DiscoverKQED's ForumFatal UCSF Stabbing Heightens Concerns About Health Worker Safety
Fatal UCSF Stabbing Heightens Concerns About Health Worker Safety

Fatal UCSF Stabbing Heightens Concerns About Health Worker Safety

Update: 2025-12-11
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The killing of Alberto Rangel, a 51-year-old social worker at San Francisco General Hospital, has left colleagues grieving and questioning whether his death could have been prevented. Rangel was stabbed by a patient who authorities say had made multiple threats for weeks. Incidents of workplace violence in healthcare facilities have been on the rise for more than a decade nationwide, prompting hospitals and medical offices to adopt stricter safety protocols. But are they working? We’ll talk about workplace violence against health care workers and what employers are doing – and failing to do – to protect them.




Guests:


Annie Vainshtein, reporter, San Francisco Chronicle


Dani Golomb, psychiatrist; Golomb was attacked by a patient in 2020 during her medical residency at California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco


Dan Russell, president, University Professional and Technical Employees


Al'ai Alvarez, clinical professor of emergency medicine, Stanford University


Cammie Chaumont Menendez, research epidemiologist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

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Fatal UCSF Stabbing Heightens Concerns About Health Worker Safety

Fatal UCSF Stabbing Heightens Concerns About Health Worker Safety

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