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VOLUME 1 ISSUE 1

Review Article

Workplace Violence Against Healthcare Providers: Medico-Legal Perspectives, Administrative Challenges, and Policy Solutions in South Asia

Dr Jaspinder Pratap Singh, Dr Yashpal Sharma

Workplace violence against healthcare providers is an escalating global crisis with profound medico-legal, ethical, and administrative implications. South Asia is disproportionately affected, with overcrowded facilities, fragile health systems, high patient expectations, and socio-political tensions driving incidents that range from verbal abuse to mob assaults. Consequences include psychological trauma, compromised patient care, attrition of skilled professionals, and erosion of trust in healthcare institutions. Medico-legal documentation remains inadequate, limiting judicial accountability and epidemiological insight. Hospital administrators face escalating challenges in ensuring provider safety while balancing patient rights and continuity of care. Comparative models from high-income countries demonstrate the effectiveness of integrated frameworks that combine legislation, zero-tolerance policies, institutional preparedness, and public awareness. This review synthesizes epidemiological trends, medico-legal dimensions, administrative challenges, and policy solutions for workplace violence in South Asia, situating the issue within a global framework. Recommendations emphasize the need for harmonized legislation, strengthened medico-legal protocols, hospital-level security reforms, conflict resolution training, and community engagement. By addressing structural, legal, and ethical gaps, South Asia can advance toward safer healthcare environments and align with international standards of occupational health and justice.

Keyword: Healthcare workers, Workplace Violence, OSHA, Mob Violence.

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