ENDEAVOUR HILLS STAR JOURNAL
Home » Paramedics’ constant abuse from patients

Paramedics’ constant abuse from patients

By LACHLAN MOORHEAD

JUST weeks after speaking out about being the victim of assault while on the job, paramedic Bracha Rafael was witness to another act of violence towards medical staff.
Ms Rafael, who regularly patrols the Endeavour Hills area, said she recently saw an injured and intoxicated man she’d transported to hospital attempt to hit a male nurse and verbally abuse him.
The incident came just a couple of shifts after Ms Rafael spoke to the media about two separate occasions in which she was threatened and also the victim of attempted sexual assault.
New figures released last month showed there were 314 reports of assault and aggression towards paramedics in 2013-’14 – almost one per day.
“Two or three shifts after the initial press conference, I helped transport a guy who was intoxicated and had an injury.
“He had been quite agitated on scene and we’d requested police but he had so far been compliant and we decided we were comfortable taking him to hospital,” Ms Rafael said.
“But as soon as the male nurse came in, the patient was up and swinging at him and making a barrage of verbal assaults – what could they have done to prevent it?”
Unfortunately, this show of patient aggression towards medical staff and paramedics is not uncommon to Ms Rafael.
When she was still working as a graduate paramedic, the 25-year-old was threatened and intimidated by a woman, whose seemingly unconscious mother needed help.
“At some point, we’d requested police, then when a second paramedic arrived he knew the patient, and within a couple of minutes she’d woken up and demanded that we leave,” Ms Rafael said.
“We were happy to leave, we packed our bags away. I jumped into the passenger seat of the ambulance and the daughter pulled the door open and started abusing me.
“She was very aggressive, and she never at any point offered any particular rationale as to why she was so angry.”
Ms Rafael said she’d been very shaken by the incident.
“I’d frozen when it happened, and I was concerned by that,” she said.
“I felt my actions weren’t helpful, I needed to have a plan if that happened again.
“I needed to take different actions.”
And it did happen again, this time when Ms Rafael was working as a qualified paramedic.
While transporting another intoxicated and injured man the patient attempted to touch her inappropriately inside the ambulance.
“He spent most of the trip dozing and when I was checking his blood pressure I felt his hand between my thighs and up my legs towards my groin,” she said.
“I said what are you doing? It was the only time I’d sworn at a patient. It was effective, he woke up, and he appeared remorseful and I demanded that the patient say sorry.”
While she felt she’d handled the incident well under the circumstances, Ms Rafael admitted she wouldn’t have been able to treat any other patients that night due to her nerves.

Digital Editions


  • Minister’s warm welcome to Wellsprings

    Minister’s warm welcome to Wellsprings

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532816 Wellsprings for Women welcomed the Federal Minister for Multicultural Affairs, Dr Anne Aly, who saw first hand the…

More News

  • Looking Back

    Looking Back

    100 years ago 11 February 1926 The new “Keep to the Left Rule”, which the Dandenong Shire Council has not brought into force, is not very strictly observed in the…

  • What’s On

    What’s On

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 390730 Victorian Mosque Open Day Mosques open their doors to visitors on this annual open day organised by Islamic Council of Victoria. Venues include…

  • The power of self-acceptance

    The power of self-acceptance

    Intrinsic in feelings of hope is the acceptance of the self and then the acceptance of the situation with the faith that there is some benefit in it. This attitude…

  • Jail for armed carjacker targeting elderly driver

    Jail for armed carjacker targeting elderly driver

    A would-be carjacker who held a screwdriver to his elderly victim’s neck and threatened to kill him in a home driveway in Keysborough has been jailed. Petap Kong, 31, of…

  • Letter-to-the-editor: Who will grow the trees?

    Letter-to-the-editor: Who will grow the trees?

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 492338 This summer’s repeated 40-degree days have made one thing unavoidable: Melbourne’s suburbs are heating up, and trees are no longer decorative extras. Councils…

  • Bail plan flagged for accused teacher

    Bail plan flagged for accused teacher

    A former teacher accused of stabbing a principal at Keysborough Secondary College may require involuntary mental health treatment, a defence lawyer has told court. Kim Ramchen, 37, of Mulgrave, appeared…

  • ‘I love what I’m doing’: Meals on Wheels volunteer awarded

    ‘I love what I’m doing’: Meals on Wheels volunteer awarded

    The City of Greater Dandenong Australia Day Volunteer of the Year is awarded to an individual who has dedicated more than 30 years in giving back to the community. Heather…

  • Casey residents surveyed to guide community wellness

    Casey residents surveyed to guide community wellness

    Some Casey locals might get their chance at providing critical feedback and insights and in turn, help the council shape the future of health and wellbeing in their area. Over…

  • Commuters say Metro Tunnel trips now harder

    Commuters say Metro Tunnel trips now harder

    South East commuters say the new Metro Tunnel service on the Cranbourne and East Pakenham lines has made travelling to the city more time-consuming, less convenient, and stressful. The changes…

  • Two-hour police pursuit ends in jail

    Two-hour police pursuit ends in jail

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 481350 A Frankston serial car thief has been jailed for up to 26 months after a perilous, two-hour police pursuit across the South East.…