Mausz Justin, Donnelly Elizabeth A
Peel Regional Paramedic Services, Brampton, ON, Canada.
School of Social Work, The University of Windsor, Windsor, ON, Canada.
JMIR Res Protoc. 2023 Mar 16;12:e37636. doi: 10.2196/37636.
Violence against paramedics has been described as a serious public health problem with the potential for significant physical and psychological harm, but the organizational culture within the profession encourages paramedics to consider violence as just "part of the job." Therefore, most incidents of violence are never formally documented. This limits the ability of researchers and policy makers to develop strategies that mitigate the risk and enhance paramedic safety.
Following the development and implementation of a novel, point-of-event violence reporting process in February 2021, our objectives are to (1) estimate the prevalence of violence and generate a descriptive profile for incidents of reported violence; (2) identify potentially high-risk service calls based on characteristics of calls that are generally known to the responding paramedics at the point of dispatch; and (3) explore underpinning themes, including intolerance based on gender, race, and sexual orientation, that contribute to incidents of violence.
Our work is situated in a single paramedic service in Ontario, Canada. Using a convergent parallel mixed methods approach, we will retrospectively review 2 years of quantitative and qualitative data gathered from the External Violence Incident Report (EVIR) system from February 1 2021 through February 28, 2023. The EVIR is a point-of-event reporting mechanism embedded in the electronic patient care record (ePCR) developed through an extensive stakeholder engagement process. When completing an ePCR, paramedics are prompted to file an EVIR if they experienced violence on the call. Our methods include using descriptive statistics to estimate the prevalence of violence and describe the characteristics of reported incidents (Objective 1), logistic regression modeling to identify high-risk service calls (Objective 2), and qualitative content analysis of incident report narratives to identify underpinning themes that contribute to violence (Objective 3).
As of January 1, 2023, 377 paramedics-approximately 1 in 5 active-duty paramedics in the service-have filed a total of 975 violence reports. Early analysis suggests 40% of reports involved a physical assault on the reporting paramedic. Our team is continuing to collect data with more fulsome analyses beginning in March 2023. Our findings will provide much-needed epidemiological data on the prevalence of violence against paramedics in a single paramedic service, its contributing themes, and potential risk factors.
Our findings will contribute to a growing body of literature demonstrating that violence against paramedics is a complex problem that requires a nuanced understanding of its scope, risk factors, and contributing circumstances. Collectively, our research will inform larger, multisite prospective studies already in the planning stage and inform organizational strategies to mitigate the risk of harm from violence.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): DERR1-10.2196/37636.
针对护理人员的暴力行为被视为一个严重的公共卫生问题,有可能造成重大的身体和心理伤害,但该行业的组织文化鼓励护理人员将暴力行为仅仅视为“工作的一部分”。因此,大多数暴力事件从未得到正式记录。这限制了研究人员和政策制定者制定减轻风险和提高护理人员安全的策略的能力。
在2021年2月开发并实施了一种新颖的事件发生时暴力报告流程后,我们的目标是:(1)估计暴力行为的发生率,并为报告的暴力事件生成描述性概况;(2)根据调度时响应护理人员通常已知的呼叫特征,识别潜在的高风险服务呼叫;(3)探索导致暴力事件的潜在主题,包括基于性别、种族和性取向的不容忍。
我们的研究位于加拿大安大略省的一个护理服务机构。采用收敛平行混合方法,我们将回顾性审查2021年2月1日至2023年2月28日从外部暴力事件报告(EVIR)系统收集的两年定量和定性数据。EVIR是一种事件发生时报告机制,嵌入通过广泛的利益相关者参与过程开发的电子患者护理记录(ePCR)中。在完成ePCR时,如果护理人员在呼叫中遭遇暴力,系统会提示他们提交EVIR。我们的方法包括使用描述性统计来估计暴力行为的发生率并描述报告事件的特征(目标1),使用逻辑回归模型识别高风险服务呼叫(目标2),以及对事件报告叙述进行定性内容分析以识别导致暴力的潜在主题(目标3)。
截至2023年1月1日,377名护理人员(约占该服务机构在职护理人员的五分之一)共提交了975份暴力报告。早期分析表明,40%的报告涉及对报告护理人员的身体攻击。我们的团队将从2023年3月开始继续收集数据并进行更全面的分析。我们的研究结果将提供急需的流行病学数据,说明在一个护理服务机构中针对护理人员的暴力行为的发生率、其潜在主题和潜在风险因素。
我们的研究结果将有助于丰富越来越多的文献,证明针对护理人员的暴力行为是一个复杂的问题,需要对其范围、风险因素和促成情况有细致入微的理解。总体而言,我们的研究将为已经处于规划阶段的更大规模的多地点前瞻性研究提供信息,并为减轻暴力伤害风险的组织策略提供信息。
国际注册报告识别码(IRRID):DERR1-10.2196/37636。