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Experiences of occupational violence in Australian urban general practice: a cross-sectional study of GPs

Parker J Magin, Elyssa Joy, Malcolm C Ireland, Jon Adams and David W Sibbritt
Med J Aust 2005; 183 (7): 352-356. || doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2005.tb07082.x
Published online: 3 October 2005

Abstract

Objective: To establish the prevalence and characteristics of occupational violence in Australian urban general practice, and examine practitioner correlates of violence.

Design, setting and participants: Cross-sectional questionnaire survey mailed to all members (n = 1085) of three urban divisions of general practice in New South Wales in August and September 2004. The three divisions were chosen to provide a range of socioeconomic status (SES) demographics.

Main outcome measures: Occupational violence towards general practitioners during the previous 12 months.

Results: 528 GPs returned questionnaires (49% response rate). Of these, 63.7% had experienced violence in the previous year. The most common forms of violence were “low level” violence — verbal abuse (42.1%), property damage/theft (28.6%) and threats (23.1%). A smaller proportion of GPs had experienced “high level” violence, such as sexual harassment (9.3%) and physical abuse (2.7%). On univariate analysis, violence was significantly more likely towards female GPs (P < 0.001), less experienced GPs (P = 0.003) and GPs working in a lower SES status area (P < 0.001), and among practice populations encompassing greater social disadvantage (P = 0.006), mental health problems (P < 0.001), and drug- and alcohol-related problems (P < 0.001). Experience of violence was greater for younger GPs (P = 0.005) and those providing after-hours care (P = 0.033 for after-hours home visits). On multivariate analysis, a significant association persisted between high level violence and lower SES area (odds ratio [OR], 2.86), being female (OR, 5.87), having practice populations with more drug-related problems (OR, 5.77), and providing home visits during business hours (OR, 4.76). More experienced GPs encountered less violence (OR, 0.77) for every additional 5 years of practice.

Conclusion: Occupational violence is a considerable problem in Australian urban general practice. Formal education programs in preventing and managing violence would be appropriate for GPs and doctors-in-training.

Workplace violence has been recognised as a significant problem in general practice.1,2 A number of studies, especially questionnaire-based retrospective studies from the United Kingdom, have established a relatively high prevalence of violence in the work experiences of general practitioners and have characterised many aspects of the nature of such violence.3-8 Violence in this context encompasses not only physical injury to the GP but also verbal abuse, threatening behaviour and sexual harassment, violence directed towards general practice staff, and the damaging of property. In these studies, verbal abuse has been consistently the most prevalent type of violence experienced by GPs, but there have also been consistent findings of more serious types of violence — assault and stalking — albeit at low prevalence.

Studies in rural Australia9-11 have demonstrated that occupational violence is also a significant problem for Australian rural GPs. However, there has been a lack of research in Australian urban general practice on this important issue. Furthermore, previous studies of violence in general practice have employed univariate analysis only. Given the likely clustering of socioeconomic, mental-health, and drug- and alcohol-related problems (factors associated with violence in these earlier studies), multivariate analysis is especially indicated for studies in this area. In response, we employ multivariate ana-lyses in reporting on prevalence and characteristics of violence in Australian urban general practice and how these correlate with GP demographics.

Methods
Survey

Following a qualitative study involving GP focus groups conducted in 2003,12 a 60-item questionnaire was constructed and mailed (with a single follow-up mail-out) to all 1085 members of three urban divisions of general practice in New South Wales in August and September 2004. The three divisions were chosen to provide a range of socioeconomic status (SES) demographics within Rural Remote and Metropolitan Areas (RRMA)13 classifications 1 and 2 (incorporating capital cities and other metropolitan centres). The questionnaire elicit-ed demographic data on the GPs and their practice (including self-assessed levels of social disadvantage, drug- and alcohol-related illness and psychiatric illness among their patients), experiences of violence, and education and training related to violence.

Levels of violence were classified as “high level” violence (physical abuse, sexual abuse, stalking, or sexual harassment) or “low level” violence (verbal abuse, property damage/theft, threats, or slander). Slander was defined as false and malicious accusations related to the GP’s professional role made by a patient or patient’s friend or family member.

Results

A total of 528 replies was received (response rate 49%). Response rates for the individual divisions were 50% (high SES capital city division), 36% (low SES capital city division) and 54% (mixed SES non-capital city division). The mean age of respondents was 51.3 years (SD, 10.7 years), and 50% of respondents were women. (For comparison with national data see Box 1).

The majority (63.7%) of GPs surveyed had been subjected to some form of violence within the previous 12 months. The most common forms of violence were verbal abuse (42.1%), property damage or theft (28.6%), threats (23.1%), and slander (17.1%) (Box 2). Sixty-eight GPs (12.9%) experienced high level violence, while 263 GPs (49.8%) experienced only low level violence (Box 3).

Univariate analysis

Demographic and practice-related factors compared across the levels of violence experienced by GPs in the past 12 months are shown in Box 4. In terms of statistically significant GP demographic factors, GPs reporting high level violence were more likely to be female, to be younger in age, and to have less years of experience as a GP. In terms of statistically significant practice-related factors, GPs experiencing both low and high levels of violence were more likely to report having a higher than average number of patients who were socially disadvantaged and/or had mental-health or drug-related problems. In addition, GPs were more likely to experience violence if they worked longer hours per week, conducted home visits after hours, worked after hours in a cooperative clinic, or worked in the low SES division.

Multivariate analysis

Multivariate polytomous logistic regression modelling was used to compare GPs who had experienced low or high level violence in the past 12 months with those who had not (Box 5). Comparison between the univariate and multivariate analyses did not reveal any evidence of confounding.

After multivariate analysis, GP demographic factors that remained significant were sex and number of years worked as a GP. Female GPs were more likely to experience both low and high level violence than males, while having more years’ experience as a GP was associated with a reduction in both low and high level violence. For every 5 years worked as a GP, the decline in likelihood of experiencing violence was 0.9 (for low level violence) and 0.8 (for high level violence).

Practice-related factors that remained significantly associated with low level violence were having a higher than average proportion of patients with mental-health or drug-related problems, working after hours in a cooperative clinic and working 20–29 hours or ≥ 40 hours per week. Factors significantly associated with high level violence were working in a low SES division, having a higher than average proportion of patients with drug-related problems, working 20–29 hours or ≥ 40 hours per week, and making home visits during business hours.

The study participants were also questioned about workplace violence education or training. Most GPs (80%) had not received any education or training related to workplace violence. Of those who had received some form of training, 15% were prompted by a personal experience or an episode of violence in general practice. Sixty per cent of the GPs surveyed indicated that they would benefit from further education or training in managing violence.

Discussion

To our knowledge, this is the first formal study of prevalence and characteristics of occupational violence in Australian urban general practice. Our finding that 63.7% of GPs had experienced at least one episode of violence over the previous 12 months can be compared with a 12-month prevalence of violence of 44% and 48%, respectively, in previous UK3 and rural Australian11 general practice studies. The high prevalence of verbal abuse and low (though still worrying) prevalence of stalking, physical abuse and sexual abuse were also in keeping with these and other previous studies.6,9,10 Slander directed at GPs was a relatively frequent occurrence. This form of violence has not been elicited in previous studies, and the implications for GPs, whose role encompasses close attachments to (and respect within) their communities, may be significant.

Our results suggest that female GPs were more likely than males to experience high and low level violence, although after multivariate analysis significance persisted only for high level violence. This finding is in contrast with a UK study3 showing that male GPs experienced a higher 12-month prevalence of violence than female GPs. In an Australian rural study,10 the 12-month prevalence of what we have characterised as “low level” violence was higher in male GPs, but “high level” violence was more common in female GPs. These discrepant findings may arise from the fact that both our study and the rural Australian study, unlike the UK study, specifically elicited sexual harassment as a form of violence.

In our study, the likelihood of having experienced violence during the previous 12 months declined with years of experience as a GP. Previous studies have not examined this aspect of general practice violence. It is possible that this finding may be attributable to the acquisition of greater interpersonal skills and patient-management techniques with longer experience as a GP, and the likely older age and greater stability of the experienced GP’s patient demographic. Thus, the patients of experienced GPs are likely to be less prone to violence, and it is reasonable to expect such practitioners would have more expertise in “defusing” potentially violent situations.

We found that GPs who perceive their practice to include more patients with mental-health and drug-related problems experience more violence. This is in keeping with both quantitative and qualitative studies from the United Kingdom3-8,14,15 and Australia,10,11 which have found a significant role for psychiatric and drug-related illness in precipitating individual violent incidents in general practice.

Our study also found that GPs who rate their practice as having greater than average social disadvantage are, on univariate analysis, at greater risk of violence. This is consistent with previous research finding an association of verbal abuse of GP receptionists and practice deprivation score16 and with the qualitative perceptions of GPs.12,17 This effect was, however, no longer apparent on multivariate analysis (though the greater risk of violence in the division characterised as being of low SES persisted).

A factor to be considered here is the “clustering” of risk factors that dominated risk stratification assessments of violence by GPs in the earlier qualitative phase of our study. This suggests that social disadvantage may be a marker of mental-health or drug- and alcohol-related problems, which then precipitate episodes of violence. Similarly, “clustering” of risk factors examined in univariate analysis could be a factor in the association between mental-health problems and high level (though not low level) violence failing to persist on multivariate analysis.

To further elucidate the role of social disadvantage and mental health as independent risk factors, data on individual incidents of violence will need to be examined, rather than relying on summary assessments of practice profile and recall of violence by practitioners.

It is also difficult to interpret the greater experience of violence of GPs who do home visits or who work in after-hours cooperative clinics without examining where episodes of violence involving the individual GP occurred.

The perception from other studies that violence is more prevalent in larger practices18 was not supported by our findings, which were consistent with those of the qualitative phase of our study.12

A strength of our study was the use of multivariate analysis to allow a more refined examination of the nature of general practice violence than previous studies, which have employed univariate analysis only.

A limitation of our study was the fairly low response rate, especially from GPs in the low SES division. The overall response rate of 49%, while not high, is comparable with that of previous studies (range, 30%–80%; median, 61%)3,5-8,10,11 Though conducted in only three urban divisions of general practice, these divisions were chosen to be broadly representative of Australian urban general practice demographics. Nevertheless, the demographics of the GPs in the study compared with national statistics (being somewhat older and with a higher proportion of males) should be considered in generalising our results. Furthermore, the poorer response rate in the low SES division, together with the finding of greater likelihood of experiencing violence in the low SES division, suggests our study may have underestimated the prevalence of violence overall.

Other limitations of our study, in common with previous studies, were the self-assessment by GPs of the demographic profile of their practices and the possible recall bias inherent in retrospective collection of data on such an emotive topic. Prospective studies with contemporaneous reporting of occurrence and characteristics of episodes of violence are much needed.

Nevertheless, our results have established that occupational violence is a significant problem in Australian urban general practice. Given our finding that women are more likely to experience high levels of violence, and in view of the increasing number of women in Australian general practice,19 violence is likely to be an increasing problem.

In spite of the occupational health and health-service delivery implications of violence against GPs, it is noteworthy that Australia has no systematic response to occupational violence in general practice, unlike the “zero tolerance” approach promoted by the UK National Health Service.17

Lastly, given the frequency of violence directed towards GPs, the restrictions of practice in response to violence and the implications these have for access to primary health care,12,20 it is somewhat disturbing that 80% of GPs had not had any education or training in dealing with workplace violence. Giving GPs formal education and training in dealing with violence is thus of some urgency, and our results provide an evidence base for such programs. An implication of the finding that violence is more likely for less experienced GPs may be that medical students and general practice registrars should be the primary target for education in violence prevention and management.

4 Association of demographic and practice-related factors with proportion of general practitioners experiencing various levels of violence over the previous 12 months*

Level of violence


Level of violence


Factor

None
(n = 196)

Low
level
(n = 263)

High
level
(n = 68)

P

  

Factor

None
(n = 196)

Low
level
(n = 263)

High
level
(n = 68)

P



Sex of GP

< 0.001

Proportion of patients with alcohol-related problems

< 0.001

Female

45%

46%

75%

Less than other practices

42%

25%

40%

Male

55%

54%

25%

Same as other practices

55%

67%

50%

Country qualified

0.829

More than other practices

3%

8%

10%

Australia

76%

76%

80%

Proportion of patients with drug-related problems

Overseas

24%

24%

20%

Less than other practices

69%

54%

53%

< 0.001

Main type of work

0.402

Same as other practices

28%

33%

32%

Sole practitioner

22%

22%

17%

More than other practices

3%

13%

15%

Partner

20%

25%

15%

Number of GPs in practice

0.913

Associate

27%

26%

36%

1

20%

18%

15%

Assistant

19%

14%

16%

2

16%

15%

16%

Other

12%

13%

16%

3–4

21%

24%

28%

Billing practice

0.487

≥ 5

43%

43%

41%

Totally private

6%

5%

10%

Hours worked per week

0.001

Totally bulk-billing

19%

19%

21%

< 20

23%

12%

13%

Mixed private and bulk-billing

75%

76%

69%

20–29

13%

18%

28%

Type of practice

0.841

30–39

32%

26%

21%

Traditional

87%

89%

87%

≥ 40

32%

44%

38%

Corporate

7%

7%

6%

Type of visit in which violence experienced

Other

6%

4%

7%

Home visits during business hours

85%

88%

93%

0.268

Proportion of socially disadvantaged patients

0.006

Home visits after hours

58%

69%

71%

0.033

Less than other practices

51%

37%

33%

Private surgery after hours

32%

42%

31%

0.050

Same as other practices

37%

41%

44%

Cooperative clinic after hours

26%

41%

18%

< 0.001

More than other practices

12%

22%

23%

Socioeconomic division

< 0.001

Proportion of patients with mental health problems

< 0.001

High SES

55%

42%

43%

Less than other practices

30%

11%

20%

Mixed SES

32%

46%

30%

Same as other practices

62%

68%

65%

Low SES

13%

12%

27%

More than other practices

8%

21%

15%

Mean age (SD) of GPs (years)

53.2
(11.9)

51.1
(10.5)

48.3
(10.8)

0.005

Mean number of years (SD) working as a GP

25.0
(18.1)

22.4
(15.7)

17.2
(9.6)

0.003


* Figures represent proportion of GPs, except where otherwise specified. Self-assessed comparison with other general practices.

5 Results of multivariate polytomous logistic regression analysis comparing general practitioners who experienced low or high level violence in the previous 12 months with those who did not experience violence

Low level violence compared with no violence

High level violence compared with no violence

Factor

OR (95% CI)

OR (95% CI)


Division of general practice

Mixed SES

1.00

1.00

Low SES

0.95 (0.43 – 2.10)

2.86 (1.00 – 8.43)

High SES

0.81 (0.46 – 1.43)

0.79 (0.33 – 1.91)

Sex of GP

Male

1.00

1.00

Female

1.27 (0.77 – 2.10)

5.87 (2.61 – 13.17)

Proportion of patients with mental health problems*

Less than other practices

1.00

1.00

Same as other practices

2.68 (1.52 – 4.72)

0.99 (0.43 – 2.27)

More than other practices

4.49 (1.94 – 10.41)

0.97 (0.29 – 3.21)

Proportion of patients with drug-related problems*

Less than other practices

1.00

1.00

Same as other practices

1.05 (0.65 – 1.71)

1.74 (0.82 – 3.70)

More than other practices

2.41 (0.88 – 6.61)

5.77 (1.56 – 21.30)

Hours worked per week

< 20

1.00

1.00

20–29

3.24 (1.56 – 6.73)

4.59 (1.65 – 12.78)

30–39

1.74 (0.93 – 3.29)

1.31 (0.48 – 3.60)

≥ 40

3.37 (1.73 – 6.59)

6.26 (2.16 – 18.10)

Home visits conducted during business hours

No

1.00

1.00

Yes

0.99 (0.53 – 1.85)

4.76 (1.49 – 14.29)

Working after hours in a cooperative clinic

No

1.00

1.00

Yes

1.54 (0.87 – 2.70)

0.55 (0.21 – 1.39)

Years worked as a GP

Each 5-year increment

0.91 (0.82 – 1.02)

0.77 (0.66 – 0.90)


OR = odds ratio. SES = socioeconomic status. * Self-assessed comparison with other general practices.

  • Parker J Magin1
  • Elyssa Joy2
  • Malcolm C Ireland3
  • Jon Adams4
  • David W Sibbritt5

  • 1 Discipline of General Practice, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW.
  • 2 Centre for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW.


Correspondence: 

Acknowledgements: 

Our study was supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council grant.

Competing interests:

None identified.

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