Many teens may experience workplace violence
By Joene Hendry
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - As many as one in three teenagers may have been on the receiving end of violence or abuse at work, survey findings suggest.
"Most working teenagers and their parents probably do not think that workplace violence is something they need to be concerned about, but they should," Dr. Kimberly J. Rauscher told Reuters Health.
In the US, most teens work in the retail sector which involves a great deal of customer contact and cash handling - both known risk factors for workplace violence and criminal activity, said Rauscher, from the Injury Prevention Research Center, University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill.
Yet, outside of occupational injury surveillance tallies of actual injuries from workplace violence, "there are (sic) very little data on the types of violence that US youth, ages 14 to 17, suffer, and the perpetrators of these acts," Rauscher notes.
She, therefore, assessed the incidence of workplace violence among 1,171 students at a Lowell, Massachusetts high school. Fifty-four percent were female and most had worked for less than 2 years on average.
Overall, 51 percent were non-Hispanic white, 38 percent were Asian, and the remaining were black, Hispanic, or of other ethnicity.
In the American Journal of Industrial Medicine, Rauscher reports 10 percent of the teens said they had been physically attacked, another 10 percent felt they were sexually harassed, and 25 percent said they had been verbally threatened.
Of the teens reporting physical attacks, 31 percent came from a customer. Customers also accounted for 34 percent of the sexual harassment and 55 percent of the verbal threats. Continued...
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