Value Care, Value Nurses

Nurses' Reality: Enduring Injuries While Caring for Patients

Wall Street Journal

By BENJAMIN BREWER, M.D.




Excerpt

...Many nurses and nursing assistants have had patients accidentally injure them. One obstetrics nurse at our hospital was injured when a patient grabbed her around the neck while pushing in labor. She needed medical treatment for a neck strain afterwards.

Certified nurse assistants, who do the bulk of patient lifting and moving, get back injuries frequently. They often work shorthanded because the pay is low, the work is hard and their co-workers don't show up. Patients unexpectedly drop on them or grab them and pull them off balance.

A 2002 study in the Journal of Emergency found that at a large Florida hospital 88% of nurses reported being verbally assaulted and 74% reported being physically assaulted while at work in the past year. (Read the abstract)

With hospitals focused on patient safety and patient satisfaction, the nursing safety issue hasn't gotten as much attention.

Nurses and doctors in the emergency department are the most likely to encounter workplace violence.

A 2005 study of Michigan ER doctors showed that 75% were verbally threatened, 28% were physically assaulted and 3.5% were stalked in the previous year. (Read the abstract)

Read the full article

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