• Intern Emerg Med · Sep 2020

    Violence against health workers: findings from three emergency departments in the teaching hospital of Padua, Italy.

    • Miranda Zoleo, Foscarina Della Rocca, Federico Tedeschi, Mirka Zucchetto, Giovanna Maddalena, and Gianna Vettore.
    • Aulss 4 Veneto Orientale Emergency Department Portogruaro, CAP 30026, Portogruaro, Venetia, Italy. miranda.zoleo@aulss4.veneto.it.
    • Intern Emerg Med. 2020 Sep 1; 15 (6): 1067-1074.

    AbstractEmergency departments (EDs) are high-risk places for Workplace Violence (WPV). In Italy, this phenomenon is scarcely investigated. The aim of this study is to evaluate the incidence, experiencing and perception of WPV in the general ED (GED), paediatric ED (PED) and obstetric-gynaecological ED (OGED) of the teaching hospital Azienda Ospedaliera in Padua (AOP). We led a cross-sectional study among the GED, OGED and PED staffs, submitting an anonymous questionnaire, regarding personal information, verbal and physical aggression experiences, risk factors and proposals for corrective actions. Our sample consists of 73 people from GED, 45 from OGED and 53 from PED. Aggressions are common. Verbal aggressions are almost never recorded, even in the case of physical aggressions, 41% did not signal the event. Both in GED and in OGED, most of the staff (68.9% and 75.0%, respectively) underwent aggression by neither psychiatric nor substance abuser patients (PSAPs). Physical aggressions are more common in GED than in OGED and in PED; most of professionals were assaulted by PSAPs. In all EDs, verbal or physical assault has been lived through by anger, resignation or fear, rarely by indifference. Professionals think there are structural characteristics and risk factors that could be corrected. They do not know how to manage assaults and would deem it useful training meetings with experts. Our results regarding how staff perceive and experience violence in the ED concern a local situation, that nevertheless reflect current evidence about the topic of WPV which plagues EDs across the globe.

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