Egerton-Warburton Diana, Lim Jolene, Seneviratne Dinesh Seiji, Bumpstead Sue, Joyce Laura R, Kuhn Lisa, Moore Katie, Richardson Drew B, Lee Robert, Fatovich Daniel M
School of Clinical Science at Monash Health, Monash University, Monash Medical Centre, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Policy, Research and Partnerships Department, Australasian College for Emergency Medicine, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Emerg Med Australas. 2025 Apr;37(2):e70021. doi: 10.1111/1742-6723.70021.
To determine the extent of alcohol-related violence in EDs throughout Australia and New Zealand and the impact this has had on ED staff.
A mixed methods, cross-sectional, online survey of ED staff working in Australia and New Zealand conducted between 1 August and 11 September 2022 measuring the frequency of physical or verbal alcohol-related aggression from patients and their relatives/carers; changes to the frequency of alcohol-related occupational violence over the preceding 5 years; the impact of COVID-19 on these presentations; and the perceived impact on ED function and staff well-being.
A total of 1284 ED staff responded, with almost all (97.9%) reporting having experienced verbal aggression and 92.7% experienced physical aggression from alcohol-affected patients at some point over the preceding 12 months. Alcohol-related presentations were significantly associated with negatively impacting patient wait times (86.1%), the care of other patients (87.5%) and other patients in the waiting room (94.6%). A large majority of ED staff also noted that these presentations negatively impacted staff wellness (82.4%), workload (93.1%) and job satisfaction (78.9%). Most (68.2%) believed that the issue of alcohol-related violence had worsened over the preceding 5 years and 46.7% believed that COVID-19 specifically has worsened the incidence of alcohol-related violence in the ED.
Alcohol-related occupational violence and aggression is experienced by almost all ED staff and the prevalence is perceived to be increasing. It results in negative impacts on both staff well-being, the care of other patients and ED function.
确定澳大利亚和新西兰各地急诊科与酒精相关的暴力行为程度及其对急诊科工作人员的影响。
于2022年8月1日至9月11日对澳大利亚和新西兰的急诊科工作人员进行了一项混合方法的横断面在线调查,测量患者及其亲属/护理人员身体或言语上与酒精相关的攻击行为频率;过去5年与酒精相关的职业暴力频率变化;新冠疫情对这些情况的影响;以及对急诊科功能和工作人员幸福感的感知影响。
共有1284名急诊科工作人员做出回应,几乎所有(97.9%)报告称在过去12个月的某个时候曾遭受过受酒精影响患者的言语攻击,92.7%曾遭受过身体攻击。与酒精相关的情况与对患者等待时间(86.1%)、其他患者护理(87.5%)和候诊室其他患者(94.6%)产生负面影响显著相关。绝大多数急诊科工作人员还指出,这些情况对工作人员健康(82.4%)、工作量(93.1%)和工作满意度(78.9%)产生负面影响。大多数(68.2%)认为与酒精相关的暴力问题在过去5年中有所恶化,46.7%认为新冠疫情尤其加剧了急诊科与酒精相关的暴力发生率。
几乎所有急诊科工作人员都经历过与酒精相关的职业暴力和攻击行为,且普遍认为其发生率在上升。这对工作人员幸福感、其他患者护理和急诊科功能均产生负面影响。