The numbers are hard to ignore. In England, the 2024 NHS Staff Survey found that 1 in 7 staff had experienced physical violence from patients, their relatives, or members of the public in the previous year. In Scotland, Freedom of Information data revealed more than 51,000 violent incidents against NHS Scotland staff between 2019 and 2024, with 8 of the 14 regional health boards reporting an increase in 2023-24 after a previous decline. A separate RCN analysis of 89 NHS trusts in England found a 94% rise in recorded physical assaults between 2019 and 2024.
For HR teams across NHS trusts, health boards, and integrated care systems, these figures represent a management challenge that is only getting harder. Cases involving workplace violence are sensitive, legally significant, and process-intensive. They require careful documentation, consistent investigation, coordinated staff support, and a clear audit trail. Most HR departments are handling them with tools that simply weren’t designed for the job.
There is a tendency to treat workplace violence as a health and safety issue and leave it there. That view misses a significant part of the picture. Research published in Social Science & Medicine found that experiencing physical violence increases a healthcare worker’s intention to leave their organisation by 10 percentage points. Verbal violence pushes that figure to 21 percentage points. In a healthcare workforce already stretched thin, violence is actively driving people out of the NHS.
Beyond retention, there are real financial costs. Liverpool John Moores University’s 2025 analysis put figures on the cost of violence to the NHS of £1.36bn, covering sickness absence, occupational health, legal claims, and staff replacement. The NHS Resolution thematic review of workplace violence claims, published in October 2024, analysed more than 5,000 claims and found the total cost of closed cases was £61.4 million. The case for investing in better HR processes is not hard to make.
On a more positive note, NHS Tayside’s experience shows that the violence epidemic can be controlled. After launching its ‘Respect Us’ public awareness campaign, the board saw a steady and sustained decline in violent incidents, despite still recording 1,484 incidents in 2023-24. It shows that targeted action works, but it has to be measurable in order to prove its effectiveness.
The compliance picture differs between England and Scotland, and it’s worth being clear about what each framework requires.
There is also a practical difference worth noting for Scottish HR teams. Where criminal prosecution is pursued, cases go to the Procurator Fiscal rather than the Crown Prosecution Service. The ‘Once for Scotland’ policy is explicit that managers must support staff through that process. HR case management needs to include the provision of that support until the legal procedures are complete.
Under-reporting is one of those problems that everyone acknowledges and nobody has fully solved. The Nuffield Trust notes that the true scale of violence in the NHS is probably higher than survey data shows, because staff lose confidence in the process, assume nothing will happen, or simply come to treat violence as an occupational hazard. That normalisation is itself a failure of governance.
The iMatter Staff Experience Survey, which measures staff experience across NHS Scotland’s 14 health boards, gives a useful window into this in Scotland. In 2024, only 56% of respondents agreed they were confident their concerns would be followed up. This is not a number that suggests staff feel reporting is worth the effort.
Both the NHS VPR Standard in England and the NHS Scotland Staff Governance Standard require organisations to build a reporting culture. In practice, that means making it straightforward to report, and making it demonstrably clear that reports lead somewhere. An HR case management system does both: it removes friction from the reporting process and creates a visible, trackable record of what happens next.
A workplace violence case typically moves through several distinct stages: logging the initial report, investigating what happened, supporting the affected member of staff, taking action in relation to the perpetrator, and documenting the outcome. Each stage has potential for inconsistency, delay, or lost information if there’s no structured process underpinning it.
A purpose-built HR case management platform like Workpro addresses this across the full case lifecycle:
Individual case management matters. But the data that accumulates across cases is where the real strategic value sits.
In England, the VPR Standard’s seven-domain framework requires NHS trusts and integrated care systems to assess and report on their performance at regular intervals. In Scotland, health boards report through the Health and Safety Partnership Forum and the iMatter improvement cycle. Both frameworks require the kind of structured, reliable data that is very difficult to produce if cases have been managed across spreadsheets, inboxes, and shared drives.
A case management platform with built-in reporting lets HR directors and people leads see case volumes by type, department, perpetrator category, and outcome, and track whether anything is changing over time. NHS Tayside’s declining incident figures following its ‘Respect Us’ campaign are a good example of what that kind of trend data can demonstrate: prevention activity is working, and here is the evidence. Without the underlying data, that argument is much harder to make to a board.
Recording the incident is not the end of HR’s role. Post-incident support is increasingly a formal expectation on both sides of the border. In England, the government’s April 2025 support package for NHS staff made post-incident support measures mandatory. In Scotland, the ‘Once for Scotland’ Work-related Violence and Aggression Policy, mentioned above, makes explicit that staff must have access to ongoing support following an incident, including through any Procurator Fiscal proceedings, and that managers are responsible for making that happen.
In practice, post-incident support means welfare check-ins, occupational health referrals, access to counselling, and practical help with any police or legal process. For an HR team managing dozens of active cases, tracking all of that consistently is a real operational challenge. A case management platform logs each support action against the case record, assigns follow-up tasks, and flags when deadlines are approaching. It means no staff member gets lost in the system.
The NHS Resolution thematic review of workplace violence claims identified gaps in post-incident support as a recurring factor in compensation claims. A documented support journey reduces that risk. It also does something harder to quantify: it tells staff that the organisation took their experience seriously.
The regulatory environment around NHS workplace violence is more demanding than it has ever been, in response to increased incidences of attacks on staff. Taken together, the mandated VPR Standard in England, the ‘Once for Scotland’ policy framework and the government’s accepted recommendations from the Social Partnership Forum represent a significant step up in what NHS organisations are expected to do and the evidence they are expected to record.
HR teams that are still managing workplace violence cases through spreadsheets and email chains are going to find that gap increasingly hard to defend. Not because regulators will necessarily come knocking, but because the inconsistency, the lost information, and the missed follow-ups will accumulate in ways that affect staff and create an increased risk of liability.
Workpro’s HR case management software gives NHS organisations, from health boards in Scotland to trusts and integrated care systems across England, a structured way to manage workplace violence cases from first report through to resolution. It provides a consistent process, a full audit trail, and the management information needed to report against the VPR Standard or Staff Governance Standard.