Firearms in Hospitals – No Progress This Year, Again

by | Aug 18, 2012 | Accreditation, Posts - Manmade Hazards and Issues, Public Health, Terrorism


This article from the Columbus Dispatch discusses two recent handgun deaths in hospitals, leaving unanswered questions about how to make hospitals safer for patients, visitors and staff in the face of rising crime. Excerpt:

The joint commission logo“John Wise, 66, has been charged in the Aug. 4 shooting of his wife, Barbara, at her bedside in the intensive-care unit of Akron General Medical Center. She died the next morning. They had been married for 45 years.

The case appears similar to an apparent mercy killing in 2005 at Mount Carmel East Hospital. In that case, Harry Brown shot his wife of 50 years, Inge, to death in her hospital bed and then returned to the couple’s Gahanna apartment. Soon after, police shot and killed him on his front step after he pulled a gun on officers.â€

It goes on to say:

“There’s a fine line between having an environment that’s friendly and open and one that has the feeling of being locked down,†said Mike Mandelkorn, the security director for Ohio State University’s Wexner Medical Center.

Added Dan Yaross, the new security director at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, “It’s an art more than a science.â€

We respectfully disagree and suggest that making an effort to keep guns out of hospitals could save lives. Industry is reticent to make necessary changes, accreditation entities are afraid to rock the boat, the medical staff are not as concerned as they should be, and the press does not know enough about the issues to make informed opinion on the matter.

After a similar incident at Johns Hopkins in 2008, we wrote a dissenting view on the after-action report, which basically suggested that everything that could have been done to prevent the tragedy had been done. It was a whiney, self-serving piece with a lot of excuses and passing the buck, even the headline which suggests that shootings in hospitals is rare, was off the mark. How many qualifies as rare? We know that reporting these numbers is voluntary and that like all voluntary activities in the healthcare industry over the last twenty years, a financial motive will usually win vs. providing a safer environment. All of this from an organization that received a $1.5M Homeland Security grant to help hospitals become more prepared in the face of man-made threats to “soft targets†of opportunity.

The joint commission logoActually, from the graphic in the report, we can assume the toll from gun violence in hospitals continues to mount, and those responsible for safety seem to think it is somehow part of a risk management calculus similar to Financial Services and that there are acceptable levels of failure. We contend that there are no acceptable levels of failure when human lives are lost as a result. We are not talking about 100% security, which in itself is almost impossible to achieve; we are talking about the prevailing attitudes that nothing can be done from those who are responsible for security and that institutions such as the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) can, through their own neglect in putting forth a more forceful argument, allow this defeatist attitude to prevail unchecked. When JAMA published the findings without rebuttal or editorial comment to the contrary, they essentially agreed with the finding of the two Johns Hopkins employees who wiped their hands clean after the event. At this point we wrote a dissenting view, which can be seen below. Here we are two years later, with more deaths behind us and no real progress addressing the issue. Will it be the same in two more years, or will it really take a major Mumbai-like event to wake everyone up?

A Dissenting View – 12/10/2012

The December 8th, 2010 Journal of American Medical Association (JAMA) article -Hospital Shootings Rare: But Other Assaults High, received a lot of attention on the internet.

We were surprised by the initial coverage of the Johns Hopkins shooting event in September. The press statements from hospital security experts and local politicians had us scratching our heads. As more information became available some of those statements appeared to be bizarre. When we first reviewed the JAMA December 8th,, 2010 article we thought that it was a rehash of the 17th September 2010. A closer look revealed that it was a Commentary piece submitted to JAMA as a serious research effort, after action analysis of what may have gone wrong.

We assumed it would reflect some thoughtful retrospective content or explanations

For, what appeared to us to be, some misguided impulsive remarks made during the usual heat of the shooting crisis…

We were surprised that the article was authored by two Johns Hopkins physician employees.  Our assumption is that some JAMA expert review group reviewed the article and passed it on for publication. We question the “objectivity†of the commentary and find it defensive, self-serving and misguided.

The hospital authority for Johns Hopkins Corporate Security indicated that the weekly stream of 80,000 patients, visitors and others through 80 entrances that screening is “impossibleâ€. Other staff commented on the dangerous crime-ridden East Baltimore neighborhood and the fact that many residents carried firearms.

Contrary to the statement that “few hospitals use metal detection devices†many hospitals across the nation place great reliance on metal detectors in their battle against all manner of violence.

We are not sure we agree with Johns Hopkins Security director that “I think at the end of the day we’re pleased with the way the plan was implementedâ€Â Two dead and one seriously wounded is a questionably acceptable outcome.

We expect politicians to make the usual gaff at these events. We hope that the researchers in the JAMA Commentary did not internalize the published statements “the hospital’s security is adequate and that metal detectors would create a hazardous situation for patients entering the hospital.†“Why would they want metal detectors going into the hospital?†“People go to the hospital because they got shotâ€; “People wouldn’t go to the hospital because of these metal detectors.† “They would stay away and die rather go through metal detectorsâ€.

The notion that putting Magnetometers in selected entrances would frighten patients and they would boycott the hospital is not worth our attention. Did the enhanced security at Airports keep the holiday travelers away?

We assume that some Center for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) external evaluation contractor has surveyed the organization for its all-hazards/Emergency Management Preparedness. It is a requirement (deemed status) for reimbursement of care for federal beneficiary. The Tucson shooter gives us a glimpse of the potential slaughter capacity posed by one shooter.

Homeland Security terrorism experts warn us that the most likely next terrorist attack would be a Mumbai style event. If you offer some 80 points of entry and no means to reasonably defend against armed intruders, it makes little difference how many outside armed responders are poised to assist. Ten terrorists prepared to kill as many patients, visitors, staff and others before they are killed would create a Terror Multiplier Effect across the nation. This did happen in Mumbai hospitals.

Johns Hopkins is not unique in its desire to keep its work site as an open and welcoming environment. We have watched as millions are spent for Patient Safety and Security. In recent years in the struggle to reduce treatment acquired infections and medical misadventures (errors) has led to initiatives which focus on one side of safety and security and has morphed into an exclusive clinical domain at the neglect of physical safety and security. A century of clinical excellence can be neutralized by an assault from a ragtag group of domestic terrorists or neglected security on hospital-based Cesium Cl blood irradiator, one-half of the dreaded “Dirty Bombâ€.  The Mumbai attackers were a group of near-teens poorly trained and armed with conventional weapons easily obtained across the nation.

Fast forward to the subject JAMA article.

The ease with which the researchers conclude that hospital shootings are a rare event and that the security experts should focus on the violence associated with the work site is troubling.

We have seen the degradation of work site safety and security for some time. The researchers would be better served by researching some root causes of violence in the workplace.

They may want to start with a look at the personal stress on caregivers as organizations’ downsize to meet economic challenges.  Emergency rooms stretched to their limits. Human Resources Screening, not policy but practice. They may want to look at the screening practice of Outsourced Administrative and Clinical services, how reliable are their screening practices? Take a look at the impact of “Just in Time†deliveries and the additional traffic associated with this economic strategy.  When staff cuts are made are the support services (a cost center) Security (both manpower and supporting security equipment) are generally the first to go.

Had the healthcare industry responded to the early Infant Abduction crisis in the same manner as suggested by the Johns Hopkins’s researchers then they would have seen the expensive array of security equipment and other actions not worth the time and expense. All that public display of security measures to keep newborns and vulnerable children safe, would amount to “emote a false sense of securityâ€.

These protective measures have reduced infant and child abductions significantly. How do you determine what is rare shootings in hospitals?  Legal experts told us that one child abduction, places a heavy, expensive legal burden on hospitals. We have identified approximately 20 shooting event in hospitals in 2010. Many of those involved multiple deaths the total would be higher if you included forensic exposures with firearms involvement. If it happens on Campus but not in the hospital does it give comfort to patients and visitors? How many hospital shooting should be considered acceptable? Are there any experts there who will say the trend in hospital shootings is on the wane?

The Johns Hopkins researchers posit that any expectation of providing perfect safety and security

(Their words) in hospitals must be seen in the light of a more hostile, Hobbesian population. Dramatic increases in divorce and “custody battles†has posed a greater threat for infant and child abduction, would you wait to respond to the reality of dysfunctional family events to enhance your protective net?  It is one thing to deny the good for the perfect but to indicate that the good is not in reach is folly.

Our concern over the JAMA commentary is that its target audience, physicians, promotes an unrealistic evaluation to a group which traditionally has been reluctant to support a robust secure workplace.

We have not determined the underlying circumstances which led to the Johns Hopkins submission (requested or offered) JAMA Commentary. In any event, the content appears self-serving.

Local press coverage reflects the usual “soft†treatment of crisis events and the propensity to accept irrational statements from politicians and industry officials when they are covering troubling events at the area’s largest employers. The trusting public almost always finishes second.   JB

Post Your Comment

0 Comments

Core Topics

Contact Us

*We will never sell or share your contact information” to “Your email address will not be published.