Markets
SecurityInfoWatch




Gaming

Updated: July 8th, 2008 05:27 PM EDT

Video Surveillance Helps Protect Hospital Workers

By Dave Shelton


WHEN IT COMES to workplace violence, U.S. healthcare workers – especially those in hospitals – face some of the highest risks.   According to FBI statistics, doctors, nurses and aides who deal with psychiatric patients, members of emergency medical response teams and hospital employees working in admissions, emergency rooms and crisis or acute care units experience the largest number of Type 2 assaults.   That type of assault is defined as violence directed at employees by users of an organization's services.

The Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics reported hospital workers are more than four times as likely to be assaulted on the job as compared to those in other private-sector industries.

These statistics give system integrators and security dealers a tremendous opportunity to offer hospital administrators electronic security solutions to help reduce assaults in the workplace.   Video surveillance systems can play a vital role in any installation.

Emergency rooms are often the site of the most egregious violence.   For instance, gang violence that begins on the streets can continue into the ER, where injured gang members go to seek medical treatment.   Cameras should be mounted to view the main entry, the waiting room and non-treatment areas within the examination/treatment space.

And cameras should view all other hospital entries where people may look for other ways to gain entry into the emergency room to continue their dispute with a patient.   Other areas that deserve monitoring include the admissions desk, elevator banks and the pharmacy.   With its cache of powerful drugs, the pharmacy requires cameras at the dispensing desk, within the pharmacists' work areas and at the receiving docks, where the drugs arrive and enter the hospital.

Cameras should be placed directly outside of the nursery and psychiatric and geriatric wards.   Every few months, there is a painful story of a newborn baby being kidnapped from a hospital.   And both the young and old suffering from mental disease may wander.   If they leave the hospital, they could put themselves at great risk.

The parking garage is another area deserving of video surveillance.   Since nearly all hospitals operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week, employees and visitors are coming and going at all times.   A garage offers an attacker many ideal places to hide in wait.

1 2 next


More From Gaming




SIW eNews

FrontLine

Markets & Sys

PracticeReport

AppReport

ProductWatch

EventWatch

Weekly Recap

EndUser Blasts

Dealer Blasts