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Penylvania’s shooting highlights violence against US hospital workers

Penylvania’s shooting highlights violence against US hospital workers

By Mead Gruver, Associated Press

A man who He took hospital in a hospital in Pennsylvania During a shooting that killed a police officer and injured five other people, highlights the growing violence against health workers in the United States and the challenge of protecting them.

Diogenes Archangel-Ortiz, 49, took a gun and strips to the Intensive Care Unit at the UPMC Memorial Hospital in the southern York County of Pennsylvania and took personnel members as hostages on Saturday before they kill him In a shooting with the police, authorities said. The attack also left a doctor, nurse, custodian and two other wounded officers.

Leah Fauth is excited after leaving flowers in front of the West York Police Department
Leah Fauth is excited after leaving Flores in front of the West York Police Department after a police officer was murdered responding to a shooting at the UPMC Memorial Hospital in York, Pennsylvania, on Saturday, February 22, 2025. (Photo/ Matt Rourke)

The officers opened fire when the Archangel-Oortiz contained at the tip of the gun as a member of the female staff whose hands had been tied with zipper, police said.

The man apparently attacked the hospital after he was in contact with the Intensive Care Unit at the beginning of the week for medical care that involves another person, according to the York County District Prosecutor.

Such violence in hospitals is often increasing in emergency departments, but also in maternity rooms and intensive care units, said hospital security consultant Dick SEM.

“Many people are more confrontative, faster to get angry, faster to be threatening,” said SEM. “I interview thousands of nurses and listen to all the time on how they are being abused every day.”

The reasons of Archangel-Ortiz were not clear, but nurses report that the increase in the public’s harassment, especially after the Coronavirus pandemic, said SEM, former director of Safety and Crisis Management for Waste Management and Vice President of Pinkerton /Securitas.

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