
Healthcare leaders no longer debate whether workplace violence is a crisis. The data is clear.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, healthcare and social service workers account for nearly 73% of all nonfatal workplace injuries and illnesses due to violence. OSHA has repeatedly identified healthcare as one of the most high-risk sectors for workplace violence. Meanwhile, incidents of violence – including verbal abuse, threats, and physical assaults – are significantly underreported, masking the true scope of the issue.
The conversation has shifted from whether there’s an issue, to how to act effectively to fix the problem. Yet many healthcare organizations are still approaching staff safety as a single-solution problem, layering policies on top of outdated infrastructure, retrofitting asset-tracking tools for duress purposes, or relying on reactive incident response protocols.
The result is fragmented protection, delayed response, and, perhaps most critically, eroded staff trust.
If healthcare organizations want to meaningfully reduce harm, improve response times, and strengthen retention, the transformation of safety must evolve into a layered, employee-centric, technology-enabled strategy.
First Layer: Close the Response Gap
In healthcare settings, seconds matter. Whether responding to an aggressive patient, a behavioral health crisis, or a clinical emergency, the speed and precision of response directly influence outcomes.
Delayed intervention can increase the likelihood of escalation from verbal altercations to serious injury, but many healthcare facilities still rely on overhead paging systems, instant messaging systems, or imprecise location data that slow down coordination. Modern safety infrastructure can change that dynamic.
Wearable duress buttons, for example, allow staff to discreetly signal for help immediately – without escalating a situation further. When paired with accurate digital mapping, responders receive precise location information rather than a building address or unit approximation. This combination closes a longstanding operational gap: knowing not just that help is needed, but exactly where it is needed.
Speed is not simply a security metric. It is a workforce metric. When caregivers know help can arrive quickly and precisely, the perceived risk of harm decreases and psychological safety increases.
Second Layer: Replace a Surveillance Culture with a Trust Culture
As hospitals adopt new technologies, a critical question emerges: do they empower staff or monitor them?
Real-Time Location Systems (RTLS), originally designed for asset tracking and workflow optimization, have in some cases been repurposed for staff safety, but continuous tracking can introduce unintended consequences. Research in organizational psychology consistently finds that excessive monitoring reduces autonomy and trust, which are core components of employee engagement.
In a sector already facing staffing shortages and burnout, that distinction matters.
The American Hospital Association estimates that hospitals could face a shortage of up to 86,000 physicians by 2036, alongside continued nursing workforce instability. Retention is not just a talent issue; it is a financial one. Replacing a single bedside nurse can cost tens of thousands of dollars when accounting for recruiting, onboarding, and lost productivity.
Safety technology that feels invasive may unintentionally undermine the very engagement hospitals are trying to protect. Employee-centric safety solutions take a different approach, prioritizing caregiver autonomy.
Safety tools that can be activated by staff when an incident occurs can provide rapid assistance without the concern of being continuously tracked. Additionally, providing digital reporting platforms that encourage incident documentation and remove fears of retaliation or stigmatization are also imperative.
Healthcare employers must send a simple, but powerful message: safety systems exist to protect staff, not to surveil staff. That distinction can influence adoption, reporting behavior, and long-term employee retention.
Third Layer: Make Reporting Accessible and Actionable
Workplace violence is chronically underreported. The Joint Commission has warned that normalization of aggression in healthcare leads many staff members to view violence as “part of the job.” When incidents go unreported, organizations lose more than data. They lose visibility into patterns, hotspots, and systemic vulnerabilities.
Digital reporting systems integrated into safety infrastructure can simplify documentation and reduce friction; however, the true transformation occurs when data becomes operational insight.
Accessible, aggregated incident data allows leadership to:
- Identify recurring high-risk locations
- Adjust staffing models
- Modify physical layouts
- Enhance de-escalation training
- Allocate security resources more strategically
This means safety data shifts from retrospective documentation to proactive risk mitigation. Data transparency also reinforces accountability: when frontline staff see that reported concerns lead to visible changes, trust strengthens. Reporting becomes participation – not paperwork.
Fourth Layer: Tie Safety to Organizational Performance
Healthcare safety investments are often framed as compliance obligations or liability safeguards. While those factors matter, they are incomplete. Workplace violence drives turnover, workers’ compensation costs, absenteeism, and decreased productivity. OSHA estimates that workplace violence results in billions of dollars in direct and indirect costs annually. In 2023, the AHA estimated this at 18.27 billion dollars.
When safety initiatives are connected to measurable outcomes such as reduced injury rates, faster response times, improved staff engagement scores, and decreased turnover, they shift from cost centers to performance drivers. That’s why healthcare organizations should embed safety metrics into enterprise dashboards alongside clinical quality indicators and financial performance data. Reframing the data elevates safety from an operational silo to a strategic priority.
Layered safety is not about adding more technology. It’s about integrating infrastructure, culture, data, and leadership alignment into a cohesive system.
The Path Forward for Safer Healthcare Workplaces
The healthcare industry cannot afford fragmented or surveillance-first approaches to staff protection. The stakes are too high — for caregivers and for patients, and for the stability of the workforce.
A truly layered safety strategy delivers measurable outcomes: rapid, precise response when every second matters, technology that empowers caregivers and prioritizes autonomy, rather than undermining it, and integrated data that transforms incidents into operational insights. When response times accelerate, harm escalation decreases. When staff feel protected, engagement improves — and so do patient care quality and outcomes. When leaders can see patterns clearly, they can act decisively.
Healthcare has embraced digital transformation in clinical care, revenue cycle management, and patient engagement; workforce protection deserves the same strategic integration. Because in modern healthcare, safety is not a compliance requirement; it’s an infrastructure imperative.
About Andrea Greco
Andrea Greco is the SVP of Healthcare Safety at CENTEGIX. She’s spent decades partnering with customers to deliver solutions that focus on employee, patient, and family satisfaction and engagement. Her current role is focused on the creation and deployment of innovative, layered safety solutions that empower and protect healthcare organizations every day.
