Anger in health care affects both patients and professionals with rising violence and negative health outcomes, but understanding its triggers and applying de-escalation techniques can help manage this pervasive issue.
Anger is generally defined as a negative emotion. Although anger can be used productively and can initiate positive results, especially when justified, the negative consequences, in behavior and physiologic effect, outweigh any benefit of this emotion. Although many formal definitions of anger exist, words such as antagonism, belligerence, and displeasure dominate the descriptions.
Centuries ago, the Roman philosopher Seneca penned perhaps one of the most stirring descriptions of this emotion: “the most hideous and frenzied of all the emotions, a ‘brief insanity’ during which we are closer to a wild animal than a civilized person.”1 The response to anger is to remove the source or sources that provoke this negative emotion. The strategy of removal and the physiologic and psychological effect of these emotions before removal or resolution defines the consequences, in our case to our teammates in health care, our patients, and ourselves. Before we delve into causes, effects, and mitigation, let us look at the scope of the problem.
Anger is increasing
It is not that anger is new to our country. In 2022, The New York Times published a series of articles under the heading “The Year We Lost It.”2 One article acknowledges effective positive rage, such as during the “years of hope and days of rage,” of the 60s, but 2022 was when Will Smith acted on his negative rage by slapping Chris Rock in front of millions of viewers on live television––hardly a positive or effective experience for either performer. We can quantify the increase in these observed activities in the health care setting. From 2011 to 2018, violent attacks against medical professionals increased by 63%, and this was before the COVID-19 pandemic, an event well known to have increased aggression against health care workers. In a 2022 survey of members of the nation’s largest union of registered nurses, 48% reported an increase in workplace violence.3
Anger is not good for your health
Anger has a profound effect on the neurohormonal system, causing a multitude of negative physiologic responses and consequences.4 In addition to the impact on the heart’s conduction system, the anger-induced immune-mediated release of inflammatory cells can lead to the rupturing of coronary artery plaques, leading to infarction. Increased adrenaline output mediated by anger can lead to gastrointestinal tract hypermobility, loss of appetite, and malabsorption. The effect of anger on the brain is more complicated. Anger can be considered an adaptive response. In that regard, our brains can be primed for action, leading not only to motivation but to a critical fight-or-flight response to a perceived dangerous situation. On the other side, however, anger can negatively affect our judgment and block out other effective adaptive signals. Anger also mediates a host of negative consequences due to its effect on sleep.
Health care workers are angry
In addition to workplace violence, a consequence of anger towardhealth care workers, health care professionals themselves are experiencing internal anger. Although the pandemic may have brought attention to the issue of health care workers’ anger, it certainly is not the only factor. The pandemic allowed workers to express their anger openly, whereas previously such expression was considered unprofessional. But even before this new expression of anger, it would have been naive to suppose that health care professionals did not experience anger similarly to others in professions with less frustrating and stressful positions.5 Although the situation surrounding the pandemic identified unique factors that instigated anger among health care workers, such as perceived systemic failures and increased clinical loads related to the lack of use of effective preventive and therapeutic interventions, the decrease in clinical burden of COVID-19 has not removed the anger associated with the health care profession. Two themes are felt to contribute to anger: feeling overloaded and overwhelmed and feeling a lack of control over the work environment. The anger over vulnerability to infection experienced during the pandemic could now translate into anger due to concern about safety from workplace violence. But it is not only anger-induced violence that threatens the health of health care workers. As we mentioned previously, the anger itself can be harmful.
Patients are angry
Patients can become angry for many reasons. Identifying the root cause of the anger is the foundation behind strategies (which we discuss later) that mitigate the risk of that behavior to both the health outcome of the patient and the safety of the health care team. The reasons for anger can be placed into 3 buckets:
Managing the angry patient
Remembering that much anger is triggered by a perceived unfair diagnosis, we can find great lessons in de-escalation techniques revealed in the oncology literature.6 Before addressing the patient and their anger, make sure you are in the right frame of mind by being aware of your own stress levels, which could lead to the unintended escalation of an already volatile situation. Show the patient respect. This is among patients’ most often mentioned expectations, and a perceived lack of respect may further inflame an angry patient. Make sure you are not only listening but that the patient perceives you are listening. This is especially difficult in an era when the health record is on a computer screen, which may make you seem distracted.
Your listening must be intentional. Acknowledge the patient’s anger and take responsibility for the flaws in care. This does not mean you should disclose a medical error, but you should certainly apologize for any delay in care, even if it was not your fault. Do what you can to resolve the situation. Practice service recovery if necessary. Most importantly, if you feel the situation is becoming threatening, remove yourself from the environment and get help.
Manage your anger
Failure to manage your anger can negatively affect your ability to provide care or ascend to a leadership position in your health care system. And, as previously mentioned, it is just not good for you. Fortunately, there is no shortage of anger management techniques, including these 5 strategies7:
Remember, anger is not always destructive and cannot be avoided. The key is to manage it, mitigate its risk, and exploit its advantages of self-protection and increased productivity.
References
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