An Act To Enhance the Security of Hospital Patients, Visitors and Employees
Sec. 1. 22 MRSA §1832 is enacted to read:
§ 1832. Safety and security in hospitals
(1) The physical layout of the hospital;
(2) Staffing and staffing patterns and patient classification systems and an analysis of their contribution and connection to aggressive and violent behavior;
(3) The adequacy of the hospital's security systems, protocols and policies, including the availability of security personnel;
(4) The potential security risks associated with specific units or areas of the hospital where there is a greater likelihood that a patient, visitor or other person may exhibit aggressive or violent behavior;
(5) Public access to the hospital;
(6) Potential security risks associated with working late night or early morning hours;
(7) The potential use of a trained response team to assist an employee during an incident of aggressive or violent behavior;
(8) Employee security in areas surrounding the hospital, including employee parking areas;
(9) Policies and training related to appropriate response to aggressive and violent behavior; and
(10) Efforts to cooperate with law enforcement regarding aggressive and violent behavior in the hospital.
(1) Personnel training policies to protect patients, visitors and employees, including education on recognizing the potential for violence, when and how to seek assistance, how to report an incident of aggressive or violent behavior and how to file criminal charges. For employees regularly assigned to an emergency department or psychiatric unit, the policies must require annual training related to:
(a) General and personal safety measures;
(b) Factors that predict aggression and violence;
(c) Obtaining the patient history of a patient who has a history at the hospital of violent behavior;
(d) Characteristics of aggressive and violent patients and of victims;
(e) Verbal and physical maneuvers to defuse potentially violent situations and avoid violent behavior;
(f) Strategies to avoid physical harm;
(g) Restraining techniques, including the appropriate use of chemical restraints; and
(h) Any resources available to employees for coping with incidents of violence, including but not limited to critical incident stress management, debriefing and employee assistance programs;
(2) A system for responding to immediate threats and incidents of aggressive or violent behavior, including immediate assistance if needed;
(3) A system for investigating threats or incidents of aggressive and violent behavior that must include interviewing any person who was threatened with or was the subject of aggressive or violent behavior;
(4) A system for reporting to the hospital, recording and monitoring situations of risk, threats and incidents of aggressive and violent behavior;
(5) A system for reporting to the Department of Public Safety, Bureau of State Police incidents of aggressive and violent behavior. The system must require reporting all criminal threatening or assaults committed by a patient or a person accompanying a patient, with recording of the date, time and location of the incident, the name of the person who committed the criminal threatening or assault and the person who was the victim of the criminal threatening or assault, a description of the incident and the response of the hospital. The system must require reporting within 24 hours all assaults that result in injury and all criminal threatening and all assaults that involve the use of a firearm or other dangerous weapon or that present an urgent or emergent threat to the health, safety or welfare of patients, visitors or employees. The system must require reporting all other reportable incidents within 72 hours; and
(6) Modifications in job design, staffing, security, equipment or facilities to prevent or address aggressive and violent behavior against patients, visitors or employees.
(1) An appropriate response by the hospital that protects the alleged perpetrator and the alleged victim;
(2) The right of an employee to seek assistance and intervention from law enforcement and evaluation and treatment for physical or emotional injuries without retaliation by the hospital; and
(3) Evaluation and treatment for an employee who is a victim of an incident of violence, including, if requested by the employee, access to individual crisis counseling, support group counseling, peer assistance and professional referrals to address trauma or distress.
Sec. 2. 34-A MRSA §1803, sub-§3, ¶A-1 is enacted to read:
Sec. 3. Report. The Department of Health and Human Services shall report to the Legislature by January 31st each year, beginning in 2013, regarding reports on incidents of violence in hospitals made to the department for the previous year pursuant to hospital safety and security plans required under the Maine Revised Statutes, Title 22, section 1832. The report must protect patient and employee confidentiality, must provide the total number of reports, must identify the hospital facilities and any inspections or investigations, must provide information on any administrative penalties levied by the department for violations and may include recommendations on how to prevent incidents of violence in hospitals.
summary
This bill requires the adoption of safety and security plans to protect patients, visitors and employees in hospitals. The plan would require training for employees, a system for reporting, investigation of incidents of violence, a guarantee of the employee's right to seek assistance and treatment, immunity for good faith reporting of incidents and reporting to the Department of Public Safety and from that department to the Department of Health and Human Services. It requires the State Board of Corrections to adopt standards for safety and security plans in correctional facilities and county jails. It also requires annual reporting from the Department of Health and Human Services to the Legislature on reports of violence in hospitals.