Sure. I think that's a really important point. This is something that we've tried to focus a lot of attention on. You heard me say that we had 58 injuries in the last year. To add to that, we had another 530 incident reports that were reported just as a “good catch”, meaning there was no injury, no first aid needed whatsoever, but just that this happened so that we could have some more data. As you said, we looked at what the contributing causes were.
From that we see in our experience that, yes, there are areas of the hospital that are higher risk and perhaps there are some patients who are more likely to be involved in violence. But really, at the first point, it can be anybody who has had a bad day and gotten some bad news, because this is what happens in health care.
Perhaps you're a parent whose child is being taken out of your custody and into child services. This is a really difficult life transition. We haven't talked about this much, but 70% of the staff in my environment are women. You've heard that from several of the other witnesses. We know that women are more likely to be the target of domestic abuse. What that means for us is that we know that at any given time, with 14,000 staff, there are probably hundreds of people who work for us who are living a very complicated life. Sometimes that domestic abuse can work its way into the workplace, or one of those people can have the right circumstances and the courage to ask for support. How can we provide a better, safer environment for them at the workplace?
Those are two kinds of spots. There are many others, but those are two that stick out to me that people don't think about a lot of times.