Exploring the impact of workplace violence on defensive medicine and patient outcomes: an empirical analysis using regression discontinuity

Abstract Objective This study aims to thoroughly examine the impact of workplace violence incidents in healthcare settings on the structure of medical expenses, with a particular focus on specific changes in defensive medical, and to further investigate the resulting patient outcomes. Method This st...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Guoheng Hu, Ying Li, Haining Zhao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-05-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-025-12942-z
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850243420970287104
author Guoheng Hu
Ying Li
Haining Zhao
author_facet Guoheng Hu
Ying Li
Haining Zhao
author_sort Guoheng Hu
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Objective This study aims to thoroughly examine the impact of workplace violence incidents in healthcare settings on the structure of medical expenses, with a particular focus on specific changes in defensive medical, and to further investigate the resulting patient outcomes. Method This study examines a high-profile workplace violence incident in W City, H Province, China, which had widespread societal impact, treating it as an exogenous shock. Utilizing inpatient medical record data from W City, the study constructs a regression discontinuity model to systematically analyze shifts in medical behaviors related to costs and decision-making following the incident, as well as the implications of these changes on patient burden and health outcomes. Results The findings indicate that workplace violence incidents lead to significant changes in the structure of medical costs, with a notable increase in comprehensive medical service fees and a significant decrease in invasive treatment fees. Further analysis reveals that such incidents trigger pronounced defensive medicine, including extended hospital stays, increased probabilities of departmental transfers, reduced surgical levels, and higher costs and a greater proportion of traditional Chinese medicine in total expenditures. Additionally, in terms of patient outcomes, workplace violence incidents slightly alleviate patients’ out-of-pocket expenses and payment ratios. However, these incidents significantly worsen patients’ primary health indicators and overall health status at discharge. Conclusion Workplace violence against healthcare professionals significantly impact the structure of medical costs and trigger defensive medicine, characterized by a tendency toward conservative treatment approaches and reduced treatment intensity. While such incidents may partially alleviate patients’ financial burdens, they have detrimental effects on patients’ health outcomes. Therefore, to enhance healthcare quality and safeguard patient well-being, it is imperative to implement measures to mitigate workplace violence in healthcare and encourage medical institutions to prioritize scientific and rational decision-making in treatment practices.
format Article
id doaj-art-6b7893bfd5f9460ebd3d20b78f4ca2c9
institution OA Journals
issn 1472-6963
language English
publishDate 2025-05-01
publisher BMC
record_format Article
series BMC Health Services Research
spelling doaj-art-6b7893bfd5f9460ebd3d20b78f4ca2c92025-08-20T02:00:00ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632025-05-0125111910.1186/s12913-025-12942-zExploring the impact of workplace violence on defensive medicine and patient outcomes: an empirical analysis using regression discontinuityGuoheng Hu0Ying Li1Haining Zhao2Yanshan UniversityYanshan UniversityYanshan UniversityAbstract Objective This study aims to thoroughly examine the impact of workplace violence incidents in healthcare settings on the structure of medical expenses, with a particular focus on specific changes in defensive medical, and to further investigate the resulting patient outcomes. Method This study examines a high-profile workplace violence incident in W City, H Province, China, which had widespread societal impact, treating it as an exogenous shock. Utilizing inpatient medical record data from W City, the study constructs a regression discontinuity model to systematically analyze shifts in medical behaviors related to costs and decision-making following the incident, as well as the implications of these changes on patient burden and health outcomes. Results The findings indicate that workplace violence incidents lead to significant changes in the structure of medical costs, with a notable increase in comprehensive medical service fees and a significant decrease in invasive treatment fees. Further analysis reveals that such incidents trigger pronounced defensive medicine, including extended hospital stays, increased probabilities of departmental transfers, reduced surgical levels, and higher costs and a greater proportion of traditional Chinese medicine in total expenditures. Additionally, in terms of patient outcomes, workplace violence incidents slightly alleviate patients’ out-of-pocket expenses and payment ratios. However, these incidents significantly worsen patients’ primary health indicators and overall health status at discharge. Conclusion Workplace violence against healthcare professionals significantly impact the structure of medical costs and trigger defensive medicine, characterized by a tendency toward conservative treatment approaches and reduced treatment intensity. While such incidents may partially alleviate patients’ financial burdens, they have detrimental effects on patients’ health outcomes. Therefore, to enhance healthcare quality and safeguard patient well-being, it is imperative to implement measures to mitigate workplace violence in healthcare and encourage medical institutions to prioritize scientific and rational decision-making in treatment practices.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-025-12942-zWorkplace violenceWorkplace violence against healthcare professionalsDefensive medicinePatient outcomes
spellingShingle Guoheng Hu
Ying Li
Haining Zhao
Exploring the impact of workplace violence on defensive medicine and patient outcomes: an empirical analysis using regression discontinuity
BMC Health Services Research
Workplace violence
Workplace violence against healthcare professionals
Defensive medicine
Patient outcomes
title Exploring the impact of workplace violence on defensive medicine and patient outcomes: an empirical analysis using regression discontinuity
title_full Exploring the impact of workplace violence on defensive medicine and patient outcomes: an empirical analysis using regression discontinuity
title_fullStr Exploring the impact of workplace violence on defensive medicine and patient outcomes: an empirical analysis using regression discontinuity
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the impact of workplace violence on defensive medicine and patient outcomes: an empirical analysis using regression discontinuity
title_short Exploring the impact of workplace violence on defensive medicine and patient outcomes: an empirical analysis using regression discontinuity
title_sort exploring the impact of workplace violence on defensive medicine and patient outcomes an empirical analysis using regression discontinuity
topic Workplace violence
Workplace violence against healthcare professionals
Defensive medicine
Patient outcomes
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-025-12942-z
work_keys_str_mv AT guohenghu exploringtheimpactofworkplaceviolenceondefensivemedicineandpatientoutcomesanempiricalanalysisusingregressiondiscontinuity
AT yingli exploringtheimpactofworkplaceviolenceondefensivemedicineandpatientoutcomesanempiricalanalysisusingregressiondiscontinuity
AT hainingzhao exploringtheimpactofworkplaceviolenceondefensivemedicineandpatientoutcomesanempiricalanalysisusingregressiondiscontinuity