Workplace violence Legislation Health care/social assistance Health Care Workers

Lawmakers seek OSHA standard on workplace violence prevention in health care

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Photo: Wavebreakmedia/iStockphoto

Washington — Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) and 12 other House Democrats have introduced legislation intended to curb workplace violence in health care facilities.

The Health Care Workplace Violence Prevention Act, introduced March 8, would direct OSHA to create a standard that would require health care facilities to develop and implement facility- and unit-specific workplace violence prevention plans.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries, at least 58 hospital workers died as a result of workplace violence between 2011 and 2016. In 2016, the Government Accountability Office found that health care workers at inpatient facilities were five to 12 times more likely to encounter nonfatal workplace violence than all other workers.

The legislation follows regulation enacted in 2014 in California, which went into effect in 2017, directing Cal/OSHA to craft a workplace violence prevention standard. The law requires all covered health care employers in California to develop and issue – by April 1 – plans to prevent workplace violence and ensure the safety of patients and workers.

The bill introduced by Khanna is similar: Workplaces would create and implement comprehensive violence prevention plans with input from doctors, nurses and custodial workers. The bill stresses prevention, training and worker participation. It defines workplace violence broadly to include not only physical acts of violence, but threats of violence. It emphasizes staffing as a crucial ingredient in preventing violence from occurring and responding quickly when it does.

“Health care workers, doctors and nurses are continuously at risk of workplace violence incidents – strangling, punching, kicking and other physical attacks – that can cause severe injury or death,” Khanna said in a March 8 press release. “This is simply unacceptable. The Health Care Workplace Violence Prevention Act puts a comprehensive plan in place and is a national solution to this widespread problem modeled after the success seen in California.”

National Nurses United, the nation’s largest union of registered nurses, applauded the bill.

“Right now, health care facilities are not doing enough to prevent these violent incidents,” NNU Co-President Deborah Burger said in a press release. “Under the proposed federal standard, hospitals would need to assess and correct for environmental risk factors, patient specific risk factors, staffing and security system sufficiency. There are a number of interventions that can reduce violence in the hospital.

“For example, affixing furniture and lighting so they can’t be used as weapons, maintaining clear lines of sight between workers while they are caring for patients, and providing easy access to panic buttons or phones to call for help. It is imperative that nurses, doctors, and other health care workers, along with security staff and custodial personnel, are all involved in the development and implementation of these plans.”

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SteveR
March 16, 2018
Yet again more worthless legislation! This is NOT a government program, this is an individual healthcare providors problem to deal with. all 58 deaths probably stem from 1 location or place or corporation and this is yet again more Government over reach into the private sector by Democrats. What 3 regulations does this bills remove in order to create this new regulation??? or are Democrats still not listening to the presidents rules for regulations, this will be vetoed, which means these Representatives KNOWINGLY wasted tax payer money on a bill they KNOW will be vetoed. Again, Democrats just wasting money and will point at Trump when spending is up.

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Robert Triplett
March 16, 2018
Are you folks asleep? There are requirements for employers to conduct hazard assessments, to train employees about the hazards that exist, to create plans and procedures regarding those hazards already! And employers can also use guidance on this topic at: https://www.osha.gov/Publications/osha3148.pdf . I recall dealing with this topic as a compliance officer for Federal OSHA and MIOSHA back as early as 1996 and on until 2014. The problem is not more regulations, it's that existing regulations are rarely ever used or enforced because the lack of enforcement personnel knowledge of how to cite the regulations or supervisors that are not actively making their compliance officers do their job! And this is a Democrat making an effort to wake you up!

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Brian Carr
March 16, 2018
To the idiot commenting below about this being worthless litigation, you are obviously clueless. Since the government de-institutionalized the mental health system in America, those mentally ill patients are now receiving healthcare in hospitals built for the general population. Our hospitals are not staffed or equipped to deal with multiple patients on a single floor with violent tendencies due to mental health. My wife is a nurse and has been attacked multiple times throughout her 14 year career. My 115 pound wife deeerves a workplace free from exposure to violence at the hands of 300 pound psychopaths and opioid addicts.

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Ken Hann
March 16, 2018
"It is imperative that nurses, doctors, and other health care workers, along with security staff and custodial personnel, are all involved in the development and implementation of these plans.” This last sentence is critical to make this or any program successful.

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Juan D
March 21, 2018
Another Chicken Little scene to steer more power to the irrelevant government so they can justify higher taxes and micro manage the populace.

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Bonny S. Williams
March 21, 2018
Should be a standard in all workplaces

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Jerry B.
March 21, 2018
My fellow countryman, once again our government has create the problem when they de-institutionalized the mental health system in America and put the unstable into the general population. We would be in most cases far better off if the legislators and senators would stay out of the way and let this country run itself. Most of them don't really care to start with, it's about the vote so they can continue to live quite nicely off the tax payers of this country.

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Carol
March 21, 2018
I work in a Public Mental Health hospital and we are already required by current regulation and policy to "have and implement comprehensive violence prevention plans with input from doctors, nurses and custodial workers". And our current plan does include and emphasis on prevention, training and worker participation. And the violence continues. Setting a standard at the federal level will only create "unfunded mandates." It's been my experience that tax payers don't want to pay "top dollar" to care for these very complicated people. But I think we lose sight of the fact that they are -people- first.. someone's son or daughter, aunt or friend. Mental illness manifests itself in many ways - not always with violence... and one doesn't have to be mentally ill or an addict to be violent either. As a society, more needs to be done to instill "core values" that emphasize treating ALL people with greater respect and care. While some illnesses can distort perceptions (so someone may feel threatened even when they are not, etc.) and some can cause a lack of impulse control (lashing out verbally or physically with or without cause), it always boils down to a basic interaction between two people... maybe if we can improve on that, we can reduce violence.

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Sue B
March 21, 2018
That's all very well and good for hospital workers but how do they propose protecting nurses that work in the community setting such as in home health or in occupational health? Home health nurses are at even greater risk when in someone's home delivering health care, and may be told by their supervisor "don't go to the home if you don't feel safe" (but we won't pay you either). I hope that whatever is proposed is something more than lip service.

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Kathy
March 22, 2018
I work in a free standing healthcare facility made up of separate offices all off the same hall we have no plan in place and feel these facilities are at risk due to drugs on premises cash ,We have a suite that is a full Pharmacy which has been robbed at gunpoint other offices were not even notified. thank you for approaching this legislation as I'm currently trying to get plans building wide in place to protect our workers and you just gave me more info to approach management with

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Hector Alvarez
July 22, 2018
The Healthcare Workplace Violence Prevention Standard enacted in California has generated a significant level of prevention activities that otherwise, in my opinion, would likely not have taken place. I have worked directly with healthcare organizations of all types and violence is woven into the fabric of the job, almost accepted as "par for the course". This legislation is anything but worthless. However, I will concede the fact that its not at all clear what is going to be done with the data that is being collected as part of the reporting/recording mandate.