April is Workplace Violence Prevention Month, a dedicated time to pause and evaluate how healthcare organizations protect their most valuable asset: their people.
In the clinical world, safety is already woven into the fabric of daily operations. Teams manage high-stress environments, support vulnerable populations, and maintain 24/7 care under immense pressure.
However, in the rush to meet evolving regulatory standards or react to high-profile headlines, it is easy to lose sight of the fundamentals. This month isn’t just about reacting to worst-case scenarios; it’s about taking a step back to cut through the noise. Many teams are so hyper-focused on preventing "headline" incidents or checking boxes for outside audits that they may inadvertently overlook a foundational piece of their safety plan. By returning to the basics, we can ensure our strategies are built on reality, not just reaction.
Awareness of workplace violence in healthcare has grown significantly. States have passed new legislation, and regulatory bodies like The Joint Commission have implemented stricter guidelines. Consequently, many organizations have begun deploying advanced safety solutions.
Despite this progress, certain misconceptions persist—often preventing these strategies from reaching their full potential. To improve, we must address these hurdles head-on:
To solve workplace violence, we must first define it. According to the International Association for Healthcare Security and Safety (IAHSS) Foundation, workplace violence encompasses any behavior that tends to disturb the public peace, including verbal profanity, obscene gestures, and physical attacks.
To recognize that safety extends beyond the bedside, the IAHSS Foundation utilizes a four-type typology to categorize these events based on the relationship between the perpetrator and the workplace:
Category |
Definition |
Healthcare Example |
|
Type 1: Criminal Intent |
The individual has no legitimate relationship to the facility. |
Theft or trespassing in a parking garage or public lobby. |
|
Type 2: Customer/Patient |
Violence directed at staff by patients, visitors, or those receiving services. |
A patient or family member becoming aggressive due to clinical stress. |
|
Type 3: Worker-on-Worker |
Violence between current or former employees. |
Bullying, lateral violence, or verbal intimidation between staff. |
|
Type 4: Personal Relationship |
Violence involving someone with a personal connection to an employee but no connection to the facility. |
A domestic dispute that follows an employee into the clinical setting. |
Risk is often tied to the nature of the work. Certain areas see higher rates of workplace violence due to the intersection of urgency and emotional distress:
While clinicians are five times more likely to sustain an injury than other professions, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, hospitals are a hub of activity with people coming and going regularly and interacting with more than just the bedside caregivers. When we assume violence only happens in "the high-risk units," we leave our administrative, support, and facilities staff vulnerable to the very real threats that exist in the hallways, parking structures, and public lobbies they navigate every day.
Prevention is critical, but response is where outcomes are shaped. To move from awareness to action, we must address the gaps in traditional safety infrastructure. While access controls and cameras are absolutely vital for asset protection and post-incident reporting, they are not effective at quickly alerting to and coordinating a response to a workplace violence incident.
When an incident occurs, the following actionable factors determine the final outcome:
Strong incident management platforms do not replace existing infrastructure; they connect and enhance it. By providing all staff with a suitable duress tool that matches how they work, organizations can bridge the response gap and automatically trigger protocols like lockdowns or access controls.
As we navigate Workplace Violence Prevention Month, it’s worth asking: Have we gotten so swept up in the headlines that we’ve overlooked the foundations? Sometimes, in the fear of a high-profile incident making the news, we rush to find a "quick fix" without unpacking the full scope of what we are solving for.
Who needs protection? How do we leverage our existing physical security forces while filling the gaps in mobile, discreet response? If your organization is still grappling with these questions, you aren't alone. Progress is being made, and this month is the perfect time to reflect and refine.
Take the next step in strengthening your response. Schedule a demo to see how 911Cellular helps healthcare organizations improve incident reporting, coordination, and communication across their environments.