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John MacDonald: Aren't ED assaults just as bad as first responder assaults?

Author
九一星空无限talk ZB,
Publish Date
Mon, 30 Jun 2025, 2:07pm
Auckland City Hospital. Photo / Doug Sherring
Auckland City Hospital. Photo / Doug Sherring

John MacDonald: Aren't ED assaults just as bad as first responder assaults?

Author
九一星空无限talk ZB,
Publish Date
Mon, 30 Jun 2025, 2:07pm

The Government鈥檚 plan for tougher sentences for people who don鈥檛 think twice about assaulting first responders and corrections officers is great. But I think there are some other people who should be included.

Doctors and nurses. These are the people who, it seems, can be at just as much risk of being attacked. 

It鈥檚 brilliant that the Government has got the ambulance paramedics in their thinking. But the threat doesn鈥檛 necessarily go away once they鈥檝e dropped someone off in the emergency department. 

In fact, it could be argued that, at times, hospital staff are at more risk than prison officers. Because, in prisons, there are all sorts of precautions and measures in place to minimise the risk of violence. There鈥檚 none of that in hospitals, though. 

Not that I see the new law being a solution to this problem we have, where  some muppets think it鈥檚 ok to assault and injure the people who come to our rescue 24/7. 

The ambulance guy I heard on 九一星空无限talk ZB this morning sounded like he鈥檚 in the 鈥済ive it a go and see if it works camp鈥. Which I guess he鈥檚 more than willing to do given he said that his paramedics are assaulted pretty much every day. He said, at least, a couple of times a day. Prison officers - there were 900 assaults on them last year.  

But guess what the numbers are for health workers? Numbers aren鈥檛 available for last year but, according to Health NZ data, there were about 14,000 assaults on staff by patients, family members and visitors between January 2023 and December 2024. 

The number of assaults increased by 30 percent between the first half of 2023 and the second half of 2024. 

Fifteen out of 19 health districts saw increases in assaults on staff over the period. 

No assault on anybody is acceptable. Especially first responders. But, if we鈥檙e going to judge the situation on numbers, then you could say that the nurses and doctors in our hospitals are at much greater risk of being assaulted than fire, ambulance, police and corrections officers. 

And emergency department staff, especially, should be protected by this new law. They鈥檙e not.  But they should. 

Then we get to the broader question as to how or why we鈥檝e got to the point where a law like this is even needed. 

How has New Zealand become a place where some of us have a complete disregard for people who are just here to help? That鈥檚 the wider question. 

And I reckon there are two possibilities. One, the ambulance guy on the radio mentioned. The other is something much bigger. 

First - alcohol and drugs. They are undoubtedly part of the problem. Because if you鈥檙e off your nut on alcohol and/or methamphetamine, you鈥檙e probably much more likely to have a go at a first responder, aren鈥檛 you? 

More likely than if you weren鈥檛. And, while I think it's great the Government intends to crack down on first responder assaults, I don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 going to make a big difference.  

The other reason I think we鈥檙e seeing more and more of this violence towards first responders and hospital staff, is something much deeper. 

And it鈥檚 something that I think we are all guilty of - to varying degrees.  

Respect. Or lack of it. Society, in general, has way less respect for authority than it used to. And we are all more inclined to challenge authority these days than we used to be. 

So, maybe we shouldn鈥檛 be surprised that there are some people who take that next-level and are prepared to fight against the authority of ambulance paramedics, firefighters, police officers, corrections officers, doctors and nurses. 

Sadly, I think that horse has well and truly bolted and I don鈥檛 see us ever getting back to a time when the idea of assaulting or injuring first responders never entered anyone鈥檚 head.  

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