Violence is the second most frequent cause of nonfatal injuries to emergency medical services (EMS) providers according to 2020 data from the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) data tracking. Most of these injuries are caused by the patient's EMS providers are treating.
Recommendations
Recommendations for personal safety vary from department to department and include:
- Understanding that emergency scenes are dynamic and that violence to emergency responders is always a possibility.
- Monitoring surroundings/situational awareness.
- Creating distance and shielding while treating patients.
- Wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) that can guard against a knife or a bullet.
- Learning basic self-defense techniques.
training program
SAVER Systems Checklist shifts the responsibility of safety and health to the organization
An EMS department in Austin, Texas is implementing a training program that focuses on changing how violent patients are approached, including how to detect a possibly violent patient early in the incident.
Although important, situational awareness, self-defense skills, and PPE may not be the entire solution. The SAVER Systems Checklist shifts the responsibility of safety and health from that of the individual first responder to the organization.
Checklist
The checklist contains items organized by 6 phases of EMS response:
- Pre-event.
- Traveling to the scene.
- Scene arrival.
- Patient care.
- Assessing readiness to return to service.
- Post-event.
These items are the focus of safety actions that leadership can institute through training, policy, and environmental modifications.