You go to work to help people. But what if your job put you at risk of being yelled at, threatened, or even physically hurt? That is the reality for many healthcare workers today.
Nurses, doctors, and hospital staff face rising rates of workplace violence. This includes verbal abuse, physical attacks, racial slurs, and sexual harassment. And the problem is getting worse, not better.
A new quality improvement initiative at St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton in Ontario, Canada aims to change that. The hospital is testing a multi-step plan to protect its workers. And the approach could become a model for hospitals everywhere.
Why violence against healthcare workers is a crisis
Workplace violence in healthcare is not new. But recent years have made it worse. Stress, long wait times, and staffing shortages have all added fuel to the fire.
The effects go beyond the worker who gets hurt. When staff feel unsafe, patient care suffers. Workers may leave the profession. Mistakes become more likely. The entire healthcare system takes a hit.
Many hospitals already have programs to stop violence. But the numbers keep climbing. That is why St. Joseph's is trying something different.
The old approach was not working
Most hospitals rely on incident reports. A worker gets hurt, fills out a form, and someone reviews it later. But this system has a big problem.
Many healthcare workers do not report violence at all. They may fear being seen as weak. They may think nothing will change. Or they may be too busy to fill out paperwork.
This means hospitals have a blind spot. They cannot fix a problem they do not fully see.
What this hospital is doing differently
St. Joseph's set up a Workplace Safety Governance Committee. This group acts as an advisory body to lead the fight against workplace violence.
The committee is using a mix of methods to get a full picture of the problem. They are not just looking at numbers. They are talking to staff directly.
One key part of the plan involves doing rounds in different hospital units. Leaders go to each floor and ask workers what they see. They listen to concerns. They ask for ideas. They make it safe to speak up.
Think of it like a fire alarm system. The old way was waiting for the fire to start and then calling for help. The new way is checking every room for smoke before anything catches fire.
The study behind the plan
The hospital published its protocol in Frontiers in Medicine in May 2026. The plan includes several steps.
First, the team is reviewing all existing research on how doctors report workplace violence. They want to know what stops people from speaking up.
Second, they are working with the Institute of Healthcare Improvement to audit their current practices. An outside expert team will look at what is working and what is not.
Third, they are comparing their data with similar hospitals in Ontario. This helps them see if their problems are unique or part of a bigger pattern.
Fourth, they are tracking trends over time using simple charts and statistics. This lets them see if their changes are actually making a difference.
What they hope to find
The goal is not just to count incidents. The goal is to prevent them.
By understanding why workers do not report violence, the hospital can fix those barriers. By talking to staff directly, they can spot problems before they escalate. By tracking data over time, they can see what works and what does not.
But there is a catch.
This is not a quick fix
The plan is still in its early stages. The hospital has set up the committee and started the work. But real results will take months or even years to measure.
Changing a hospital's culture does not happen overnight. Staff need to learn that reporting is safe. Leaders need to show they take every report seriously. Systems need to be rebuilt from the ground up.
If you work in healthcare, this matters. Your safety is finally getting the attention it deserves. Hospitals are starting to realize that protecting workers is not optional. It is essential for good patient care.
If you are a patient or a family member, this matters too. When healthcare workers feel safe, they can focus on you. They can give better care. They can stay in their jobs longer.
The honest limitations
This is a single hospital in one Canadian city. What works there may not work everywhere. The plan is also a protocol, meaning it describes what they intend to do. We do not yet have results.
The hospital is being transparent about these limits. They know this is just a first step.
What happens next
The committee will continue its work through 2025 and beyond. They will publish their findings as data comes in. Other hospitals will watch closely.
If this approach works, it could spread. More hospitals could adopt similar committees. More workers could feel safe reporting violence. And slowly, the culture of healthcare could change.
Research like this takes time. But for the nurses and doctors who face violence every day, any step forward is a step worth taking.
7. ENDING
The committee will continue its work through 2025 and beyond. They will publish their findings as data comes in. Other hospitals will watch closely.
If this approach works, it could spread. More hospitals could adopt similar committees. More workers could feel safe reporting violence. And slowly, the culture of healthcare could change.
Research like this takes time. But for the nurses and doctors who face violence every day, any step forward is a step worth taking.