New Jersey Home Health Care Aides Survey Results

The objective of the study was to report on what violence-based training home health care aides received, their participation in health promotion classes, and home health care aides’ experience with workplace violence. In 2013, a mail survey was completed by 513 home health care aides in the state o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Home health care management & practice 2019-08, Vol.31 (3), p.172-178
Hauptverfasser: Ridenour, Marilyn Lou, Hendricks, Scott, Hartley, Daniel, Blando, James D.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The objective of the study was to report on what violence-based training home health care aides received, their participation in health promotion classes, and home health care aides’ experience with workplace violence. In 2013, a mail survey was completed by 513 home health care aides in the state of New Jersey. Ninety-four percent of the respondents were female. Respondents whose agency was part of a hospital were more likely to receive violence-based safety training than respondents whose agency was not part of a hospital (p = .0313). When the perpetrator of violence was a patient or family member, the respondents experienced verbal abuse the most (26%), then physical assault (16%) and exposure to bodily fluids (13%). Home health care aides whose agency was part of a hospital were more likely to receive violence-based safety training. Training is an important component of a workplace violence prevention program.
ISSN:1084-8223
1552-6739
DOI:10.1177/1084822319831933