# The Effect of Workplace Violence on the Health of Healthcare Workers: Empirical Evidence From a Multicenter Cross-Sectional Study in China

**Authors:** Tao Luo, Xiumei Tang, Li Ma, Weimin Li

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/ijph.2025.1608523 · International Journal of Public Health · 2025-10-27

## TL;DR

Workplace violence in healthcare settings significantly harms workers' health, with physical violence having the strongest impact, according to a large study in China.

## Contribution

This study provides causal evidence of workplace violence's impact on healthcare workers' health using robust statistical methods.

## Key findings

- Workplace violence reduces healthcare workers' health improvement probability by 12.9%.
- Physical violence has the strongest negative impact on health outcomes.
- Professional values mediate the effect of violence on health.

## Abstract

To investigate the causal relationship between workplace violence and health outcomes among healthcare workers, addressing gaps in evidence on its mechanisms and heterogeneous effects.

A nationally representative cohort of 4,255 Chinese healthcare workers was surveyed via four-stage stratified sampling. Causal effects were estimated using multiple linear models and ordered logit model, with robustness checks via propensity score matching and instrumental variables to mitigate endogeneity.

Workplace violence reduces the probability of healthcare workers experiencing improved health by 12.9% (p = 0.000), with this effect persisting even after considering endogeneity. Physical violence had the most substantial impact, while psychological and verbal violence also contributed. Professional values mediated the effect. Vulnerable subgroups included women, younger workers, lower-ranking staff, and non-tertiary hospital employees.

This study provides causal evidence that workplace violence undermines the health of healthcare workers, with implications for hospital policies and occupational safety standards. Interventions should prioritize physical violence prevention, support for high-risk groups, and value-based resilience training.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Physical violence (MESH:D059445)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

47 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12597837/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12597837