Angry and violent patient encounters can contribute to physician burnout. The effective management of these encounters with challenging patients can help reduce the impact they have and help maintain a safe work environment. Although many of the triggers of patient anger are avoidable or at least can be moderated, managing violent patient encounters may require different strategies.
Understanding what is causing a patient’s anger can enable a constructive follow-up to an outburst and help de-escalate the situation. However, it is important to individualize your response to an angry patient based on the potentiality of danger.
For example, de-escalation strategies may be too dangerous if the angry patient is threatening violence or has a weapon. On the other hand, a patient who is angry because of a perceived service failure or unanticipated outcome might be successfully calmed to a degree that the basis for their anger can be discovered and remedied. Successful service recovery and apology protocols have been linked to increased physician wellness and burnout reduction. Preparation is the key to preventing and successfully managing patient anger that can lead to burnout. Having a disruptive patient policy in place can provide structure to an otherwise stressful patient encounter.
Anger and agitation can be triggered by many different factors. Some triggers are avoidable (e.g., interrupting the patient) others are not (e.g., denying cigarettes to a hospitalized patient). Some examples of avoidable triggers are:
Obtaining de-escalation training can reduce the risk of escalating a patient’s anger and restore peace with a minimum amount of stress and practice disruption. Consider the following de-escalation strategies when dealing with an angry or agitated patient: 1,2
De-Escalation Resources
Terminating treatment of patients who are angry because of a service failure or unanticipated outcome of treatment can increase a patient’s propensity to file a lawsuit. The nature of the event prompting the anger should direct the response. Service recovery and unanticipated outcome programs can help turn a frustrated, angry patient into a loyal one who is more likely to comply with treatment recommendations and less likely to file a malpractice suit, make a report to the medical board, or write a negative online review.
Service Recovery and Unanticipated Outcome Resources
Workplace violence, “the act or threat of violence, ranging from verbal abuse to physical assaults directed toward persons at work or on duty,” contributes to physician burnout. Physicians and other healthcare workers are frequent victims of violence by patients, their family members, and visitors. Violent patients disrupt a physician’s control over their environment, a frequently cited cause of physician burnout. Knowing how to respond when a patient becomes violent is a way for physicians to maintain this control.
Although maintaining a safe environment is primarily the responsibility of healthcare entities, physicians can protect themselves and the people around them by engaging in training, recognizing the signs of impending violence, preparing with the healthcare team for patients with violent tendencies and employing de-escalation strategies, and, when necessary, retreating to somewhere safe and calling security or the police.
Swearing, using abusive language, and threatening violence are direct indications of an impending attack, but patients may also signal they are getting ready to lash out through nonverbal communication, including the following:3,4
Of course, all of these nonverbal cues may indicate something other than imminent violence. One of the challenges of healthcare violence prevention is successfully anticipating it without unjustly profiling a patient who is not prone to violence. It is important to judge a situation by the totality of circumstances and not just on nonverbal cues.
Unfortunately, violent patient encounters are common. Successful management of an incident depends on developing the skills necessary for recognizing risks, keeping everyone safe, and tending to your own stress following a violent patient encounter. Consider the follow recommendations.
Workplace Violence Resources
“Practical Tips for Managing the Agitated Patient: Avoiding Violence in the Clinical Setting” (Psychiatric Times)
“The Agitated Patient: Steps to Take, How to Stay Safe” (Journal of Family Practice)
“Guidelines for Preventing Workplace Violence for Healthcare and Social Service Workers” (Occupational Safety and Health Administration)
“Guiding Principles for Mitigating Violence in Workplace Toolkit” (American Organization of Nurse Executives and Emergency Nurses Association)
“Workplace Violence Prevention for Nurses” [course] (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
“Sentinel Event Alert 59: Physical and Verbal Violence Against Health Care Workers” (Joint Commission)
“Workplace Violence Best Practices for the Worst Case” [webinar] (American Hospital Association)
“Active Shooter Planning and Response in a Healthcare Setting” (Healthcare and Public Health Sector Coordinating Council)
Although termination of the physician-patient relationship with disruptive patients may be the easiest way to follow up an incident, if the behavior is the result of dissatisfaction, in many cases the better strategy is to understand the patient’s complaint, empathize, apologize, and then re-establish behavioral expectations for moving forward in the physician-patient relationship with a patient behavior warning or patient behavior agreement.
More Information on Managing Challenging Patients
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1. The Joint Commission. “Sentinal Event Alert 59: Physical and Verbal Violence Against Health Care Workers.” Sentinel Event Alert Newsletters, April 17, 2018;59, Revised June 2021.
2. Richmond JS, et al. “Verbal De-Escalation of the Agitated Patient: Consensus Statement of the American Association for Emergency Psychiatry Project BETA De-escalation Workgroup.” Western Journal of Emergency Medicine, 2012;13(1); 17-25.
3. Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety. “Violence and Harassment in the Workplace – Warning Signs.” OSH Answers Fact Sheets.
4. Dawn M. Sweet, Rebecca G. Burzette. “Development of the Nonverbal Cues of Interpersonal Violence Inventory: Law Enforcement Officers’ Perceptions of Nonverbal Behavior and Violence.” Criminal Justice and Behavior, 2018;45(4):519-540.