Allina Health Facing Fines Over Incidents of Workplace Violence

Nurses report escalating violence, with injuries including concussions and physical assaults.

By Jeff Wardon, Jr., Assistant Editor


Violence in healthcare workspaces continues to be a persistent problem, with many healthcare facilities in for a rude awakening if left unaddressed. One problem that can arise from violent incidents is fines, as Allina Health recently learned. 

Allina Health faces over $83,000 in potential fines for workplace violence incidents involving nurses at Abbott Northwestern Hospital in Minneapolis, the Minnesota Star Tribune reports. The Minnesota Department of Labor and Industry cited 15 serious incidents, crediting the issues to an ineffective workplace violence prevention program. Nurses report escalating violence, with injuries including concussions and physical assaults. A 2023 union survey found that nearly half of nurses had experienced physical abuse during their careers. 

Related: Geisinger Finds Success with Violence Prevention Efforts

“Facility managers can provide solutions that create a safe and welcoming workplace culture,” AlGene Caraulia, vice president of integration and sustainability with the Crisis Prevention Institute, previously told Healthcare Facilities Today. “By demonstrating a commitment to workplace violence prevention programming, in-house teams will know that managers prioritize their safety, which can create measurable improvements in retention and a culture that aids recruitment.” 

Workplace violence can be tricky to tackle, however, it can be remedied with actionable steps. Caraulia recommends three steps to address workplace violence: 

  • Implementation: Effective workplace violence prevention programs have all teams work from the same training and use a shared language. 
  • Role definition: Managers need to clearly define roles for everyone in the organization and make those expectations part of the onboarding, training, mentorship and management of healthcare professionals. They also need to extend implementation and program management strategies to conversations among employees, team leaders and supervisors.  
  • Organization-wide collaboration: Managers can cause wider collaboration and adoption of de-escalation training through empowering workplace violence prevention committees to include representatives from all levels of an organization. All together, they can help oversee and implement training programs across departments and an organization. 

Jeff Wardon, Jr., is the assistant editor for the facilities market. 



December 11, 2024


Topic Area: Safety


Recent Posts

Cleanliness in Hospitals: Clinical Priority and Community Perception

EVS managers and communities value cleanliness for complementary reasons: managers for safety and compliance, communities for trust and comfort.


Dana-Farber Receives $50M Gift for Planned Cancer Hospital

A $50 million grant from the Yawkey Foundation will support construction of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute’s planned 450,000-square-foot cancer hospital.


Clarinda Regional Health Center Reports Data Security Incident

On or around December 15, 2025, Clarinda learned that certain data within its network may have been accessed without authorization.


Gaps in Nurses' Environmental Cleaning Knowledge Grow Amid Rising EVS Pressures

Environmental cleaning is crucial in preventing HAIs, but when the responsibility falls to those outside of EVS teams, problems arise. 


Ground Broken on the Southern Nevada Forensic Facility

Construction on the new secure forensic psychiatric hospital is expected to be completed in 2029.


 
 


FREE Newsletter Signup Form

News & Updates | Webcast Alerts
Building Technologies | & More!

 
 
 


All fields are required. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

 
 
 
 

Healthcare Facilities Today membership includes free email newsletters from our facility-industry brands.

Facebook   Twitter   LinkedIn   Posts

Copyright © 2023 TradePress. All rights reserved.