Publication | Open Access
Workplace assaults on minority health and mental health care workers in Los Angeles.
49
Citations
8
References
1995
Year
Violence AssessmentInjury PreventionMental HealthSocial SciencesWorkplace AssaultsViolence Against WomenAfrican American StudiesTrauma SystemViolencePublic HealthWorkplace ViolenceMinority StressHealth Services ResearchLos AngelesMinority HealthSerious ProblemCompensation AssaultsSexual AssaultNursingPsychological ViolenceSociologyDomestic Violence PreventionMedicineAggressionHealth Care SettingsEmergency Medicine
Workplace violence is becoming increasingly recognized as a serious problem in health care settings. All 628 workers' compensation assaults claimed by minority Los Angeles County health care workers from 1986 through 1990 were abstracted. Population-at-risk data from county personnel computer tapes provided denominators by age, sex, race, job classification, and type of facility. Rates varied by type of facility (rate ratio = 38 for psychiatric hospitals vs public health facilities) and varied by job, with inpatient nursing attendants having the highest rate for caregivers. Most assaults were committed by patients (86%), followed by coworkers (8%). The average cost of an assault ($4879) was relatively low but related to the costlier problem of work-related emotional illness.
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