Healthcare organizations are rethinking what security means inside environments that must remain open, accessible, and centered on care. Hospitals are not designed to feel restrictive — but they are increasingly required to manage complex and escalating risks. The challenge is no longer whether to strengthen protection, but how to do it without disrupting care delivery.
During a recent Vaidio healthcare webinar featuring Todd Larson of HonorHealth and Steve Unger of Vaidio, one issue surfaced immediately:
“Workplace violence is probably the number one thing keeping healthcare leaders up at night.”
— Todd Larson, HonorHealth
Hospitals must welcome patients, families, and visitors at all hours. That openness supports care. It also creates exposure. Today’s healthcare leaders are balancing compassion with control — strengthening safety without undermining the patient experience.
Risk inside healthcare environments is no longer isolated to a single department. It spans staff safety, patient protection, and organizational liability.
Workplace violence continues to rise across healthcare settings, particularly in emergency departments and behavioral health units.
“We’re seeing workplace violence continuing to rise, and clinicians are feeling it.”
— Todd Larson, HonorHealth
Frontline staff experience aggression directly. The consequences extend beyond physical harm. Morale suffers. Burnout increases. Retention becomes more difficult. Security is no longer just about perimeter protection — it is about protecting caregivers in real time.
Patients are also vulnerable in open environments. Escalations in waiting areas, unauthorized access to restricted spaces, and elopement attempts all present safety concerns. In large health systems with multiple buildings and campuses, response time can determine whether a situation is quickly de-escalated or allowed to spiral.
Maintaining environmental awareness across high-traffic clinical spaces is increasingly critical to patient safety.
Drug diversion represents another significant and growing exposure.
“Drug diversion cases are up significantly, and the financial and regulatory exposure can be enormous.”
— Steve Unger, Vaidio Healthcare Sales Manager
The impact extends far beyond lost medication. Healthcare systems face regulatory scrutiny, potential compliance violations, financial penalties, and reputational damage. In highly regulated environments, visibility is not optional — it is foundational.
Most hospitals already operate extensive camera systems. The issue is not a lack of video. The gap lies in transforming that video into actionable intelligence before incidents escalate.
Hospitals cannot operate like airports or courthouses. They cannot rely solely on checkpoints, metal detectors, or hardened perimeters. Security must function within the reality of an open care model.
As Todd Larson framed it:
“How do you do target hardening in an open environment? Technology.”
— Todd Larson, HonorHealth
Rather than restricting access broadly, healthcare organizations are increasingly layering intelligent monitoring onto existing infrastructure.
Vision AI enhances current camera systems by enabling detection of:
Instead of relying exclusively on badge systems or manual monitoring, AI introduces consistent, objective oversight.
“Cameras are non-biased. They don’t get distracted. They don’t overlook something.”
— Todd Larson, HonorHealth
Video analytics apply rules continuously and uniformly. They surface risk indicators in real time, allowing security teams to intervene earlier — and often more calmly — before incidents intensify.
Traditional security workflows are reactive. An incident occurs. Footage is reviewed later. Reports are filed. Compliance teams reconcile discrepancies during audits.
AI-driven monitoring changes that sequence.
Real-time alerts allow intervention during escalation in an ER waiting room — not hours afterward. Unauthorized access to a pharmacy can be addressed immediately. Cross-camera tracking enables coordinated response across large campuses and multi-building systems.
“Cross-camera tracking is a need for our health system.”
— Todd Larson, HonorHealth
In complex healthcare environments, the ability to identify and follow an individual across multiple cameras within seconds significantly improves response time and coordination.
This approach does not replace existing infrastructure. It activates more value from systems hospitals have already deployed.
Healthcare organizations today face layered exposure:
Vision AI supports:
The goal is not to change how a hospital feels. It is to improve how it functions under pressure.
Security does not have to alter the openness of care environments. It has to improve outcomes — reducing escalation, strengthening compliance, and protecting the people who rely on these spaces every day.
In modern healthcare, smarter visibility — not higher walls — is what makes the difference.