Saturday’s senseless violence at Methodist Dallas Medical Center that took the lives of two health care workers has stunned the health care community across the country. People working in hospitals are five times more likely to experience nonfatal, violence-related injuries than those working in private industry. Nurses and other staff directly involved in patient care are often subjected to violence, bullying and aggression. The pandemic marked an alarming increase in workplace violence. A found that 44% of nurses reported experiencing physical violence and 68% reported experiencing verbal abuse.

While health care workers have long accepted violence as an unavoidable part of the job, being shoved, kicked, hit, harassed, intimidated, yelled at or even worse is NEVER part of anyone’s job. Sadly, many incidents go unreported for many reasons. In talking to our members, most health care workers have a story to go with their physical and emotional scars. As health care leaders, we must urgently lead work with all clinicians, staff and leadership to drive a cultural change so no one accepts workplace violence as part of a health care worker’s job.

To help hospitals and health systems protect their employees and patients, the American Organization for Nursing Leadership and the Emergency Nurses Association developed Guiding Principles on Mitigating Workplace Violence in 2015. AONL and ENA recently updated the using new research and incorporating best practices. This update includes a with resources and tools to customize a workplace violence prevention program.

AONL and ENA leadership identified the following principles for hospital and health systems as they build on their existing violence prevention efforts:

  • Ground workplace violence prevention programs using evidence-based strategies.
  • Employ comprehensive solutions, recognizing the intersecting layers of intrusive, consumer, relational and organizational violence.
  • Mitigate workplace violence by establishing support through the breadth of the organization.
  • Promote a culture of safety to create a healthy work environment
  • Ensure interprofessional teams (leadership, staff, patients and visitors) are committed to reporting incidents of violence and acting to prevent workplace violence.
  • Emphasize accountability, regardless of role or discipline, to uphold foundational standards of nonviolent behavior.

As health care leaders, we know hospitals’ #1 resource is our team, and our priority is the health and safety of our health workers so they can best care for our communities.

We encourage leaders to embrace the Guiding Principles on Mitigating Violence in the Workplace. Together, we can build an environment where health care workers, patients and visitors feel safe, appreciated and where they thrive. We also urge the health care community and policymakers to find solutions to mitigate workplace violence.

Robyn Begley, DNP, RN, is CEO of the American Organization for Nursing Leadership and also serves as senior vice president and chief nursing officer of the ºÚÁÏÕýÄÜÁ¿ Association. Nancy MacRae is CEO of the Emergency Nurses Association.

Related News Articles

Perspective
Public
America’s hospitals and health systems are places of healing, hope and health. They strive to deliver quality care every hour of every day for everyone and do…
Headline
A new initiative launched March 18 by the Dr. Lorna Breen Heroes' Foundation seeks to improve mental health care access for health care workers. The program,…
Headline
A study published Feb. 26 by JAMA Psychiatry found that female physicians died by suicide at more than 1.5 times the rate of female nonphysicians from 2017-…
Headline
A shooting at UPMC Memorial Hospital Feb. 22 in York, Pa., left the suspected gunman and a police officer dead and injured others, according to multiple…
Headline
The AHA voiced support for bipartisan House legislation introduced Feb. 4 to reauthorize for five years the Dr. Lorna Breen Health Care Provider Protection Act…
Headline
The Food and Drug Administration Jan. 30 announced it approved Journavx (suzetrigine) oral tablets, a first-in-class non-opioid drug, to treat moderate to…