March 13, 2026 min
10 min
🎧 Listen now on:
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Let’s say something plainly: violence should never be accepted as “just part of the job”.
Yet across adult services, schools, fostering environments and even family homes, staff and carers quietly normalise aggression. Over time, that breaks teams, fuels burnout and damages the reputation of the entire care system.
In this solo episode, Andy explores how to reduce harm and risk behaviour without sliding into punishment, fear or a culture of control.
Most incident reports begin at the point of crisis – when someone is shouting, blocking doors, threatening or slamming objects.
But what about when they were at a 6? A 4? A 2?
Prevention is often deprioritised because “we haven’t got time right now”. Ironically, that delay can lead to:
This episode challenges teams to practise intellectual honesty. Not blame. Not shame. But reflection.
Andy introduces a simple but powerful framework:
If an organisation only trains firefighters, staff burn out and incidents repeat. Sustainable safety comes from designing systems that prevent escalation in the first place.
Many carers, teachers and parents struggle with a false dilemma:
If I’m compassionate, I’ll lose control.
If I hold boundaries, I’m being harsh.
This episode dismantles that thinking.
You can be boundaried and compassionate at the same time. You can reduce risk without creating fear. The goal is not to “win” power struggles. The goal is to reduce threat and create predictability and safety.
The principles discussed apply across:
Safety improves when we stop relying on heroics and start relying on thoughtful design.
Are we designing systems that reduce escalation – or are we gambling on staff coping skills?
This episode is a reflective challenge for leaders, carers and educators who want safer services without losing humanity.
If you want a shared language, proactive planning tools and safer physical intervention strategies, explore how the Able Target System supports teams to move from reactive to preventative behaviour support.
If this episode has challenged how your organisation approaches harm, escalation and safety, the Able Target System (ATS) provides a practical framework for proactive planning, shared language and safer responses.
Click here to find out more about the Able Target System (ATS)