More than 80 percent of nearly 900 physical therapists surveyed said
they have encountered sexual remarks, touches, indecent exposure and
sexual assault. Almost half said they’ve experienced one of these
situations in the past year - numbers that haven’t changed since the
last major surveys in the 1990s.
“The numbers stand for themselves, and it’s quite alarming,” said
lead author Jill Boissonnault of the George Washington University
School of Medicine and Health Sciences in Washington, D.C.
U.S. health care professionals have 16 times greater risk for
non-fatal violence at work than other fields, the study authors
write in the journal Physical Therapy.
“Many of us are not trained in how to deal with this behavior, which
can lead to consequences for both the physical therapist and the
patient, who may be discharged from care early when this happens,”
Boissonnault told Reuters Health by phone.
The most recent studies that focused specifically on patient sexual
harassment and physical therapists were done in the United States,
Canada and Australia in the late 1990s, the study team notes. At
that time, nearly 80 percent of therapists said they had experienced
sexual harassment, and one quarter of those reported psychological
consequences such as anger, guilt, fear, anxiety and depression.
“It’s important to pull out those particular numbers because sexual
harassment by a patient is a different situation than with a
coworker or boss,” said Ziadee Cambier of the Swedish Medical Center
in Seattle, a coauthor of the study.
“We have a duty of care to the patient,” Cambier told Reuters Health
in a phone interview. “The way we address that behavior is entangled
with meeting the healthcare needs of the patient and our own ethical
and legal obligations.”
The research team surveyed 892 physical therapists and physical
therapy students across the country, recruited through physical
therapy academic programs and the American Physical Therapy
Association. About 80 percent of the participants were women, and 60
percent reported working with patients who had dementia, delirium or
brain injuries. Most said they treated an equal number of male and
female patients.
Researchers found that 84 percent of survey participants had
experienced inappropriate patient sexual behavior during their
career, and 47 percent experienced it during the last year. Women
reported significantly higher rates of harassment, especially
staring, suggestive remarks, inappropriate touches, date requests,
sexual gestures, requests for sexual activity and masturbation.
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Several factors increased the risk of experiencing inappropriate
behavior, such as routinely working with patients with brain
impairments and having fewer than five years of direct patient
experience. Harassment was most common between a female therapist
and male patient. Treating mostly male patients increased the odds
of harassment by almost 400 percent, and treating an equal mix of
patients doubled the odds, as compared to those who mainly treated
female patients.
In the open-ended portion of the survey, therapists shared details
about some of their experiences and how they were affected. “It was
disturbing to me, and even twenty years later it makes me upset,”
one said.
Several physical therapists also talked about the lack of support,
training and policies related to patient sexual harassment. “I was
told that when patients were inappropriate with me, it was ‘part of
the job,’” one therapist reported. “I did not have support from
management to address the situation or to take further steps.”
Therapy, online August 21, 2017.
Future studies should also look at organizational policies and
practices about employee safety, said Paul Spector of the University
of South Florida in Tampa, who was not involved in the study.
“In organizations with a good climate, supervisors are supportive,”
he told Reuters Health by email. “There are policies in place to
prevent this experience and respond appropriately when it happens.”
Educating patients about professional guidelines may be helpful as
well, he added.
“The public should be aware and appreciate what the providers who
help them when they are ill have to put up with,” Spector said.
“Maybe a little understanding might encourage people to treat them
with more kindness.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2iJaPcr Physical
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