Post by jannatjahan1111 on Feb 28, 2024 7:19:06 GMT
Joaquín Jiménez-Galanes Díaz-Mera, inspector, head of Private Security and health police interlocutor of the Provincial Police Station of the National Police of Ciudad Real, and Francisco Javier Jiménez Bañales, captain, head of the Organic Unit of the Judicial Police and police interlocutor of the Civil Guard Command of Ciudad Real yesterday gave the talk "The figure of the police health interlocutor in the fight against attacks on doctors", organized by the College of Physicians of Ciudad Real on the occasion of the commemorative events of the European Day against attacks on doctors and health professionals which is celebrated on March 12.
During the presentation, the president of the College of Physicians, Dr. Mª Concepción Villafánez García, insisted on the need to report any Industry Email List aggression, physical or verbal, that occurs in a workplace. Just because they are not reported does not mean that they do not occur. This is evidenced by the internal and anonymous survey organized each year by the College of Physicians, which asks people to respond only and exclusively if they have suffered an attack.
Paradoxically, thirty-two people have responded to the survey, and only two have reported the events, a figure very far from the nine attacks reported and officially managed by the collegiate organization. The College, Dr. Villafánez recalled, offers “members free legal legal assistance, all the necessary information and is guided and accompanied throughout the process to follow from the aggression to the resolution of the conflict.” Therefore, the president concluded, “we are only facing the tip of the iceberg of attacks on health professionals. And to eradicate this problem we must denounce it, we must raise our voices. Stop Aggression and Zero Tolerance.
In 2017, the Police Action Protocol in Health Centers was launched in the province of Ciudad Real, which among other measures contemplated the creation of the figure of the Territorial Health Police Interlocutor, in charge of maintaining fluid and more direct contact between the collegiate entity. and the State Security Forces and Corps in case of aggression against health personnel. After five years in operation, the province's interlocutors took stock of this period while carefully explaining their mission in the fight against attacks on toilets. They also offered tools to address violent patients and proposed measures to be implemented by health authorities to combat this problem.
The message is clear: Reporting is essential and must be made in the workplace, before the security forces and/or at the College of Doctors. Furthermore, we must focus on raising awareness and training from the corresponding institutions.The CGCOM Anti-Aggression Observatory recorded a total of 612 attacks in 2021, 171 more than the previous year, which puts the total number since 2011 at 5,649 attacks.Of all the attacks suffered, correspond to women compared to 38% of men, a figure that consolidates the trend of recent years in which women suffer the majority of attacks.
The area of Primary Care, which accounts for more than of the cases (51.1%), remains at the top of the statistics, followed by Hospitals, which rises five points and stands at; Primary Care Emergencies (7.9%) and Hospital Emergencie . Assaults in home care “in Itinere” now account for of the total.Regarding the different types of attacks suffered, in of the cases there were insults and threats, mostly to women, while the remaining 13% were attacks that ended in physical injuries, suffered by 56% women athe men. It is worth highlighting the increase recorded in threats (+5.7%) and injuries to the detriment of insults.
Of all the attacks received and reported, 13% of them ended in sick leave, four points more than the previous year. In addition, a decrease is also observed in terms of material damage recorded during the attack, reaching 7% of cases compared to 8% the previous year. Likewise, this year there has been a significant decrease in the number of attacks carried out electronically. The figure, which in 2020 was 29%, and in 2021 stands at.
During the presentation, the president of the College of Physicians, Dr. Mª Concepción Villafánez García, insisted on the need to report any Industry Email List aggression, physical or verbal, that occurs in a workplace. Just because they are not reported does not mean that they do not occur. This is evidenced by the internal and anonymous survey organized each year by the College of Physicians, which asks people to respond only and exclusively if they have suffered an attack.
Paradoxically, thirty-two people have responded to the survey, and only two have reported the events, a figure very far from the nine attacks reported and officially managed by the collegiate organization. The College, Dr. Villafánez recalled, offers “members free legal legal assistance, all the necessary information and is guided and accompanied throughout the process to follow from the aggression to the resolution of the conflict.” Therefore, the president concluded, “we are only facing the tip of the iceberg of attacks on health professionals. And to eradicate this problem we must denounce it, we must raise our voices. Stop Aggression and Zero Tolerance.
In 2017, the Police Action Protocol in Health Centers was launched in the province of Ciudad Real, which among other measures contemplated the creation of the figure of the Territorial Health Police Interlocutor, in charge of maintaining fluid and more direct contact between the collegiate entity. and the State Security Forces and Corps in case of aggression against health personnel. After five years in operation, the province's interlocutors took stock of this period while carefully explaining their mission in the fight against attacks on toilets. They also offered tools to address violent patients and proposed measures to be implemented by health authorities to combat this problem.
The message is clear: Reporting is essential and must be made in the workplace, before the security forces and/or at the College of Doctors. Furthermore, we must focus on raising awareness and training from the corresponding institutions.The CGCOM Anti-Aggression Observatory recorded a total of 612 attacks in 2021, 171 more than the previous year, which puts the total number since 2011 at 5,649 attacks.Of all the attacks suffered, correspond to women compared to 38% of men, a figure that consolidates the trend of recent years in which women suffer the majority of attacks.
The area of Primary Care, which accounts for more than of the cases (51.1%), remains at the top of the statistics, followed by Hospitals, which rises five points and stands at; Primary Care Emergencies (7.9%) and Hospital Emergencie . Assaults in home care “in Itinere” now account for of the total.Regarding the different types of attacks suffered, in of the cases there were insults and threats, mostly to women, while the remaining 13% were attacks that ended in physical injuries, suffered by 56% women athe men. It is worth highlighting the increase recorded in threats (+5.7%) and injuries to the detriment of insults.
Of all the attacks received and reported, 13% of them ended in sick leave, four points more than the previous year. In addition, a decrease is also observed in terms of material damage recorded during the attack, reaching 7% of cases compared to 8% the previous year. Likewise, this year there has been a significant decrease in the number of attacks carried out electronically. The figure, which in 2020 was 29%, and in 2021 stands at.