Over 50% of Healthcare workers feel unsafe: Study
Led by experts from the Vardhman Mahavir Medical College (VMMC), Safdarjung Hospital and AIIMS, New Delhi, the study highlighted "significant gaps" in the security infrastructure within Indian healthcare settings.
PTI
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Logistic regression was used to find differences among groups.PHOTO:PTI
New Delhi, 20
Oct
More than
half of the healthcare workers who participated in a survey feel that their
workplace is "unsafe", particularly in state and central government
medical colleges.
Led by
experts from the Vardhman Mahavir Medical College (VMMC), Safdarjung Hospital
and AIIMS, New Delhi, the study highlighted "significant gaps" in the
security infrastructure within Indian healthcare settings.
The
"Workplace Safety and Security in Indian Healthcare Settings: A
Cross-Sectional Survey" published in a recent issue of the journal
'Epidemiology International' underscored the urgent need for improving the
prevailing safety and security measures in healthcare settings.
The survey
is a collaborative effort of Dr Kartik Chadhar and Dr Jugal Kishore from the
VMMC and Safdarjung Hospital along with Dr Richa Mishra, Dr Semanti Das, Dr
Indra Shekhar Prasad and Dr Prakalp Gupta from All India Institute of Medical
Sciences (AIIMS), New Delhi.
The
cross-sectional survey was conducted among 1,566 healthcare workers from
diverse medical institutions across India using a pre-tested, self-administered
online questionnaire, which assessed various dimensions of workplace safety.
Logistic regression was used to find differences among groups.
The survey
participants consisted of 869 (55.5 per cent) females and 697 (44.5 per cent)
males. About one-fourth (24.7 per cent) of healthcare workers were from Delhi
and around half of the them were resident doctors (49.6 per cent), followed by
undergraduate medical students, including interns (15.9 per cent).
Responses
were also received from faculty members, medical officers, nursing staff, and
other supporting staff.
The
majority of the respondents worked in government-run medical colleges (71.5 per
cent). Half of the respondents worked in non-surgical departments (49.2 per
cent) and one-third worked in surgical departments (33.8 per cent).
Results
revealed that more than half (58.2 per cent) of healthcare workers feel unsafe
at the workplace and 78.4 per cent reported having been threatened on duty, Dr
Jugal Kishore, the corresponding author of the study said.
Nearly half
of the healthcare workers do not have a dedicated duty room while working for
long hours or at night.
The
existing duty rooms are grossly inadequate in providing the basic amenities and
services such as regular cleaning, pest control, ventilation, room space, and
air conditioning, Dr Kishore stated.
A
staggering majority of healthcare workers expressed "deep
dissatisfaction" with the existing security measures in health
institutions across India, he said.
Over 70 per
cent felt security personnel were ineffective, and 62 per cent reported the
emergency alarm system to be inadequate. Nearly half reported severe gaps in
access control, surveillance, and security in high-risk areas like ICUs and
psychiatric wards.
Over 90 per
cent of institutions lack proper screening for weapons or dangerous objects,
and nearly three-fourths reported the absence of secure hospital boundaries.
These findings paint a "dire picture of insufficient security" in
critical healthcare settings, putting both workers and patients at risk, Dr
Kishore said.
"A
striking difference in security satisfaction emerged between private and public
medical colleges, with state government institutions showing the highest
dissatisfaction," Dr Kishore said.
Over 63 per
cent of respondents in state government medical colleges were unhappy with the
number of security personnel, with a four times higher likelihood of
dissatisfaction compared to private colleges.
Nearly 70
per cent criticised poor emergency alarms, access control, and security in
high-risk areas, where dissatisfaction was more than 3.5 times higher.
"While
central government colleges fared somewhat better, they were still up to twice
as likely to experience dissatisfaction compared to private institutions,"
Dr Kishore elaborated.
Besides, an
alarming 81.3 per cent of healthcare workers reported witnessing violence, yet
nearly half (44.1 per cent) felt these incidents were handled poorly.
About 80
per cent of respondents didn't know who to contact in case of an emergency, and
over 70 per cent lacked a clear, confidential process for reporting security
concerns.
To address
these challenges, the study recommended strengthening security in high-risk
areas, increasing the number of security personnel, improving duty room
conditions, and implementing clear violence-handling protocols.
Regular
security training and collaboration with national agencies to advocate for
legal frameworks were also suggested.-PTI
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