Patient and visitor aggression is the fastest-growing source of workplace injury in Australian healthcare, with assault-related claims increasing year on year across hospitals, aged care, mental health, and disability services. Aggression ranges from verbal abuse and threats through to physical assault causing serious injury. The unpredictable nature of patient aggression — driven by pain, medication effects, cognitive impairment, mental illness, and substance intoxication — means that controls must be systematic and embedded in every patient-facing role. This template covers aggression management from prevention through to post-incident response with controls mapped to the binding Healthcare Code effective 1 July 2026.
WHS Regulation 2025 Part 3.1 — Psychosocial Hazards (Reg 55C); Healthcare Code 2026
Violence and aggression (psychosocial hazard)
Healthcare Code of Practice 2026 (binding 1 July 2026 under Section 26A)
Yes — Healthcare code binding July 2026. Non-compliance is a standalone offence.
| Hazard | Consequence | Likelihood |
|---|---|---|
| Physical assault by patient during clinical care or behavioural episode | Fractures, soft tissue injuries, head injuries, psychological trauma | Likely |
| Verbal abuse and threats from patients and visitors | Psychological injury, anxiety, PTSD | Likely |
| Injuries during physical restraint of aggressive patient | Muscle strain, bites, scratches, joint injuries | Possible |
| Weapon use by patient (improvised or concealed) | Penetrating injuries, severe lacerations, fatality | Unlikely |
| Secondary psychological harm from witnessing assault on colleagues | Vicarious trauma, anxiety, PTSD | Possible |
Worker seriously assaulted by resident with known history of aggression. Facility had no aggression risk assessment, no duress alarms, and no de-escalation training program.
2023 — SafeWork NSW Prosecution Database
Our WHS consultants develop aggression management SWMS with de-escalation frameworks, duress systems, and post-incident support protocols.
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