Volume 20, Issue 2 , Pages 161-168, February 2001
A labor perspective of workplace violence prevention:
Identifying research needs1
Abstract
Background: During the past decade, labor unions have contributed to efforts to increase awareness of the importance of workplace violence as an occupational hazard. Research by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health and the U.S. Department of Justice have bolstered these efforts. This research revealed that workplace violence is the second leading cause of traumatic-injury death on the job for men, the leading cause of traumatic-injury death on the job for women, and accounts for some 2 million nonfatal injuries each year in the United States.
Labor Perspective: Ten years ago, the debate focused on whether workplace violence is an occupational hazard or strictly a police and criminal justice issue. Labor unions have joined with occupational safety and health professionals in recognizing that workplace violence is a serious occupational hazard that is often predictable and preventable. They have advocated that employers establish multidimensional violence–prevention programs.
Conclusion: Although the nature of workplace violence varies from industry to industry, implementation of the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) Violence Prevention Guidelines for Health Care and Social Service Workers and for Late-Night Retail Establishments is a high priority to unions in the affected industries. Labor wants employers to invest in protecting workers from violence through voluntary programs and state legislation, and it supports the promulgation of a mandatory federal OSHA standard. To that end, intervention research can play a key role in demonstrating effective, technically and economically feasible prevention strategies
Keywords: accident prevention, guidelines, intervention studies, occupational health, violence
- 1 The full text of this article is temporarily available until February 2002 via AJPM Online at www.elsevier.com/locate/ajpmonline.
PII: S0749-3797(00)00293-2
© 2001 American Journal of Preventive Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 20, Issue 2 , Pages 161-168, February 2001
