ViSHWaS: Violence Study of Healthcare Workers and Systems—a global survey

Author:

Banga AkshatORCID,Mautong Hans,Alamoudi Razan,Faisal Umme Habiba,Bhatt Gaurang,Amal Tanya,Mendiratta Ayushi,Bollu Bhaswanth,Kutikuppala L V SimhachalamORCID,Lee Joanna,Simadibrata Daniel Martin,Huespe Ivan,Khalid Aisha,Rais Mohammed Amir,Adhikari Ramesh,Lakhani Alisha,Garg Piyush,Pattnaik Harsha,Gandhi Raghu,Pandit Ramesh,Ahmad Faizan,Camacho-Leon Genesis,Ciza N Pierre,Barrios Nimsi,Meza Kelly,Okonkwo Susan,Dhabuliwo Amuza,Hamza Hafeez,Nemat Arash,Essar Mohammad Yasir,Kampa Anne,Qasba Rakhtan K,Sharma Pranjal,Dutt Taru,Vekaria Pratikkumar,Bansal Vikas,Nawaz Faisal A,Surani Salim,Kashyap Rahul

Abstract

ObjectiveTo provide insights into the nature, risk factors, impact and existing measures for reporting and preventing violence in the healthcare system. The under-reporting of violence against healthcare workers (HCWs) globally highlights the need for increased public awareness and education.MethodsThe Violence Study of Healthcare Workers and Systems study used a survey questionnaire created using Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) forms and distributed from 6 June to 9 August 2022. Logistic regression analysis evaluated violence predictors, including gender, age, years of experience, institution type, respondent profession and night shift frequency. A χ2test was performed to determine the association between gender and different violence forms.ResultsA total of 5405 responses from 79 countries were analysed. India, the USA and Venezuela were the top three contributors. Female respondents comprised 53%. The majority (45%) fell within the 26–35 age group. Medical students (21%), consultants (20%), residents/fellows (15%) and nurses (10%) constituted highest responders. Nearly 55% HCWs reported firsthand violence experience, and 16% reported violence against their colleagues. Perpetrators were identified as patients or family members in over 50% of cases, while supervisor-incited violence accounted for 16%. Around 80% stated that violence incidence either remained constant or increased during the COVID-19 pandemic. Among HCWs who experienced violence, 55% felt less motivated or more dissatisfied with their jobs afterward, and 25% expressed willingness to quit. Univariate analysis revealed that HCWs aged 26–65 years, nurses, physicians, ancillary staff, those working in public settings, with >1 year of experience, and frequent night shift workers were at significantly higher risk of experiencing violence. These results remained significant in multivariate analysis, except for the 55–65 age group, which lost statistical significance.ConclusionThis global cross-sectional study highlights that a majority of HCWs have experienced violence, and the incidence either increased or remained the same during the COVID-19 pandemic. This has resulted in decreased job satisfaction.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

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