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Home Health

Nurses punched in face at Swindon hospital violent children’s unit

August 5, 2025
in Health
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Matthew Hill

West of England health correspondent

BBC A view of a wall with damage. In front is a pink bean bag, to the side is a fan and a sink.BBC

One of the walls of the unit was damaged during an incident earlier in the year

Nurses have been assaulted and “punched in the face” amid violent behavioural problems at a hospital’s children’s unit, staff have told the BBC.

Since April, nurses at the Great Western Hospital (GWH) in Swindon say a series of troubled teenagers have assaulted nurses, hit another child and verbally abused very young patients and their families.

Other incidents have included a patient who “ripped a TV” from a wall and broke a sink. Numerous staff are now taking sick leave.

A spokesperson for the GWH said: “Our children’s ward is often the only place available locally for vulnerable children and young people up to the age of 18 with complex medical and mental health needs.”

A view of a damaged wall with bags to the side

Another wall was also damaged at the hospital unit

Avon and Wiltshire Mental Health Partnership closed the Riverside adolescent mental health unit as a “temporary measure” in February 2024.

But its continued closure means GWH has to do its best to cope with teenagers suffering form psychiatric conditions.

The unit provides care to children up to the age of 18 and the hospitals does not have an adolescent mental health ward as an alternative.

Statistics obtained by the BBC show that in May there were 13 incidents relating to the behaviour of inpatients that involved harming themselves or others. There were another seven in June.

Five staff or other patients and family members were assaulted in May, and another four in June.

‘Nothing has changed’

The BBC has spoken to several nurses from the unit who say up to 15 members of staff have been off work because of violence.

They said one nurse who remains off work was left seriously injured after being assaulted two years ago and has suffered ever since with hearing loss and PTSD.

The nurses all want to remain anonymous.

One said: “We kept saying what is it going to take? Still nothing has changed.

“Is it going to take for a child to get hurt. We then had a child hurt on the ward.”

The nurse added that the stats were likely lower than the real number because staff find it difficult to find time to report them.

A view of a hospital building with a car park to the right side. It is a cloudy day.

Hospital bosses say the behaviour is “unacceptable”

The nurse described how she felt some incidents were not being dealt with seriously enough.

“It is often put to us these children are unwell so in terms of reporting to the police we are made to feel we are doing wrong against the child.

“We are a secure ward and have to buzz people in and out.

“It’s restrictions like that and some of the mental health patients we have to remove ligatures such as a hoody they then don’t like because we are stopping them from hurting themselves.

“The biggest trouble is we do go up to 18. Most children’s wards go to 16. it almost feels like people run scared because it is children.”

‘Punched in face’

Another nurse said: “A lot of children are medically fit to go home. No one wants to take them because of their escalating behaviour.

“It has caused a lot of holes in walls, damaged pipes and lots of staff being hit with people being punched in face.”

The nurse went on to describe how four registered mental health nurses were unable to restrain one teenage girl who was also verbally abusing staff.

“It is having a massive impact on patients and parents.”

She added: “One of my colleagues went off sick as this girl was smacking her head against the wall. The registered mental health nurses were just watching.

The nurse said they have an “assessment unit for children to be assessed” which was then closed. This has left the hospital unit dealing with these cases.

“One teenager was ripping TVs off the wall, she broke a sink. The whole wall has had to be replaced it has … led to probably at least 15 staff being off sick,” the nurse added.

The nurse said that managers had done very little to address the situation apart from introducing a ‘safe room’ which has not been opened yet.

Another nurse said: “We had a young person who was with us because she had taken an overdose and her behaviour escalated to the point that she was being looked after by three registered mental health agency nurses .

“Her behaviour escalated and she assaulted nurses and security staff. She punched quite a few people.”

Susan Masters Royal College of Nursing SW Director

Susan Masters from the Royal College of Nursing said there was no other local provision

An NHS report in 2024 highlighted the difficulties of nursing teenagers on hospital wards alongside younger children.

The South West director of the Royal College of Nursing, Susan Masters, said it is a national problem, adding: “This trust (GWH) is the local provision. There isn’t another provision anywhere else for these young people to go which is why its very difficult here.

“Children with physical health difficulties, young people with illnesses and procedures need a bright, distracting fun environment.

“Children and young people with mental health distress need the opposite-very calming very sombre. The other issue of course is specialist nursing staff.

“So currently these children are being cared for in an acute unit with children’s’ nurses that are not necessarily trained in specialist mental health services.”

A statement from GWH trust said: “We have individual rooms providing privacy and division between age groups, alongside two dedicated rooms for patients experiencing a mental health crisis.

“Many of the children and young people we care for need specialised care and we are planning to recruit specialist mental health nurses so that we have the expertise to better support children and young people with severe mental health needs.

“It’s unacceptable that NHS staff face violence and abuse and we do all we can to keep our staff, patients and visitors safe.

“This is a national issue, however these incidents can be extremely distressing, and we offer a package of mental health support to our staff, which includes de-briefing sessions and counselling services.

“Our Never OK campaign, in partnership with Wiltshire Police, encourages staff to report all incidents and the police regularly visit the hospital and support our own security team.”



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Tags: childrensfacehospitalnursespunchedSwindonunitviolent

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