• Acad Emerg Med · Feb 1995

    Violence and general security in the emergency department.

    • G J Ordog, J Wasserberger, C Ordog, G Ackroyd, and S Atluri.
    • King/Drew-UCLA Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Los Angeles 90059, USA.
    • Acad Emerg Med. 1995 Feb 1;2(2):151-4.

    ObjectiveTo describe cases of violence related to weapons in a university hospital and urban county ED and to provide related recommendations for ED staff security.MethodsDescriptive analysis and case examples of weapons-related assaults in one urban ED for the period 1979-1993.ResultsOver a 14-year period, 115 "incidents" of weapons-related violence were identified during the management of approximately 980,000 patients. Examples of ED violence are described.ConclusionEmergency department staff should prepare for the possibility of violence by 1) recognizing the danger, 2) rehearsing response mechanisms, and 3) debriefing after incidents. In particular, plans must be made and practiced for the time when external violence follows the surviving victims of gang activity through the "sacrosanct" hospital doors. Protection of patients and ED personnel must be ensured. In many urban settings, appropriately armed security guards must be immediately accessible to the ED staff. Other suggestions for ED protection are given.

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