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Monday, February 13, 2017

North Wales - 'Unacceptable' rise in attacks on Welsh Ambulance Service staff

Workers reported 905 incidents between April 2013 and the end of March last year, Freedom of Information figures show

Attacks on Welsh Ambulance Service staff attending 999 calls have shot up in the past three years.
Workers reported a total of 905 assaults between April 2013 and the end of March last year.
Ambulance chiefs say it’s “completely unacceptable” staff are subjected to any form of abuse or violence while they’re out helping people in need of medical treatment.
The statistics, which were released by the Welsh Ambulance Service NHS Trust (WAST) following a Freedom of Information request, show an overall rise of 13% in the number of attacks on staff.
In 2013/14, there were 290 reported attacks compared to 286 for 2014/15 and 329 in 2015/16.
Attacks on emergency service staff included employees being physically assaulted, verbally abused and the victim of sexual harassment and indecent exposure.
Other incidents saw staff being bitten by animals, subjected to aggressive and threatening behaviour and being threatened with weapons.
Physical assaults and verbal abuse accounted for the majority of reported attacks.

Zero tolerance attitude

Claire Vaughan, the Welsh Ambulance Service’s executive director for workforce and organisational development, said such attacks prevent employees from caring for others and have a “lasting physical and mental impact on hardworking staff.”
“We take a zero tolerance attitude to this kind of behaviour and will continue to work with police and the Crown Prosecution Service to identify those involved and seek prosecution, “ said Ms Vaughan.
She added: “We aim to protect our colleagues by giving them training on how to deal with attacks, as well as providing our full support to anyone who has been the victim of one.
“Not only can these incidents have a lasting physical and mental impact on our hardworking staff, but they also prevent them from caring for others, so we would ask everyone to please treat them with the respect they deserve.”
Union bosses say assaults are not just carried out by patients who are under the influence or who do not have mental capacity to understand their behaviour, but also carried out by patients, families, friends and abusive crowds.
Darron Dupre, ambulance lead for UNISON Cymru Wales, which is the largest union at WAST, said they supported a “zero tolerance approach” to assaults at work, backed by the use of the criminal justice system.
He added: “It is a terrible indictment of how little we value emergency crews that reported assaults in Wales are so commonplace. Frontline ambulance staff come to work every day to save life and to provide emergency care often under impossibly difficult and traumatic circumstances.
“Whilst there are a number of policies and procedures in place that are designed to keep our emergency crews as safe as possible, there is no substitute for members of the public supporting the work of Welsh Ambulance staff by allowing them to get on with their job unheeded.”

​The figures in full

​Aggressive/threatening behaviour: 62 (2013/14) 33 (2014/15) 39 (2015/16) Total - 134
Physical assault: 78 (2013/14) 100 (2014/15) 113 (2015/16) Total - 291
Bit by animal: 4 (2013/14) 2 (2014/15) (2015/16) Total - 11
Sexual harrassment/indecent exposure: 2 (2013/14) 9 (2014/15) 10 (2015/16) Total - 21
USE or threatened use of weapon: 11 (2013/14) 4 (2014/15) 18 (2015/16) Total - 33
Verbal abuse : 133 (2013/14) 138 (2014/15) 144 (2015/16) Total - 415
Overall number of incidents reported by staff : 905
2013/14 - 290
2014/15 - 286
2015/16 - 329
http://www.dailypost.co.uk/news/north-wales-news/rise-number-attacks-welsh-ambulance-12580027

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