Prevalence of Violence against Health Care Personnel in a Tertiary Care Centre, Hubballi, India

Authors

  • Sushma HR Department of Community Medicine, Karnataka Institute of Medical Sciences, Hubballi
  • Manjunath S Nekar Department of Community Medicine, Karnataka Institute of Medical Sciences, Hubballi
  • Dattatreya D Bant Department of Community Medicine, Karnataka Institute of Medical Sciences, Hubballi

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5455/njcm.20220109031701

Keywords:

Violence, Health care personnel, Verbal abuse, Emergency department

Abstract

Background: The sudden outburst of events in different parts of country like Dhule, Dharwad, Chennai and Jaipur led to the need of conducting a survey about violence against health care personnel. Health care personnel are at high risk of being victims of verbal and physical violence, its effect on them and their views on causes for sudden increase in such events.

Methodology: A semi-structured questionnaire regarding their experience with violence against health care personnel was prepared. Data was collected for two months –May and June 2017. Sample size of 200 was calculated which included doctors, nursing staff and group D workers from KIMS Hubballi and analysed using SPSS version 21.

Results: 99.5% were aware of increasing violent events.76% of them have experienced violence of which, Verbal abuse- 92.10% being the highest form, emotional abuse -17.76% and physical violence 6.58%. The common place of violence was the emergency department -62.09% during daily working hours. 92.10% have reported that patient attenders caused violence.

Conclusion: Verbal and emotional abuse against health care workers has significantly amplified which is deteriorating physician patient relationship. Violence against health care personnel is a serious issue that needs to be dealt with more safety measures at the hospital.

References

Anand T, Grover S, Kumar R, Kumar M, Ingle GK. Workplace violence against resident doctors in a tertiary care hospital in Delhi. Natl Med J India 2016;29:344-348.

Shi J, Wang S, Zhou P, Shi L, Zhang Y, Bai F et al. The Frequency of Patient-Initiated Violence and Its Psychological Impact on Physicians in China: A Cross-Sectional Study. PLOS ONE. 2015;10(6):e0128394.

Talas M, Kocaöz S, Akgüç S. A Survey of Violence Against Staff Working in the Emergency Department in Ankara, Turkey. Asian Nursing Research. 2011;5(4):197-203.

Kumar M. A Study of Workplace Violence Experienced by Doctors and Associated Risk Factors in a Tertiary Care Hos-pital of South Delhi, India. Journal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research.2016 Nov,10(11): LC06-LC10

Vorderwülbecke F, Feistle M, Mehring M, Schneider A, Linde K. Aggression and Violence Against Primary Care Physicians. Deutsches Ärzteblatt international. 2015; Mar 6;112(10):159-65

Tucker J, Cheng Y, Wong B, Gong N, Nie J, Zhu W et al. Patient–physician mistrust and violence against physicians in Guang-dong Province, China: a qualitative study. BMJ Open. 2015;5(10):e008221.

Carmi-Iluz T, Peleg R, Freud T, Shvartzman P. Verbal and physical violence towards hospital- and community-based physicians in the Negev: an observational study. BMC Health Services Research. 2005;5(1).

Ori J, Devi NS, Singh AB, Thongam K, Padu J, Abhilesh R. Preva-lence and attitude of workplace violence among the post graduate students in a tertiary hospital in Manipur. J Med Soc 2014;28:25-8.

Pund SB, Kuril BM, Doibale MK, Ankushe RT, Kumar P, Sid-diqui N. Study of workplace violence, its risk factors and per-ceptions about workplace security in doctors of Paithan. Int J Community Med Public Health 2017;4:1987-92.

Paola, F., Malik, T. & Qureshi, A. Violence against physi-cians. Journal of General Internal Medicine ,1994; 9(9):503-6.

Derazon H, Nissimian S, Yosefy C, Peled R, Hay E. [Violence in the emergency department] Harefuah. 1999;137(03/04):95–101, 175.

M Arimatsu , Wada K, Yoshikawa T et al. An epidemiological study of work related violence experienced by physicians who graduated from a medical school in Japan, Journal of Oc-cupational health 2008; 50:357-361.

Koukia E, Mangoulia P, Gonis N, Katostaras T. Violence against health care staff by patient’s visitor in general hospital in Greece: Possible causes and economic crisis. Open Journal of Nursing. 2013;03(08):21-27.

Talas MS, Kocaöz S, Akgüç S. A survey of violence against staff working in the emergency department in ankara, Turkey. Asian Nursing Researsh (Korean Soc Nurs Sci). 2011 Dec;5(4):197-203.

Winstanley S, Whittington R. Aggression towards health care staff in a UK general hospital: variation among professions and departments. Journal of Clinical Nursing. 2004;13(1):3-10.

Pranjic, N., Males-Bilic, L., Beganlic, A. and Mustajbegovic, J. Mobbing, stress, and work ability among physicians in Bosnia and Herzegovina: Survey study. Croatian Medical Journal, 2006;47(5):750-758.

Yildirim A, Yildirim D. Mobbing in the workplace by peers and managers: mobbing experienced by nurses working in healthcare facilities in Turkey and its effect on nurses. Journal of Clinical Nursing. 2007;16(8):1444-1453.

Schnieden V. Violence at work. Emergency Medicine Journal. 1993;10(2):79-85.

Zahid M, Al-Sahlawi K, Shahid A, Al-Ajmi M, Awadh J. Violence towards doctors: prevalence and effects. Hospital Medicine. 1999;60(6):414-418.

Kuhn W. Violence in the emergency department. Postgraduate Medicine. 1999;105(1):143-154.

Downloads

Published

2022-02-28

How to Cite

1.
HR S, Nekar MS, Bant DD. Prevalence of Violence against Health Care Personnel in a Tertiary Care Centre, Hubballi, India. Natl J Community Med [Internet]. 2022 Feb. 28 [cited 2024 Dec. 22];13(02):79-84. Available from: https://njcmindia.com/index.php/file/article/view/154

Issue

Section

Original Research Articles