Despite being a vocational profession, nursing can harm your health and overall well-being. The long hours, high stress, and irregular shift patterns can increase your risk of adopting negative health behaviors (like smoking and eating processed foods). They may result in fatigue, weight gain, cancer, and diabetes.
Unfortunately, traditionally marginalized minorities in America also have worse health outcomes than the rest of the population. According to the BMJ, minorities receive significantly worse healthcare in every US state, meaning you may struggle to find quality care despite working in the healthcare system.
These disparities require policy-level changes to address inequities and close the healthcare gap. Until then, however, you can protect your health and manage stress by becoming a wellbeing warrior. Championing your well-being can markedly improve your productivity, too, as you’ll be far more engaged when you feel rested, healthy, and have a positive outlook on life.
Managing Stress
Work stress is prevalent among minority nurses. This undermines many nurses’ job satisfaction and has led Black and Hispanic nurses to say they are 46% more likely to leave their employer than they were in 2008.
Prolonged periods of stress may be the reason why you feel tired all the time, too. Stress and work-related anxiety puts your body into a constant state of fight-or-flight and prevent you from adequately relaxing. If you experience heightened stress, you may find that you cannot fall asleep on time and could miss out on hours of valuable shut-eye.
The root cause of your work-related stress may be out of your hands. If you’re understaffed and overworked, it can be challenging to maintain balance and feel calm during the day. However, that doesn’t mean you should overlook stress-busting wellness interventions altogether. If you’re feeling the strain and need to find some calm in your life, consider taking steps to keep burnout at bay, which include:
Banish blue screens from the bedroom and keep your sleeping area clean, cool, and dark to improve your sleep quality.
Exercise regularly and aim to work up a sweat outside of work at least once daily. Even gentle exercise, like walking around local parks, can meaningfully reduce stress.
Adjust your diet to eat more whole foods and drink more water. This will give you the energy you need to respond to emergencies throughout the day and will reduce your risk of developing chronic fatigue.
Try to adopt a positive mindset and use a journal to record positive affirmations and things you’re grateful for today.
Adopting these habits won’t eliminate the cause of your stress, but they may help you become more resilient in the face of work-related anxiety. This can give you the energy to campaign for change and champion calls for increased well-being at work.
Incentivizing Well-being
Yoga, deep breathing, and a healthy diet will make you more resilient. However, that doesn’t mean you should ignore the fundamental issues causing you to feel stressed, burnt out, and fatigued. Addressing these issues directly is critical, as some employers may be unaware of the scale of discontent at your place of work.
You may not be able to campaign for better pay or reduce work hours, but you can champion calls for a better employee incentive program at your place of work. Effective employee incentive programs have many benefits, including:
Improved productivity
Enhanced morale and job satisfaction
Accurate performance tracking
Highlighting these benefits to your employer may help them understand why a benefits program that incentivizes well-being is so essential. This can drastically reshape your relationship with work, too, as you’ll be able to accurately report the number of hours you work, the stress you feel, and the productivity barriers undermining your well-being.
Healthy Hobbies
Making changes at work is the best way to respond to work-related stress. However, you’ll still need to use your free time for sustained career satisfaction. This is why hobbies are so important, as they shape how you spend your time off and will innately boost your health, happiness, and well-being.
If you usually spend your free time scrolling on socials and completing household chores, consider switching things up in favor of hobbies that engage you mentally and support your physical health. For example, if you are passionate about nature and the world around you, consider developing a gardening hobby. Even if you don’t have a yard, you can garden by getting involved with community greenspaces and allotments.
Hobbies that improve your fitness can boost your mental resilience, too. For example, learning new yoga flows and mastering poses can give you a much-needed confidence boost that aids your efforts to feel empowered. This is crucial if you’re experiencing mission drift and need to refind your purpose as a nurse. Focusing on interests outside of work can renew your interest in nursing and help you feel energized when you return to work.
Conclusion
Becoming a well-being warrior can improve your health, happiness, and job satisfaction. Even simple changes like drinking more water and taking up hobbies like yoga can boost your energy and help you avoid conditions like fatigue. Just be sure to advocate for necessary changes at work, as no amount of journaling and positive mantras can overcome a work environment that does not support your wellness.
The stress of nursing can take quite a toll on nurses emotionally and psychologically. Learn to recognize the signs, what to do, and when to seek help.
Abbegail Eason, RN, remembers some of the most devastating moments she’s witnessed as a nurse: a teenage girl learning she would never walk again after being shot by a gang member, a mom who gave birth but then died from a cerebral aneurysm just days later, and a baby who was left in a store’s parking lot and ended up dying.
“In these types of situations, it’s almost impossible not to be affected after your shift is over,” says Eason, a holistic coach at Abbegail Eason, LLC.
“Every nurse is susceptible to suffering from emotional distress,” explains Lucia M. Thornton, RN, MSN, AHN-BC, a consultant, educator, and author of Whole Person Caring: An Interprofessional Model for Healing and Wellness. Thornton and other sources we interviewed say that while all nurses can be affected emotionally, those in particular specialties may be more apt to experience this kind of issue. Some of the areas where nurses are especially at risk:
emergency departments and trauma, intensive care unit (ICU), hospice, oncology, pediatrics, HIV clinics, homeless medicine, high-risk pregnancy clinics, palliative care, and neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), among many others.
“Anyone who is empathetic and works in a caregiving role—including nurses and certified nursing assistants—are at risk for developing compassion fatigue and increased caregiver stress, which affects emotional health,” explains Karen Whitehead, MS, LMSW, DCC, CCFP, who provides counseling in the greater Atlanta area and at TurningPoint Breast Cancer Rehabilitation. “Nurses who over-identify with patients and blur boundaries, as well as nurses with personal trauma histories, poor social support, isolated working conditions, or a previous history of unmanaged anxiety are at greater risk. Feeling a lack of control about your work environment—including schedule, lack of recognition, or sense of community—can also contribute to caregiver stress.”
“Working in these areas with these types of patients triggers the sympathetic nervous system and keeps the body in fight or flight mode. This heightened stress reaction can, over time, lead to compassion fatigue and ongoing emotional distress,” she adds.
It can also be especially difficult for nurses because they are on the frontline of patient care, says Carl J. Sheperis, PhD, NCC, CCMHC, MAC, ACS, LPC. “Aside from the ongoing stressors of variable schedules, budget cuts, and constant technology changes, nurses are faced with a broad range of emotions experienced by patients,” explains Sheperis, a licensed professional counselor as well as the program dean for the College of Social Sciences at the University of Phoenix. “According to the American Nurses Association 2011 Health and Safety Survey, over 56% of participating nurses had experienced some type of threat or verbal abuse from patients. All of these stressors compound and result in high incidences of compassion fatigue and burnout for nurses.”
Compassion Fatigue, Moral Resilience, and Burnout
Mary Bylone, RN, MSM, CNML, president of Leaders Within, LLC, and a former board member of the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses (AACN) often lectures and writes about the AACN’s healthy work environment standards. Bylone says that while compassion fatigue, moral resilience, and burnout are terms often used interchangeably because they do have a lot of overlap, they also have some differences.
“Burnout is best used to describe a situation in which an individual feels overwhelmed and exhausted. It can be seen when people sacrifice themselves for work or become overwhelmed with the feeling that the work is never done. Compassion fatigue refers to the weariness that develops from caring for individuals when the caregiver feels saddened that they cannot change the situation and give of themselves in the hope of relieving pain or suffering in the patient,” explains Bylone. “Moral resilience refers to the aspect of an individual’s character to rise above situations creating moral distress, such as being asked to provide futile care or care against a patient’s wishes. Resilience comes when the nurse is able to restore and maintain their integrity by challenging or pushing back when asked to do things they do not feel are right. It involves using one’s bold voice to speak up when others would remain silent—to ensure that the morally right thing is done.”
For the past decade, the AACN has addressed all these issues. Its National Teaching Institute recently held a special interactive session during which more than 300 nurses spent an afternoon sharing the types of experiences that would cause these feelings and sharing their solutions with their colleagues as well. “The AACN puts a lot of energy into hope and resilience rather than dwelling on the negative,” says Bylone.
Recognizing the Signs
“Experiencing emotional reactions is human and appropriate,” says Sheperis. “The key is recognizing when the emotional reactions are out of proportion to a situation or when they have a negative impact on you or others around you. Nurses are often good at compartmentalizing emotional reactions, but sometimes the compartments become full, and the emotions spill out.”
Some of the signs that a nurse is experiencing negative effects from emotional overload are: using a greater number of sick days and/or dreading going to work; feeling exhausted; problems sleeping; using drugs or alcohol to sleep; having work-related dreams, nightmares, or intrusive thoughts; being angry a lot either at work or home; yelling at patients or families; changes in mood or behavior at work; crying all the time; feeling angry at supervisors or coworkers; developing fears about the safety of friends or family; feeling less engaged in their personal and/or professional life; the inability to think clearly; headaches; gastrointestinal problems; irregular breathing patterns, feeling devalued, and losing the capacity to care about themselves, their patients, their family members, or really anyone.
This doesn’t even touch on the signs of clinical depression, which nurses may also experience. The point is that if nurses notice vast changes in themselves or in their coworkers, they may need to seek or suggest help.
Taking Action
The first action that nurses can take to keep their emotional health intact is to set boundaries, says Gail Trauco, RN, BSN-OCN, a grief mediator, owner of Front Porch Therapy, and author of Conquering Grief from Your Own Front Porch. Nurses can do small things to make themselves happy. “Be sure you have things that you visually see which create an immediate ‘happy sensation,’” suggests Trauco. “This can be a favorite coffee mug, bright-colored scrubs, flowers on your desk, or even a funny stethoscope cover.”
One of the biggest problems nurses have is that they tend to put everyone else’s care above their own, says Jill Howell, MA, ATR-C, LPC, a board-certified registered art therapist, professional counselor, and author of Color, Draw, Collage: Create Your Way to a Less Stressful Life. While she works at Pocono Psychiatric Associates, Howell worked with many nurses at the Pocono Medical Center. “It’s all about self-care—nurses will, of course, react by saying that they don’t have time,” says Howell. “Please remember what they say on the airplane—put your oxygen mask on first before you try to help others.”
When working with nurses, Howell would check in with them to see how they were dealing with work, give them an opportunity to vent, and make small self-care suggestions. She would also do quick guided meditations with them, teach a relaxation technique, or set up large sheets of mural paper and have them draw out their frustrations.
“I have found that most nurses, while they can care for others continuously, have a very difficult time in caring for themselves,” says Thornton. “Self-compassion is an important and useful practice for nurses to develop.”
“Nurses are givers. We go into the field because we are caretakers,” says Eason. “Many of us feel we are at our best when taking care of others.” She says that it’s important, though, for nurses to understand that they have to take care of themselves first. “Ensure you are getting adequate, quality sleep. You are eating a well-balanced meal. You are getting adequate exercise. You are spending time cultivating a life that is meaningful, rich, and deep outside of work,” says Eason.
After a particularly stressful experience at work, Lisa Radesi, DNP, CNS, RN, academic dean at the School of Nursing, College of Health Professions, University of Phoenix, says that nurses and other staff should have a debriefing session and remember that, despite all of the “bad” that occurs in their jobs, the “good” is the most rewarding part of what they do.
“Nurses should work together to ensure that they are okay after an incident. If a nurse notices a coworker is not doing well, they should talk with the coworker and bring it to the attention of the supervisor or manager,” says Radesi. “Above all, nurses should feel comfortable seeking treatment and communicating about emotional issues they may experience. Keeping this information bottled up can lead to issues and stress that have long-lasting effects. Know that it is not weakness, but strength, to acknowledge emotional disturbances and respond to them accordingly.”
If you see a coworker in distress, you can do something as simple as strike up a conversation with her or him, advises Bylone. “Use open-ended questions to find out how they are doing. Sometimes hearing the other person’s story really puts things into perspective. Let them know you care, and you are there to help, if only to listen. Please do not watch them suffer alone. Left unattended, these feelings only deepen and create lasting impact, often causing them to leave the profession,” she says.
Seeking Professional Help
Let’s face it: there are times when a spa day, time out with friends, or a bubble bath just won’t cut it in alleviating emotional problems. That’s when nurses need to seek professional help.
“If you are experiencing distressing symptoms over an extended period of time, it’s a good idea to check in with a professional therapist or counselor,” says Whitehead. “Whether it is distress from work or something related to your life outside of work, connecting with a professional can help you be a more effective caregiver and build your own resilience to mitigate the effects of your chosen population at work.”
If you need professional help, first see if your workplace has a program for staff members. If not, Sheperis says that the National Board for Certified Counselors has a directory of board-certified counselors across the United States (visit nbcc.org for more info). PsychologyToday.com also has a therapist directory that includes profiles of providers who can help.
There’s no shame in seeking help to get better. Sheperis says, though, that all nurses should do whatever they can to prevent their emotional stress from getting to this level. “Most people only seek professional help after something in their life had caused significant distress. While it is important to seek help if you are reaching a level of burnout or compassion fatigue, it is much better to take proactive steps and to work with a counselor to build resilience prior to hitting an emotional wall,” he says.
Sheperis also suggests that nurses focus on wellness practices at the onset of their careers. “It is easy to become engrained in a high-pressure system and to become emotionally overwhelmed if you don’t have a set of wellness practices in place.”
See Our Champions of Nursing Diversity
Sign up now to get your free digital subscription to Minority Nurse