Get the Top, Local stories delivered to your inbox! Click here to join the daily Vernon Matters newsletter.
'Disturbing incident'

UPDATE: Nurses union wants answers after Vernon suspect accused of hitting healthcare worker

May 14, 2020 | 3:25 PM

A Vernon man was arrested after allegedly assaulting a healthcare worker at Kelowna General Hospital.

Police say an emergency room nurse was allegedly struck in the arm by a man who had come to the hospital for treatment Wednesday afternoon.

The 37-year-old suspect was restrained by security staff until police arrived and arrested him.

He’s been released for a future court date with charges being considered by the B.C. Prosecution Service.

“The victim suffered non-life threatening injuries as a result of the alleged assault,” said Cpl. Jocelyn Noseworthy, media relations officer.

Anyone with information on the incident can contact the Kelowna RCMP at 250-762-3300, or remain anonymous by calling Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 or by leaving a tip online at www.crimestoppers.net.

The BC Nurses’ Union is demanding answers after the incident where it says the nurse, working to screen patients for COVID-19 at KGH’s emergency department, was struck and verbally assaulted by an irate patient.

The union says KGH is one of a handful of hospitals in the province that is supposed to provide 24/7 security in the ER, part of a joint pilot project lead by BCNU and Interior Health in 2018 that focused on protecting nurses from violence in the workplace.

BCNU President Christine Sorensen says that in addition to Wednesday’s disturbing incident, she’s extremely concerned to hear that the COVID-19 screening desk, where this nurse was working at the time, has not been retrofitted with a plexiglass shield, something standard at many grocery stores nowadays.

“Not only did this nurse experience a traumatizing incident that left her with physical injuries, she is also working through a pandemic, on the frontlines, in a high-risk area, without the appropriate infection control measures in place,” says Sorensen. “This screening desk is the first point of access to the emergency department. It’s unacceptable to think Interior Health would not take all of the necessary precautions to protect nurses and health care workers.”

View Comments