26 Tex. Admin. Code § 510.47 - Workplace Violence Prevention
(a) In
accordance with Texas Health and Safety Code (HSC) §331.002, a hospital
shall establish a workplace violence prevention committee or authorize an
existing hospital committee to develop a workplace violence prevention
plan.
(b) A hospital shall ensure
the committee includes at least:
(1) one
registered nurse who provides direct care to the hospital's patients;
(2) one physician licensed to practice
medicine in this state who provides direct care to the hospital's patients;
and
(3) one hospital employee who
provides security services for the hospital if any and if
practicable.
(c) A
health care system that owns or operates more than one facility, as that term
is defined by HSC §331.001, which includes a hospital, may establish a
single workplace violence prevention committee for all of the system's
facilities if:
(1) the committee develops a
violence prevention plan for implementation at each facility in the system;
and
(2) data related to violence
prevention remains distinctly identifiable for each facility in the
system.
(d) A hospital
shall adopt, implement, and enforce a written workplace violence prevention
policy to protect health care providers and employees from violent behavior and
threats of violent behavior occurring at the hospital. In accordance with HSC
§331.003, the policy shall:
(1) require
the hospital to:
(A) provide significant
consideration of the violence prevention plan recommended by the hospital's
committee; and
(B) evaluate any
existing hospital violence prevention plan;
(2) encourage health care providers and
employees to provide confidential information on workplace violence to the
committee;
(3) include a process to
protect from retaliation health care providers or employees who provide
information to the committee; and
(4) comply with HHSC rules relating to
workplace violence.
(e)
A hospital shall adopt, implement, and enforce a written workplace violence
prevention plan developed by the committee. In accordance with HSC
§331.004, the plan shall:
(1) be based on
a hospital setting;
(2) adopt a
definition of "workplace violence" that includes:
(A) an act or threat of physical force
against a health care provider or employee that results in, or is likely to
result in, physical injury or psychological trauma; and
(B) an incident involving the use of a
firearm or other dangerous weapon, regardless of whether a health care provider
or employee is injured by the weapon;
(3) require the hospital to at least annually
provide workplace violence prevention training or education that may be
included in other required training or education provided to the health care
providers and employees who provide direct patient care;
(4) prescribe a system for responding to and
investigating violent incidents or potentially violent incidents at the
hospital;
(5) address physical
security and safety;
(6) require
the hospital to solicit information from the health care providers and
employees when developing and implementing a workplace violence prevention
plan;
(7) allow health care
providers and employees to report workplace violence incidents through the
hospital's existing occurrence reporting systems; and
(8) require the hospital to adjust patient
care assignments, to the extent practicable, to prevent a health care provider
or employee from treating or providing services to a patient who has
intentionally physically abused or threatened the provider or
employee.
(f) The
written workplace violence prevention plan may satisfy the requirements of
subsection (e) of this section by referencing other internal hospital policies
and documents.
(g) At least
annually after the date a hospital adopts a written workplace violence
prevention plan required by subsection (e) of this section, the committee
shall:
(1) review and evaluate the workplace
violence prevention plan; and
(2)
report the results of the evaluation to the hospital's governing
body.
(h) Each hospital
shall make available on request an electronic or printed copy of the hospital's
workplace violence prevention plan to each health care provider or hospital
employee. If the committee determines the plan contains information that would
pose a security threat if made public, the committee may redact that
information before providing the plan.
(i) In accordance with HSC §331.005,
after an incident of workplace violence occurs, a hospital shall offer
immediate post-incident services, including any necessary acute medical
treatment for each hospital health care provider or employee who is directly
involved in the incident.
(j) In
accordance with HSC §331.005, a hospital may not discourage a health care
provider or employee from exercising the provider's or employee's right to
contact or file a report with law enforcement regarding a workplace violence
incident.
(k) In accordance with
HSC §331.005, a hospital shall prohibit hospital personnel from
disciplining, including by suspension or termination of employment,
discriminating against, or retaliating against another person who:
(1) in good faith reports a workplace
violence incident; or
(2) advises a
health care provider or employee of the provider's or employee's right to
report a workplace violence incident.
Notes
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