Student Name
Capella University
NURS-FPX4005 Nursing Leadership: Focusing on People, Processes, and Organizations
Prof. Name
Date
Interview Summary
A detailed semi-structured interview was conducted with a charge nurse at Mount Sinai Hospital to explore the systemic factors contributing to nurse burnout and ongoing workforce instability. The participant supervises a medical-surgical unit, overseeing patient throughput, staff scheduling, interdisciplinary collaboration, and onboarding of newly recruited nurses. The semi-structured approach allowed consistent questioning while also permitting in-depth discussion of operational challenges affecting frontline nursing practice.
How Have Staffing Shortages Influenced Patient Care Within the Unit?
The charge nurse reported that chronic staffing shortages frequently lead to nurse-to-patient ratios exceeding recommended safety limits. As a result, nurses often face mandatory overtime, leaving them with limited time for patient education, discharge planning, and repeated clinical assessments. The interview highlighted that sustained workload pressure and emotional fatigue compromise situational awareness and clinical vigilance, which increases the risk of medication errors, delayed interventions, and avoidable adverse events. Additionally, prolonged cognitive strain negatively affects therapeutic communication, weakening patient-centered care delivery and the overall quality of interactions between staff and patients.
What Factors Have Contributed to Nurse Turnover?
Several factors drive nurse turnover, according to the participant. High patient acuity, mandatory overtime, psychological exhaustion, and perceived lack of responsiveness from administration collectively reduce staff morale. Burnout was characterized through three recognized dimensions: emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and diminished sense of professional achievement. These conditions often prompt experienced nurses to leave bedside practice for less demanding roles or to exit the profession entirely, creating a cyclical effect that perpetuates staffing shortages and undermines institutional knowledge.
Why Were Organizational Wellness Initiatives Ineffective?
Although the organization implemented wellness programs such as resilience workshops, mindfulness training, schedule modifications, and counseling services, these initiatives lacked integration with broader operational reforms. The absence of leadership accountability, workflow redesign, and sustainable staffing solutions limited the programs’ long-term effectiveness. Without systemic support, these interventions remained isolated efforts rather than part of a coordinated strategy, resulting in minimal improvement in nurse well-being or retention.
What Interdisciplinary Efforts Were Previously Attempted?
The hospital piloted a retention program that included peer support counseling and structured resilience training sessions. However, inconsistent executive support, uneven funding, and premature termination prevented evaluation of the program’s outcomes. The findings underscore that effective retention strategies require sustained commitment, cross-department collaboration, and evidence-informed implementation frameworks (Low et al., 2021).
Issue Identification
The interview indicates that nurse burnout and persistent understaffing are the primary organizational challenges negatively affecting patient safety, workforce stability, and institutional performance metrics. These interrelated issues contribute to higher error rates, decreased staff engagement, and elevated costs for recruitment and training.
Why Is an Interdisciplinary Strategy Required?
Burnout arises from multiple sources, including operational inefficiencies, psychological strain, workforce planning deficiencies, and leadership gaps. Addressing these issues demands coordinated engagement among nursing administration, human resources, executive leadership, mental health professionals, and information technology teams. Current research highlights the utility of predictive workforce analytics and AI-supported scheduling to maintain safe nurse-to-patient ratios (Hunstein & Fiebig, 2024). Simultaneously, integrating mental health support, limiting mandatory overtime, and adjusting policies promotes resilience and occupational well-being (Alsadaan, 2023; Wei et al., 2024).
Interdisciplinary Interventions for Nurse Burnout
| Problem Identified | Interdisciplinary Intervention | Key Stakeholders | Anticipated Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unsafe staffing ratios | AI-assisted predictive scheduling | Nursing leadership, HR, IT specialists | Balanced workload and reduced clinical risk |
| Emotional exhaustion | Structured psychological support and resilience programs | Mental health clinicians, nurse managers | Reduced burnout, enhanced coping |
| Elevated turnover | Overtime limitation policies and retention incentives | Executive administration, HR | Improved retention and workforce stability |
| Communication breakdowns | Formal interprofessional collaboration protocols | Nurses, physicians, administrators | Improved teamwork and fewer preventable errors |
Change Theories That Could Lead to an Interdisciplinary Solution
How Can Organizational Change Be Structured to Address Burnout and Staffing Gaps?
Kurt Lewin’s Change Management Model provides a systematic framework for implementing organizational reform through three sequential phases: unfreezing, changing, and refreezing (Stanz et al., 2021).
NURS FPX 4005 Assessment 2 Interview and Interdisciplinary Issue Identification
Unfreezing
In this initial phase, leadership evaluates organizational processes, shares empirical evidence linking staffing instability to patient safety, and engages frontline nurses in structured dialogue. Establishing urgency and readiness mitigates resistance to change and fosters shared commitment to reform.
Changing
During the implementation phase, the organization introduces AI-based staffing platforms, revises overtime policies, and integrates structured mental health supports into workflows. Cross-functional collaboration ensures alignment between workforce planning and employee well-being initiatives. Continuous feedback mechanisms allow ongoing adjustment to emerging challenges.
Refreezing
Sustainability is achieved by formalizing policies, embedding new staffing systems into daily operations, and establishing leadership accountability metrics. Continuous education and performance monitoring reinforce change and prevent regression to prior ineffective practices.
Leadership Strategies That Could Lead to an Interdisciplinary Solution
Which Leadership Style Most Effectively Facilitates Interdisciplinary Reform?
Transformational leadership is highly effective in complex healthcare environments because it emphasizes shared vision, empowerment, and collective responsibility (Alsadaan, 2023). Transformational leaders:
- Promote transparent, two-way communication
- Encourage participatory decision-making across disciplines
- Provide mentorship and professional development opportunities
- Advocate for workforce well-being at the executive level
Empirical evidence links transformational leadership to higher nurse engagement, improved retention, and better patient outcomes. Coupled with Lewin’s change framework, this leadership style enhances the likelihood of sustainable organizational improvement.
Collaboration Approaches for Interdisciplinary Teams
How Can Interdisciplinary Collaboration Reduce Burnout and Improve Care Quality?
Effective collaboration models strengthen communication, enhance shared accountability, and mitigate stress caused by fragmented care systems. Evidence-based frameworks demonstrate measurable benefits:
Interprofessional Collaboration (IPC)
IPC emphasizes coordinated decision-making, mutual respect, and shared clinical responsibility. Studies show that well-functioning IPC teams enhance patient safety and reduce clinical errors (Braun et al., 2020; Bendowska & Baum, 2023).
Collaborative Care Model (CoCM)
CoCM integrates behavioral health professionals into clinical settings using structured screening, referral pathways, and outcome tracking. This approach improves nurse psychological support and resilience (Reist et al., 2022).
TeamSTEPPS Framework
Developed by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, TeamSTEPPS provides standardized communication, leadership engagement, and team-based training. Its implementation strengthens trust, situational awareness, and performance reliability (Samardzic et al., 2020).
Evidence-Based Collaboration Frameworks
| Framework | Primary Emphasis | Operational Mechanism | Organizational Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| IPC | Team-based communication | Shared decision-making | Reduced stress, improved safety |
| CoCM | Mental health integration | Screening and referral systems | Strengthened resilience |
| TeamSTEPPS | Team performance optimization | Standardized communication | Enhanced safety culture and accountability |
Sustained interdisciplinary collaboration, supported by accountable leadership and structured change methodologies, offers a comprehensive strategy to mitigate nurse burnout, stabilize staffing, and maintain high-quality patient care.
References
Alsadaan, N. (2023). Impact of nurse leaders behaviors on nursing staff performance: A systematic review of literature. Inquiry: A Journal of Medical Care Organization, Provision and Financing, 60(60). https://doi.org/10.1177/00469580231178528
Bendowska, A., & Baum, E. (2023). The significance of cooperation in interdisciplinary health care teams as perceived by Polish medical students. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(2), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20020954
Braun, B. I., Chitavi, S. O., Suzuki, H., Soyemi, C. A., & Puig-Asensio, M. (2020). Culture of safety: Impact on improvement in infection prevention process and outcomes. Current Infectious Disease Reports, 22(12). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11908-020-00741-y
Hunstein, D., & Fiebig, M. (2024). Staff management with AI: Predicting the nursing workload. Studies in Health Technology and Informatics, 315. https://doi.org/10.3233/shti240142
NURS FPX 4005 Assessment 2 Interview and Interdisciplinary Issue Identification
Low, S., Gray, E., Ewing, A., Hain, P., & Kim, L. (2021). Remodeling interprofessional collaboration through a nurse-for-a-day shadowing program for medical residents. Journal of Multidisciplinary Healthcare, 14, 2345–2349. https://doi.org/10.2147/JMDH.S319728
Reist, C., Petiwala, I., Latimer, J., Raffaelli, S. B., Chiang, M., Eisenberg, D., & Campbell, S. (2022). Collaborative mental health care: A narrative review. Medicine, 101(52). https://doi.org/10.1097/md.0000000000032554
Samardzic, M. B., Doekhie, K. D., & Wijngaarden, J. D. H. (2020). Interventions to improve team effectiveness within health care: A systematic review of the past decade. Human Resources for Health, 18(2), 1–42. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12960-019-0411-3
Stanz, L., Silverstein, S., Vo, D., & Thompson, J. (2021). Leading through rapid change management. Hospital Pharmacy, 57(4), 422–424. https://doi.org/10.1177/00185787211046855
Wei, N., Wang, Z., Li, X., Zhang, Y., Zhang, J., Huang, Z., & Wang, X. (2024). Improved staffing policies and practices in healthcare based on a conceptual model. Frontiers in Public Health, 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2024.1431017