Background: Among hospitalized children, episodes of aggressive patient behavior place healthcare staff at risk for serious injuries. By implementing a behavioral response team at a children's hospital, we aimed to reduce monthly employee injuries related to aggressive patient behavior from 3.4 to 2.4 per 1,000 acute care visits during 12 months.
Methods: At a children's hospital, a multidisciplinary team used quality improvement methodology to implement a behavioral response team that provided proactive and reactive support to staff caring for children at risk for aggressive behavior. Full-scale implementation occurred in July 2022. We measured days between Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA)-recordable employee injuries related to aggressive patient behavior and total monthly employee injuries related to aggressive patient behavior per 1,000 acute care visits (emergency department visits and/or hospitalizations) by patients 3 years of age or older.
Results: In the year after full-scale implementation, an average of 101 BRT rounds and 17 reactive responses occurred per month. The maximum number of days between OHSA-recordable employee injuries related to aggressive patient behavior increased from 163 days in the year before full-scale implementation to 271 days in the following year. Monthly employee injuries related to aggressive patient behavior decreased from 3.4 to 1.7 injuries per 1,000 acute care visits by patients 3 years of age or older.
Conclusions: The BRT model, which provides proactive and reactive support to hospital staff caring for children at risk for aggressive behavior, should be considered a strategy to reduce employee injuries and promote workplace safety.
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