Barbara Seymour, DNP, RN, NE-BC, CPPS
Vizient Assistant Vice President, Member Networks
On a recent trip, I was reminded during the standard pre-flight protocols on the plane why a flight
attendant instructs you in the event of an emergency to place your oxygen mask on first before
assisting others. A rapidly depressurized cabin quickly becomes dangerous, creating weakness,
disorientation and incapacitation in seconds. When passengers first don't ensure their own safety,
they are unable to help others but also add to a list of individuals that desperately need
intervention.
This same type of rapid shift and deterioration can be used to describe the current state of crisis
in healthcare. Moral distress, fatigue and burnout — exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic
— among healthcare workers have reached alarming levels. Health systems and programs cannot
sustain a weakened workforce evidenced by declining numbers of skilled professionals and their
fragile state of wellbeing.
These conditions are heavily addressed in the nursing literature, offering various programmatic
approaches to systems' problems and wellness interventions. While many sources reference the crucial
role the nurse executive plays in ensuring the wellbeing of the caregiver workforce, few address the
wellbeing of the chief nurse executive (CNE) as a subset of healthcare employees. In a recent
informal Vizient survey of health system CNEs, we inquired about their personal wellbeing: How
are you feeling? How do you feel about the work you are able to do? How will you be able to
continue to lead into the future of healthcare? What do you do to invest in your own
wellbeing?
The results are a wake-up call for the nursing profession and executive teams. These leaders
are not immune to the documented motivations to leave the nursing profession, including challenging
work environment, emotional distress, disappointment about the nursing reality and a culture of
hierarchy and discrimination. While the average of CNEs who responded rated their wellbeing as a 7.7
on a zero-to-10 scale, half indicated they were more aligned to being "I'm okay" rather than "I am
currently thriving." Several CNEs also forecasted career changes on the horizon, identifying
preferment — how employees choose to spend their time including part-time professional work,
pursuing new hobbies, spending more time with family, relaxing — or retirement as their career
trajectory within the next 12 months and for a variety of reasons.
The CNE role also has become increasingly complex and demanding. Disruption in the C-Suite, barriers
to clinical practice optimization, business model headwinds, fiduciary responsibilities and the use
of advanced analytics have evolved chief nurse executive responsibilities and uncharted pressures of
the job. Healthcare systems need to ensure that wellness starts at the top with proactive management
of psychological hazards and job remodeling to encourage CNEs to "put on their oxygen mask first."
This in turn will impact overall staff wellness — which has been well demonstrated — in
positive, meaningful and measurable ways, and not contribute to the number of nursing professionals
who desperately need intervention.
In addition to organizational wellbeing tactics, there are several practices CNEs can personally do
to ensure their own wellbeing and that of others:
- Set aside time to invest in your own wellbeing: Leader burnout creates
a
vicious cycle of negative employee perceptions and experiences, creating further stress and
burnout for the leader. CNEs must understand these pressures and actively participate in
fostering their own wellbeing.
- Practice authenticity: Demonstrating vulnerability among trusted
colleagues and
with staff serves as both communication and a reminder that wellbeing is a journey, and one that
does not have to be taken alone.
- Be purveyors of hope: Replicate behaviors that improve personal
wellbeing and
share their interconnectedness with others to build trust, bolster culture and create positive
energy. CNEs are creating an example for others with their investment — or lack of
investment — in their wellbeing.
- Differentiate discrete wellness and normal course-of-life activities:
While
many CNEs surveyed identified some engagement in enriching their wellbeing, many of the examples
provided were activities such as work-life balance, growth and development, social connections
and using paid time off — actions that should be normal course-of-life and not viewed as
discrete wellness activities. Some examples of wellness activities can be as structured as
practicing mindfulness and cognitive training, or as simple as device breaks.
While we work to continuously improve healthcare and perform the equivalent of safety checks on an
airplane — securing cabin doors, ensuring seatbacks and tray tables are in the upright
position and preparing the cabin for departure — let's also heed the reminder for chief nurse
executives to "put your oxygen mask on first," for their benefit and the benefit of others. Here's
to a healthier career flight and may we all arrive safely at our destination — high-value care
for our patients, our staff and ourselves.
Discover unique insights and tactics for nurse workforce challenges in the most
recent Nursing
Workforce Intelligence Report based on data from Vizient
and Vaya Workforce.
Learn more about Vizient Member
Networks and register
for "Workforce Wellness Starts at the Top," a webinar 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. CT, Nov. 1, as
part of the Vizient Clinical Leadership
Series.
Author
Barbara Seymour, DNP, RN, NE-BC, CPPS, serves as
assistant vice president of Member
Networks for the Vizient Chief Nurse Executives Network. Her leadership experience has
culminated in a decade of executive roles as a chief nursing officer in multi-hospital
organizations. Seymour's doctoral work focused on leadership development and the
influence on achieving exceptional outcomes. She is passionate about sharing her story
with her father's journey through healthcare, connecting others to their own "why."