4.1 Article

Occupational Violence at Lebanese Emergency Departments: Prevalence, Characteristics and Associated Factors

Journal

JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Volume 53, Issue 6, Pages 455-464

Publisher

JAPAN SOC OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
DOI: 10.1539/joh.11-0102-OA

Keywords

Emergency departments; Lebanon; Occupational health; Professional burnout; Turnover; Violence

Funding

  1. University Research Board of the American University of Beirut

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Occupational Violence at Lebanese Emergency Departments: Prevalence, Characteristics and Associated Factors: Mohamad ALAMEDDINE, et al. Health Management and Policy, Faculty of Health Sciences, American University of Beirut, Lebanon Background: Emergency departments (EDs) workers are at increased risk of exposure to occupational violence. The prevalence of occupational violence is potentially higher and consequences are more serious in areas with poor security conditions. Objectives: We investigated the prevalence, characteristics and factors associated with the exposure of ED workers to violence at Lebanese hospitals. Methods: All ED employees at six tertiary hospitals in Lebanon were surveyed using a cross-sectional design. The survey instrument included four sections collecting demographic/professional information and measuring exposure to violence, degree of job satisfaction and degree of professional burnout. The questionnaire was distributed to all ED employees at participating hospitals and was completed by 256 ED workers (70.3% response rate). Multinonnial and binary logistic regressions were used to investigate factors significantly associated with verbal and physical violence. Results: Over the past 12 mo, four in five ED employees were verbally abused and one in four was physically assaulted. Exposure to verbal abuse was associated with serious outcomes including significantly higher levels of occupational burnout and an increased likelihood to quit current job. Exposure to physical violence was associated with increased likelihood-to-quit, nurse status and public hospital employment. Conclusion: Violence largely prevails at Lebanese EDs. Most vulnerable are nurses and employees of public hospitals who are disproportionally exposed to violence. ED stakeholders must work collaboratively to investigate the root causes of violence and devise and implement effective antiviolence policies and measures. Such measures will be necessary to protect the well-being and decrease the turnover of ED workers. (J Occup Health 2011; 53: 455-464)

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