Sunday, June 12, 2022

UK HealthCare spending $5 million on security upgrades, setting new policies amid gun violence at health facilities in other states

Screenshot from UK website, adapted by Ky. Health News
The University of Kentucky is bolstering security at health-care campuses "in response to increasing reports of violence taking place across the nation in health-care settings," a news release said Friday.

UK said its police began using handheld metal detectors on all patients and visitors entering emergency departments in April 2021, followed by installation of fixed metal detectors in July 2021. Other recent measures include having at least one police officer at each of the emergency departments around the clock.

The release said UK will spend $5 million on health-care safety, including:
  • Addition of electronic access control to all perimeter doors to restrict public access as well as replacement and modernization of aged entryways.
  • Utilization of emerging technology to enhance threat detection and expanding panic alarms and lockdown capabilities.
  • Increased security camera coverage to improve situational awareness.
  • Addition of UK Blue emergency towers to walkways where staff and patients travel frequently.
  • Enhancement of exterior lighting to improve visibility around UK HealthCare facilities.
At a virtual forum for UK HealthCare employees, Executive Vice President for Health Affairs Mark Newman and UK Police Chief Joe Monroe discussed their efforts to improve the safety and security of employees, patients and visitors.

“We also are researching better ways to make UK HealthCare a weapons-free location through screening technology and looking at strategic efforts to increase dedicated police presence on the UK HealthCare campus,” Monroe said.

The moves were announced in the wake of the June 1 killings of four people at a Tulsa hospital by man who blamed his doctor for pain after back surgery and also killed himself, but the news release said UK Police have worked for a year with a security consultant on the first phase of a continuing security review "with an initial focus on enhancing perimeter security and fortifying the emergency departments at UK Chandler Hospital and UK Good Samaritan Hospital," the news release said.

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