UHS Streamwood Behavioral Healthcare

Hitting, kicking, beating, shoving — Fractures — STREAMWOOD, Illinois

HOSPITALIZED — Worker hospitalized after incident at UHS Streamwood Behavioral Healthcare in STREAMWOOD, Illinois
Employer UHS Streamwood Behavioral Healthcare
Address 1360 E. Irving Park Road
City, State ZIP STREAMWOOD, Illinois 60107
Report ID 20231010057
Event Date October 31, 2023
Outcome Hospitalized
Nature of Injury Fractures
Body Part Hip(s)
Event Type Hitting, kicking, beating, shoving
Source of Injury Student
Industry (NAICS) 622110
GPS Coordinates 42.01216, -88.17585

Location Map

Incident Narrative

A teacher's assistant was attending to a student in the quiet room when they were pushed by another student. The employee fell to the floor and sustained a left hip fracture.

Incident Summary

On October 31, 2023, a worker at UHS Streamwood Behavioral Healthcare in STREAMWOOD, Illinois suffered fractures to the hip(s). The incident was classified as hitting, kicking, beating, shoving, with student identified as the source of injury. The worker was hospitalized.

Context

OSHA has recorded 459 severe injury reports involving "Hitting, kicking, beating, shoving" incidents in our database. Browse all Hitting, kicking, beating, shoving injuries.

See all reports for UHS Streamwood Behavioral Healthcare.

Similar Incidents

Other severe injury reports involving Hitting, kicking, beating, shoving events:

Date Employer Location Nature Outcome
Sep 26, 2021 WELLPATH LLC INDIANTOWN, Florida Amputations Amp.
Aug 16, 2022 United Dairy Farmers Co. No. 51 CINCINNATI, Ohio Traumatic injuries and disorders, unspecified Hosp.
Jan 2, 2016 Capitol city Janitorial, Inc AUSTIN, Texas Intracranial injuries, unspecified Hosp.
May 12, 2018 Steak 'n Shake Inc MONTGOMERY, Ohio Soreness, pain, hurt-nonspecified injury Hosp.
Feb 22, 2016 PROTECTO WRAP COMPANY DENVER, Colorado Fractures Hosp.
Dec 13, 2022 Academy Sports + Outdoors TOPEKA, Kansas Fractures Hosp.
Dec 14, 2022 Southeastern Grocers LLC TAMPA, Florida Fractures Hosp.
Feb 28, 2016 Aurora St. Luke's Medical Center MILWAUKEE, Wisconsin Soreness, pain, hurt-nonspecified injury Hosp.

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Workers injured on the job have the right to medical treatment covered by workers' compensation, wage replacement benefits during recovery, and protection against retaliation for reporting the injury. You have the right to file a complaint with OSHA if you believe your workplace is unsafe, and OSHA cannot reveal your identity to your employer without your consent. You also have the right to see your OSHA 300 injury log. If your employer denies a workers' comp claim, you can appeal through your state's workers' compensation board. An occupational health attorney can advise on complex cases involving denied claims or third-party liability.

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About This OSHA Report

This is a severe injury report filed with OSHA. Employers are required to report all work-related fatalities and severe injuries within 8 to 24 hours. Browse more reports by employer, state, or industry below.

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