| Literature DB >> 32927880 |
Lisa Pompeii1, Elisa Benavides1, Oana Pop2, Yuliana Rojas3, Robert Emery2, George Delclos2, Christine Markham2, Abiodun Oluyomi1, Karim Vellani4, Ned Levine5.
Abstract
Workplace violence (WPV) has been extensively studied in hospitals, yet little is known about WPV in outpatient physician clinics. These settings and work tasks may present different risk factors for WPV compared to hospitals, including the handling/exchange of cash, and being remotely located without security presence. We conducted a systematic literature review to describe what is currently known about WPV in outpatient physician clinics. Six literature databases were searched and reference lists from included articles published from 2000-2019. Thirteen quantitative and five qualitative manuscripts were included which all focused on patient/family-perpetrated violence in outpatient physician clinics. No studies examined other violence types (e.g., worker-on-worker; burglary). The overall prevalence of Type II violence ranged from 9.5% to 74.6%, with the most common form being verbal abuse (42.1-94.3%), followed by threat of assault (14.0-57.4%), bullying (2.5-5.7%), physical assault, (0.5-15.9%) and sexual harassment/assault (0.2-9.3%). Worker consequences included reduced work performance, anger, and depression. Most workers did not receive training on how to manage a violent patient. More work is needed to examine the prevalence and risk factors of WPV in outpatient physician clinics for purposes of informing prevention efforts in these settings.Entities:
Keywords: outpatient physician clinic; primary care; violence; workplace aggression; workplace violence
Year: 2020 PMID: 32927880 PMCID: PMC7558610 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17186587
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses (PRISMA) overview of literature search and review of studies.
Research articles pertaining to workplace violence in outpatient physician clinics (n = 18).
| Author, Year, Country | Study Design | Sample Size | Work Group(s) | Data Collection Methods | Response Rate | Prevalence Period | Violence Prevalence | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Violence Type | All Types | Verbal Abuse | Threat of Assault | Bully-ing | Physical Assault | Sexual Assault/Harass | Intimi-Date | |||||||
| Ayranci et al., 2006, Turkey [ | CS | 151 | All | Survey | NA a | 12 m | Type II | 49.0% b | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Magin et al., 2009, Australia g [ | Q | 19 | RT | Interviews/QS | 55.0% | - | Type II | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| El-Gilany et al., 2010, Saudi Arabia [ | CS | 1091 | All | Survey | 96.1% | 12 m | Type II | 27.7% | 52.4% | 33.3% | 2.5% | 5.0% | NR/1.4% | - |
| Al-Turki et al., 2016, Saudi Arabia [ | CS | 270 | All | Survey | NR | 12 m | Type II | 45.6% | 94.3% | - | - | 6.5% | - | 22.0% |
| Bayman and Hussain 2007, England [ | CS | 207 | RT | Survey | 68.0% | 12 m | Type II | - | - | 26.0% | - | 0.5% | - | - |
| Chambers and Kelly 2006, Ireland [ | CS | 271 | RT | Survey | 68.0% | NR | Type II | 62.0% | 99.0% | 31.0% | - | 6.0% | - | - |
| Dixon et al., 2003, England [ | CS | 171 c | RT | Survey | 78.0% | 12 m | Type II | - | 68.0% | 14.0% | - | 4.0% | <5.0% | - |
| Fisekovic et al., 2015, Serbia [ | CS | 1526 | All | Survey | 86.9% | NR | Type II | 52.6% | 43.5% | - | 5.7% | 1.9% | NR/0.4% | - |
| Forrest et al., 2011 Australia [ | CS | 804 | MD | Survey | 26.3% | 12 m | Type II | - | 58.0% | - | - | 6.0% | 0.1/6.0% | - |
| Gascon et al., 2009, Spain [ | CS | 440 | MD, RT, AD | Survey | NA a | 12 m | Type II | - | 59.3% d | 57.4% d | - | 15.9% d | - | - |
| Koritsas et al., 2007, Australia [ | CS | 211 | MD | Survey | 21.1% | 12 m | Type II | 57.0% | 44.0% | - | - | 3.0% | 1.0/8.0% | 22.0% |
| Magin et al., 2005, Australia e [ | CS | 528 | MD | Survey | 49.0% | 12 m | Type II | 63.7% | 42.1% | 23.1% | - | 2.7% | 0.2/9.3% | - |
| Magin et al., 2011, Australia [ | CS | 125 | All | Survey | 55.0% | 12 m | Type II | 59.3% (MD); 74.6% (other) | 64.0% | 24.8% | - | 1.0% | NR/8% | - |
| Rincon-del Toro et al., 2016, Spain [ | CS | 11,525 | All | System Reported Events | NA | 24 m | Type II | 9.5% | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Magin et al., 2006, Australia e [ | Q | 18 FG/ | MD | FG/QS | - | - | Type II | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Magin et al., 2008, Australia e (a) [ | Q | 18 FG/ | MD | FG/QS | - | - | Type II | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Magin et al., 2008, Australia e (b) [ | Q | 18 FG/ | MD | FG/QS | - | Over career | Type II | 75.0% | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Magin et al., 2010, Australia g [ | Q | 19 | RT | Interviews | - | - | Type II | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Study Design: CS = cross sectional; Q = Qualitative. Sample size: FG = focus groups; QS = qualitative surveys. Work groups: MD = physician; AD = administration; RT = receptionist; all = all clinic and nonclinical staff; response rate: m = month; NA = Not applicable; NR = Not reported. a Study examined hospital/clinic locations and response rate for outpatient/primary care clinics not provided; b examined all health care settings and provides only overall violence prevalence for outpatient clinics; c calculated sample size from percentages given; d re-calculated rates to include total for rural and urban primary care clinics; e manuscripts pertain to the same study; f 18 participants from focus groups and 154 from qualitative questionnaires; g manuscripts pertain to the same study.
Prevalence estimates of outpatient physician clinic WPV by worker and clinic characteristics.
| Al-Turki ( | Chambers ( | Dixon ( | El-Gilany ( | Fisekovic ( | Forrest ( | Koritsas ( | Magin, 2005 ( | Magin, 2011 ( | Rincon-del Toro (11,525) [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||||||
| Male | 48.2% | 28.6% | 15.2% | 54.0%/25.0% d | 53.3% | |||||
| Female | 44.0% | 26.2% | 84.8% | 46.0%/75.0% d | 72.6% | |||||
|
| ||||||||||
| Doctor | 44.4% | 41.2% | 28.6% | 26.3% b | 57.0% | 63.7% | 59.3% | 24.4% | ||
| Nurse | 36.0% | 24.7% a | 62.1% | 9.5% | ||||||
| Receptionist | 68.4% | 62.0% | 68.0% c | 15.1% | ||||||
| Technician | 40.0% | 24.5% | ||||||||
| Other/unknown | 71.4% | 37.1% | 9.2% | 3.3 | ||||||
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| ||||||||||
| Urban | 21.4% | 43.0% c | 57.7% | |||||||
| Rural | 22.0% | 51.0% c | 85.1% | |||||||
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| ||||||||||
| ≤10 years | (34.8%; 5.8%) | 20.6% | ||||||||
| 11–20 (10+) | (23.9%) | 33.5% | ||||||||
| >20 | 45.9% |
a Includes midwives; b excludes property damage/theft; c verbal abuse only; d estimates of low-level violence (verbal abuse, property damage/theft, threats, slander)/high level violence (physical abuse, sexual abuse, stalking, sexual harassment); e estimates for other individual work groups not reported.
Factors contributing to workplace violence events in outpatient physician clinics.
| WPV Event Factors | Al-Turki ( | El-Gilany ( | Rincon-del Toro ( |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Morning shift | 38.0% | 18.9% | |
| Evening/night shift | 64.1% | 49.8/31.2% | |
|
| |||
| Inside workplace | 99.2% | ||
| Consultation | 62.7% | ||
| Reception counter | 0.3% | ||
|
| |||
| Patient | 71.5% | 23.1% | 67.8% |
| Companion | 20.3% | 68.1% | 28.1% |
| Patient and Companion | 3.3% | ||
|
| |||
| Male | 65.9% | 95% | 56.8% |
| Female | 30.1% | 5.0% | 43.2% |
| Both | 4.1% | ||
|
| |||
| <20 | 7.3% | 25.0% | |
| 20–39 (19–30; 31–40) | 59.9% | (12.9%; 26.7%) | |
| 21–45 (40+) | 61.0% | (5.9%) | (60.4) |
| ≥46 | 31.7% | ||
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|
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| Misunderstandings between HCW and perpetrator | 40.7% | 37.1% a | |
| Unmet service or needs | 36.6% | 72.2% a | 36.3% |
| Language or communication barriers | 23.5% a | ||
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| |||
| Overcrowding | 33.3% | 65.9% a | |
| Long waiting times | 32.5% | 17.0% | |
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| Lack of security in the clinic | 39.4% a | ||
| Lack of protective measures | 13.6% a | ||
| Lack of penalty for perpetrator | 49.6% | 67.2% a | |
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| |||
| Reaction to injury/accident/illness | 0.8% | 56.9% a | |
| Lack of knowledge/illiteracy | 30.1% a | ||
| Impatience (patient in a hurry) | 58.9% a | ||
| Mentally ill | 20.9% a | ||
| Drug abuse | 12.9% | ||
| Request of work leave/sick note | 5.0% |
a Sample size for contributors to violence (n = 302).