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How Healthcare Leaders Refuse to Tolerate Sexual Harassment

News  |  By Nurse Leader Insider  
   March 08, 2018

Prevention, detection, remediation: 'Thoughtful leaders use all three to assure a safe and productive care environment.'

This article was originally published by HCPro's Nurse Leader Insider March 8, 2018.

Ever since the Harvey Weinstein scandal broke in 2017, there’s been new (and well-deserved) attention placed on sexual harassment, and healthcare organizations are no exception. The industry is rife with examples.

A surgeon cornered a colleague in a cloakroom after a professional society dinner and insisted he was going to walk her to her hotel room. There was a $168 million lawsuit against a California hospital after a surgeon slapped a nurse’s rear daily while saying “I’m horny.” A Denver nurse was sent to prison for fondling female patients while they were sedated. A nurse was pinned to a bed by a patient and had her clothes ripped off and back clawed.

Ideally, everyone could go to work without having to worry about harassment. But since this isn’t an ideal world, healthcare organizations must get proactive about preventing, investigating, and resolving sexual harassment claims and violations.


Related: C-Suite Must Lead on Sexual Harassment Policy


Kate Fenner, PhD, RN, managing director of Compass Clinical Consulting, specializes in organizational optimization, performance improvement, and regulatory compliance. Anyone who has worked in a healthcare organization can recount a harassment story or allegation, she says. And some organizations are more prone to these problems than others.

“The very public attention currently being paid makes it even more imperative that executives lead their organizations on this pressing issue,” Fenner says. “Prevention, detection, and remediation are the key components of a successful approach. Thoughtful leaders use all three to assure a safe and productive care environment.”

And it’s not just the public and newspapers watching. Government agencies and surveyors are also taking notice.

“Regulators and surveyors (CMS and The Joint Commission) pay careful attention to the news and trends in public interest,” Fenner says. “Allegations of improper conduct, such as that recently lodged against a physician then practicing at a highly regarded medical center, pique regulator interest and focus attention.”

Types of harassment

The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that there are two types of sexual harassment covered by the Civil Rights Act, which recognizes sexual harassment as an infringement on employee’s civil rights:

Quid pro quo: “Job security, advancement, or benefits are tied to sexual favors. This type includes unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, or physical or verbal conduct of a sexual nature that are tied directly or implicitly to employment.”

This type of harassment is fairly straightforward (“Come to my hotel room and we’ll talk about your promotion.”). It also applies to retribution/punishment for rejecting a person’s advances (“Since you won’t go out with me, I’m demoting you.”).

Hostile work environment: “Inappropriate behavior is so pervasive and severe that it permeates the workplace and interferes with the individual’s ability to carry out the duties of the job.”

This type is more subjective and covers a variety of bad behaviors: unwelcome jokes, graphic images, insults, threats, gestures, and touching of a sexual nature. Typically, most quid pro quo cases also include hostile work environments.

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