | 3.2% |
| Sub-theme: between patients and other hospital staff | 6 | 4.8% |
| Sub-theme: financial | 91 | 13.2% |
| Sub-theme: health Literacy | 162 | 23.6% |
| Sub-theme: communication challenges | 80 | 11.7% |
| Sub-theme: emotional factors | 73 | 10.6% |
| Sub-theme: gender factors | 26 | 3.8% |
| Sub-theme: perpetuation based on media/prior events | 9 | 1.3% |
| Sub-theme: age factors | 31 | 4.5% |
| Sub-theme: intoxication | 23 | 3.4% |
| Sub-theme: Timing | 52 | 15% |
| Sub-theme: involving physicians | 44 | 12.7% |
| Sub-theme: involving nurses | 23 | 6.6% |
| Sub-theme: involving other ED staff | 8 | 2.3% |
| Sub-theme: involving patients | 42 | 12.1% |
| Sub-theme: involving family or bystanders | 177 | 51.2% |
| Sub-theme: on doctors or providers | 113 | 59.5% |
| Sub-theme: on patients and their care | 57 | 30% |
| Sub-theme: on society | 20 | 10.5% |
| Sub-theme: patients | 21 | 16% |
| Sub-theme: bystanders/attendants | 23 | 17.6% |
| Sub-theme: nurses | 4 | 3.1% |
| Sub-theme: doctors | 19 | 14.5% |
| Sub-theme: other hospital staff | 9 | 6.9% |
| Sub-theme: hospitals | 22 | 16.8% |
| Sub-theme: society | 33 | 25.2% |
| Sub-theme: improved communication | 79 | 27.7% |
| Sub-theme: improved knowledge and skills (among physicians/providers) | 13 | 4.6% |
| Sub-theme: improved patient and societal education | 57 | 20% |
| Sub-theme: improved security | 45 | 15.8% |
| Sub-theme: hospital interventions | 75 | 26.3% |
| Sub-theme: government interventions | 16 | 5.6% |
Representative quotations
| Theme | Quotation |
|---|---|
| Types of violence | “Verbal, almost on a daily basis, especially when it gets busy. Recently an attender, because we didn’t have beds, was very frustrated. He started calling us words like ‘idiots, fools.’” |
| Experiences of violence | In regards to a recent patient who presented with abdominal pain and difficulty breathing who later went into septic shock, “They started shouting, ‘What have you done with our patient? How did she become hypotensive? Initially her BP was fine!’ And they were not able to understand… They were talking like, ‘You didn’t give her anything to drink so that’s why she went into shock!’ Two or three attendants were there and all of the were shouting and the situation escalated quite a bit.” |
| Causes of violence | “People shouting, demanding for fast disposition in spite of other patients. When you are attending some other serious patient, they don’t understand the fact that the other patient needs much more attention. They just want their part to be cleared off and to be sent home.” |
| Description of events | “One patient arrested, so my colleague immediately started CPR. But when the patient attender came inside, they thought we were beating him… The lady, I think the patient’s wife, she gave a slap to my colleagues… it took so long to convince them what actually happened.” |
| Consequences | “For the residents and physicians, it creates and unhealthy environment and a lack of trust.” |
| Responsibility | “It’s not only patient bystanders. If any violence is happening in the ED we can combat the violence by constantly counseling the patient attenders regarding the process what’s going on. Suppose a patient comes and we say ‘this lab takes 2-3 h, this is the cost.’ If we counsel everything from this point to point the violence part at least will calm down. See India is a developing country, perception is different actually. What the general public thinks is this hospital charge more, they work like a corporate sector, they don’t bother about patients, they bother only about the money.” |
| Prevention strategies | “When we are receiving patients inside our ER we have to make the attenders await outside. If we avoid attenders entering our department, we can avoid violence.” |