Geelong Advertiser

Push to stamp out violence at hospitals

- GRANT MCARTHUR

A CRACKDOWN on violence in Victoria’s hospitals will see health services having to take a stronger stance against aggressive patients to protect staff.

With up to 95 per cent of healthcare workers having been subjected to physical or verbal attacks while trying to care for patients and save lives, hospitals will now be required to implement new statewide standards to respond to and report incidents.

Previously hospitals have set their own guidelines on what constitute­d a “Code Grey” incident.

But under Australian-first guidelines the state’s hospitals will now have a standardis­ed code dictating minimum requiremen­ts on how to respond to threats.

Health Minister Jill Hennessy said the code demanded the training of staff, approaches to handling difficult or aggressive patients and visitors, and was intended to change the culture so staff were encouraged to report bad behaviour.

“Our new Code Grey standards will ensure all hospitals, no matter how big or small, can prevent violence and keep their staff and patients safe,” she said.

“We are sending a strong message that violence against healthcare workers is never OK. There is simply no excuse and violence will never be tolerated.”

Under the changes hospitals must call a Code Grey situation for any real or perceived threat and have specifical­ly trained staff respond immediatel­y to reduce the risk to staff, patients and visitors.

The action follows the death of neurosurge­on Patrick Pritzwald-Stegmann, 41, who died after an alleged assault outside Box Hill Hospital on May 30.

Joseph Esmaili, 22, has been charged over the alleged incident.

The Andrews Government this year launched the “It’s never OK” campaign, hoped to reduce aggression against healthcare workers and paramedics, as well as a $40 million Health Service Violence Prevention Fund.

 ??  ?? ON THE RUN: Adopted husky Delta escaped from a Newcomb yard on Friday and may be searching for her old home. Inset, Delta with Kerry Peart, one of her new owners.
ON THE RUN: Adopted husky Delta escaped from a Newcomb yard on Friday and may be searching for her old home. Inset, Delta with Kerry Peart, one of her new owners.

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