Rioting patient injures doctor's assistant in Greiz practice!

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A 39-year-old rioted in a doctor's office in Greiz, injured an employee and caused property damage. Police are investigating.

Eine 39-Jährige randalierte in einer Greizer Arztpraxis, verletzte eine Mitarbeiterin und verursachte Sachschaden. Polizei ermittelt.
A 39-year-old rioted in a doctor's office in Greiz, injured an employee and caused property damage. Police are investigating.

Rioting patient injures doctor's assistant in Greiz practice!

On Monday morning there was a serious incident in a doctor's office in Greiz. A 39-year-old woman caused a stir around 10:40 a.m. when she vehemently demanded that medication be released. However, this request was rejected by the doctor's assistant, which escalated the situation. How Tixio According to reports, the woman then angrily pushed over a hygiene partition, which hit the employee and slightly injured her. The resulting material damage amounts to several hundred euros.

The police responded quickly after the incident was reported. An investigation into bodily harm and property damage was initiated against the woman. The exact circumstances that led to this escalation are still the subject of investigations, as confirmed by the Gera State Police Inspectorate, as well as in News.de is to be read.

A worrying trend

This incident is part of an alarming trend of increasing violence against medical staff in Germany. Experts report an increasing number of aggressive attacks in doctors' offices and clinics. Andreas Gassen, head of the National Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians, emphasizes that there are hardly any valid statistics on these incidents. Many reports are based on the subjective experiences of doctors and their employees. A cause for concern, because how ZDF today In summary, more and more doctors report being physically attacked or threatened.

For example, a general practitioner reported a steady increase in verbal and physical attacks since 1997. Over 90% of doctors said in 2016 that they had experienced aggressive behavior, and in 2018 one in four doctors had had a similar experience. The corona pandemic has made the situation even worse: many doctors received threatening letters and even had to request police protection.

Calls for faster sentences

The increasing violence against medical staff is causing alarm among experts. The head of the National Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians is therefore calling for faster and harsher punishments for acts of violence against this professional group. He also receives support from Health Minister Karl Lauterbach, who emphasizes the need to tighten penalties. These developments make it clear that a rethink is necessary in society in order to protect the working environment of doctors and medical staff.

The incident in Greiz showed once again how quickly situations in doctor's offices can escalate. It is to be hoped that such incidents will become less frequent in the future and that safety in the healthcare sector will come first.