Yves here. This development is yet another sign of social breakdown in the US. However, this article fails to examine why attacks on hospital staff are increasing. Is it more substance abuse? More mental health issues (and potentially interruptions in medication triggering them)? Is it failure to provide ER care in what is perceived to be soon enough (rumor has it that private equity, which controls ER staffing in most hospitals in the US, has been cutting staffing in an apparent bid to increase wait times to the degree that hospitals are relieved of their universal service obligation)? Or inexcusable care lapses? One time, when my mother was hospitalized, she came back with bruises all over her, which the hospital implausibly insisted she inflicted on herself. Another time, it took 20 minutes to get her water (there was no cup in her room, otherwise I would have done it) even with a nursing station right there and no one busy.

By Renuka Rayasam, KFF Health News Senior Correspondent. Previously she worked for Politico, the Austin American-Statesman and U.S. News & World Report, and before that freelanced for The New Yorker, The Atlantic, the Los Angeles Times and The Wall Street Journal. Originally published at KFF Health News

When Destiny heard screams, she raced to a hospital room where she saw a patient assaulting a care technician. As a charge nurse at Northeast Georgia Health System, she was trained to de-escalate violent situations.

This entry was posted in Doomsday scenarios, Health care, Social policy, Social values on by Yves Smith.