Custom Quick Reference Information Directories
GCC Blog

We hope you find our articles informative and interesting. If you'd like to receive our monthly newsletter with articles like these, please take a minute to sign up.

Health Workers to Wear Panic Buttons as Assaults Triple

October 5th, 2021 by Guest Communications

 

Written by: September 28, 2021 • Chacour Koop, The Charlotte Observer

(TNS)  – Health care workers at a Missouri hospital will wear “personal panic buttons” as violence has sharply increased during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Cox Medical Center Branson said hundreds of employees will be equipped with the extra layer of protection in response to an alarming increase in assaults and injuries.

From 2019 to 2020, patient assaults on employees more than tripled, from 40 to 123 while injuries increased from 17 to 78 at the hospital in southwest Missouri. The hospital said the pandemic is “greatly compounding the issue.”

Ashley Blevins, a nurse at Cox Medical Center Branson, told KYTV that employees have endured spitting, cussing and assaults.

”They come in here and they have to sit in here because everywhere is full,” Blevins told the news outlet. “We have no placements to put anybody and that’s frustrating on the patient, that’s frustrating on us, and I think that’s increasing a lot of violence towards everyone.”

COVID-19 cases and deaths surged in southwest Missouri over summer as the delta variant spread. In Taney County, where Cox Medical Center Branson is located, about 36% of eligible residents are vaccinated.

Even before the pandemic, health care workers experienced higher levels of violence. Between 2002 and 2013, hospital, nursing home and other health care workers were four times more likely than those private industry to experience serious workplace violence, according to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.

About 300 to 400 employees in the emergency department and in-patient hospital rooms will wear personal panic buttons on their badges. If employees need help, they’ll press the button to alert the hospital security system and their location will be tracked.

“When Public Safety response is critical and it’s not possible to get to a phone, personal panic buttons fill a critical void,” Public Safety and Security System Director Alan Butler said in a news release. “Personal Panic Buttons are one more tool in the battle to keep our staff safe and further demonstrate this organization’s commitment to maintaining a safe work and care environment.”

The new panic button system will be implemented by the end of the year with help from a $132,000 grant by the Skaggs Foundation, a philanthropic organization funding health initiatives in the area.

“When this project was presented to us in August, we saw the importance and urgency of it,” Skaggs Legacy Endowment Grant Committee Chairperson Nita Jane Ayres said in the news release. “Our healthcare workers already sacrifice so much but their safety should never be sacrificed.”

©2021 The Charlotte Observer. Visit charlotteobserver.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

This article was on Emergency Management News and is has been shared with consent: https://www.govtech.com/em/safety/health-workers-to-wear-panic-buttons-as-assaults-triple

 


Guide to Guest Services
Fully customized vinyl information directories for your patients and their visitors. They are easy to update and easy to use.
Guide to Emergency Preparedness
Fully customized quick reference guides to help keep your staff prepared for emergencies.
Guide to Infection Control
Fully customized quick reference guide to help keep your staff prepared for safe infection prevention and control procedures.
Accessories for your guides
Protect your investment by utilizing one of our various mounting systems.
Other Popular Products
Customized products including 3-Ring Binders, Sports Memory Books, Menus, Hotel Directories, and more…