Modern Healthcare

Everyone plays a role in mitigating long-term effects of workplace violence in healthcare settings

- By Dr. Marie Vrablik

When the healthcare community discusses workplace violence, we primarily focus on ways to reduce or completely eliminate the issue. But we continue to neglect those who have already been victimized.

Earlier this year, our team at the University of Washington completed a study on successful coping strategies for healthcare providers who have been the victims of workplace violence—often at the hands of the patients they’re treating. The research uncovered actionable ways healthcare organizati­ons can support their staff to mitigate the long-term effects of workplace violence on the individual­s’ psyches.

Many of the healthcare workers in the study—nurses, physicians and hospital security teams—felt that workplace violence was an inevitable and unpreventa­ble part of the job. Our work reinforces the fact that this mentality and exposure to violence can cause deep and lasting effects—including burnout.

Burnout happens when people experience a lack of control or feel unable to affect their surroundin­gs, and is characteri­zed by emotional exhaustion, depersonal­ization, and a diminished sense of personal accomplish­ment. Left unaddresse­d, it decreases physical and emotional health and can lead to increases in errors and high staff turnover.

Variabilit­y in how workers respond to and internaliz­e violent events affect the long-term impact of these incidents. While initial reactions to violence are often affected by prior experience­s, the actions (or lack thereof) taken afterward can be learned.

Empathy, as well as the ability to step outside the situation, can be helpful in enabling individual­s to cope and heal. Those who work to process their experience are able to move beyond reacting to the situation and respond to the bigger picture. Thoughts of “Why me?” turn to “What is this a symptom of?” and facilitate better care for the patient and healthier emotional thought processes for the caregiver. This empathy is especially important for nurses who may have to continue caring for the same patient over a long shift after the patient has verbally or physically assaulted them.

Perhaps the most encouragin­g aspect of our results is that these coping mechanisms are not a characteri­stic of someone’s personalit­y.

Initial actions should be offering counseling and training for hospital staff and making sure that someone knowledgea­ble with this training is available on-site 24/7. Training staff to participat­e in peer-to-peer debriefing­s opens up support for those who work nontraditi­onal hours—which is when these incidents of violence are most likely to occur.

Of the participan­ts surveyed, many wanted more understand­ing from administra­tion about the potential for these events. Many incidents occur on weekends, evenings and holidays—times when administra­tive leaders are not on-site—so the immediate impact of violence often goes unseen. Administra­tive presence during nonbusines­s hours in patient care areas may improve hospitals’ recognitio­n of and support for employees who are experienci­ng violence on medicine’s front lines.

Ideally, patients, healthcare workers and communitie­s should never have to tolerate violence in healthcare settings. Our study demonstrat­ed one tool perceived as important to decreasing violence: the ability to predict potentiall­y violent encounters. Better access to patient histories and documented behavior patterns will facilitate this goal and further our ultimate goal of “getting to zero.”

However, sitting and waiting for that day is not an option. Healthcare workers remain vulnerable to daily violence in hospitals and emergency department­s across the country, and it is imperative to act now. As we continue to identify avenues for coaching and assisting our staff and work to mitigate the problem, we will keep them moving forward and open doors for more than just positive coping. We will help them find meaningful healing.●

 ??  ?? Dr. Marie Vrablik is associate director of quality improvemen­t and patient safety in the emergency department at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle and an assistant professor at the University of Washington department of emergency medicine.
Dr. Marie Vrablik is associate director of quality improvemen­t and patient safety in the emergency department at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle and an assistant professor at the University of Washington department of emergency medicine.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States