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Journal Article

Citation

Sansone RA, Farukhi S, Wiederman MW. Prim. Care Companion CNS Disord. 2011; 13(4): ePub.

Affiliation

Department of Internal Medicine, Wright State University School of Medicine, Dayton, Ohio (Drs Sansone and Farukhi); Department of Psychiatry Education, Kettering Medical Center, Kettering, Ohio (Dr Sansone); and Department of Human Relations, Columbia College, Columbia, South Carolina (Dr Wiederman).

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Physicians Postgraduate Press)

DOI

10.4088/PCC.11m01160

PMID

22132364

PMCID

PMC3219527

Abstract

Objective: To examine the self-reported prevalence of aggressive and/or disruptive behaviors by patients as related to their medical care.Method: In a cross-sectional, consecutive sample of internal medicine outpatients (N = 397), respondents reported on 17 aggressive and/or disruptive behaviors related to their medical care. Data were collected during November 2010.Results: In this sample, 48.9% of respondents endorsed at least 1 of the proposed aggressive behaviors; 9.1% endorsed 1 behavior, 20.4% endorsed 2 behaviors, 10.3% endorsed 3 behaviors, 5.5% endorsed 4 behaviors, and 3.5% endorsed 5 or more behaviors (the maximum being 11). The most commonly reported behaviors were talking negatively about medical personnel to family (41.3%) and friends (39.5%), threatening to hit or strike medical personnel (7.1%), and refusing to pay a bill because of dissatisfaction or anger (6.8%). No participant reported being escorted off premises by security or being charged with assault in a medical setting. For those who reported 1 or more aggressive behaviors, there were no gender differences, but younger and better educated patients were more likely to report such behaviors.Conclusions: While the majority of patients do not evidence aggressive behaviors related to their medical care, a small minority do report such behavior, some of which can be disruptive as well as dangerous.


Language: en

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