Environmental Science and Pollution Research, volume 30, issue 30, pages 74838-74852

Workplace violence against healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Shuisheng Zhang 1
Zhen Zhao 1
Huan Zhang 2
Yanhua Zhu 1
Zhongyuan Xi 3
Xiang Ke 1
1
 
Department of Geriatrics, Jilin Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, Changchun, China
2
 
Nursing Department, Changchun Children’s Hospital, Changchun, China
3
 
Department of Pulmonary Disease, Jilin Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, Changchun, China
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2023-05-20
scimago Q1
SJR1.006
CiteScore8.7
Impact factor
ISSN09441344, 16147499
General Medicine
Environmental Chemistry
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
Pollution
Abstract
Workplace violence (WPV) is a prevalent phenomenon, especially in the healthcare setting. WPV against healthcare workers (HCWs) has increased during the COVID-19 epidemic. This meta-analysis determined the prevalence and risk factors of WPV. A database search was conducted across six databases in May 2022, which was updated in October 2022. WPV prevalence among HCWs was the main outcome. Data were stratified by WPV/HCW type, pandemic period (early, mid, late), and medical specialty. WPV risk factors were the secondary outcome. All analyses were conducted through STATA. Newcastle Ottawa Scale evaluated the quality. Sensitivity analysis identified effect estimate changes. A total of 38 studies (63,672 HCWs) were analyzed. The prevalence of WPV of any kind (43%), physical (9%), verbal (48%), and emotional (26%) was high. From mid-pandemic to late-pandemic, WPV (40–47%), physical violence (12–23%), and verbal violence (45–58%) increased. Nurses had more than double the rate of physical violence (13% vs. 5%) than physicians, while WPV and verbal violence were equal. Gender, profession, and COVID-19 timing did not affect WPV, physical, or verbal violence risk. COVID-19 HCWs were more likely to be physically assaulted (logOR = 0.54; 95% CI: 0.10: 0.97). Most healthcare employees suffer verbal violence, followed by emotional, bullying, sexual harassment, and physical assault. Pandemic-related workplace violence increased. Nurses were twice as violent as doctors. COVID-19 healthcare employees had a higher risk of physical and workplace violence.

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