Industry Overview

Always-on care in an always-on world

Healthcare is evolving fast shaped by rising demand, tighter resources, new models of care, and rapidly advancing technology. Across hospitals, clinics, research campuses and community settings, the mission stays the same: to deliver safe, high-quality care, every hour of every day.

That mission depends not only on clinical excellence, but on the environments and operations that enable it from secure access and calm public spaces, to the controlled movement of people, products and critical assets.

Industry Challenges

The challenges are real, the pace is fast, and the stakes are high.

01
Workforce pressure and the knock-on impact on safety and flow
Staff shortages and retention pressures continue to affect capacity and performance, with England reporting 125,500+ vacancies in hospital and community services (June 2023).

As systems stretch, non-clinical pressures (crowding, conflict, delays, supervision gaps) can increase risk and complexity on the ground making reliable, well-integrated operational support more important than ever.
02
Rising violence and aggression toward healthcare staff
Healthcare sites are managing increasing levels of abuse and violence. NHS England’s violence prevention page highlights that 14.38% of staff responding to the 2024 NHS Staff Survey experienced physical violence from patients, relatives, or public in the prior 12 months, alongside 25.08% experiencing harassment, bullying or abuse.

Government announcements in 2025 also emphasise violence as a critical workplace issue and the move toward stronger reporting and prevention measures.
03
Cyber risk becoming an operational risk, not just an IT issue
Digitised healthcare relies on availability and cyber incidents can quickly become patient-care incidents. Recent analysis points to increasing disruption from cyber-attacks, including ransomware, and the operational impacts on services and data.

For providers, this drives the need for resilience planning that links digital continuity with physical operations, access control, incident response, and on-site procedures.
04
Supply chain disruption and the logistics burden of shortages
Medicine shortages and supply disruption are now described in government policy as a persistent challenge driven by complex, global, regulated supply chains.

NHS England also provides guidance for reporting and resolving disruptions in medical equipment and consumables, underscoring how quickly availability can become a frontline operational issue.

The future challenge is clear: more proactive contingency planning, smarter inventory visibility, and faster, more controlled internal logistics to protect continuity of care.
05
Ageing estates, infrastructure constraints, and sustainability requirements
Many healthcare environments are operating with ageing infrastructure, and professional bodies have highlighted the safety and service impact of underinvestment in estates and the need for urgent reform and capital funding.

At the same time, the NHS is driving toward net zero targets, framing climate change as a major risk to health and service delivery, and requiring system-wide action across estates and supply chains