News

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. -- Cox South is introducing a new way to keep staff safe: panic buttons. These buttons are intended to help with safety in high risk areas, like the emergency room. Staff wear the ...
Cox Medical Center in Branson, Missouri, will begin issuing "personal panic buttons" to health care workers to help combat the steep increase in violence against staff members over the past year ...
From 2019 to 2020, assaults on hospital staff by patients tripled at Cox Medical Center in Branson, Mo. Now personal panic buttons are being implemented to alert hospital security more easily.
The number of assaults against the hospital's employees has recently tripled. Front-line workers at a Missouri hospital are being provided with personal panic buttons after the number of assaults ...
Nurses and hundreds of other staff members will soon begin wearing panic buttons at a Missouri hospital where assaults on workers tripled after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Cox Medical Cente… ...
(CNN) -- A Missouri hospital is testing out a wearable panic button for workers to press in violent situations. It's in a trial phase and is aimed at improving security in high-risk areas like the ...
Cox Medical Center Branson is using grant money to add buttons to identification badges worn by up to 400 employees who work in the emergency room and inpatient hospital rooms. Pushing the button w… ...
Health care employees at Cox Medical Center Branson in Missouri will wear panic buttons as assaults have tripled at the hospital during the COVID-19 pandemic.
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — Cox South is introducing a new way to keep staff safe: panic buttons. These buttons are intended to help with safety in high risk areas, like the emergency room. Staff wear… ...
BRANSON, Missouri -- Frontline workers at a Missouri hospital are being provided with personal panic buttons after the number of assaults against employees has recently tripled, officials said ...
From 2019 to 2020, assaults on hospital staff by patients tripled at Cox Medical Center in Branson, Missouri. Now personal panic buttons are being implemented to alert hospital security more easily.