Break the Silence: Report Bullying

Save your co-workers life; report bullying. Suicide and Post Traumatic Stress does occur from being bullied in the workplace. Nurses take an oath to do no harm to others. This includes protecting your co-workers from being bullied. Reach out your hand and help your co-workers so they can receive counseling. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

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The importance and impact of bullying in the workplace are significant to nursing in many ways. Bullying threatens the very foundation, of not just nurses, but its business ethics, structure, and productivity. Nursing is a sensitive structure that demands teamwork, dedication, and drive.

The rise of bullying threatens to create barriers in nursing that will result in a negative way. This impact bullying has on nurses impedes their ability to function professionally by interfering with teamwork, morale, and personal health. Prevention is the only way to stop or eliminate bullying. An anti-bullying program must become an integral part of nursing training by deeply embedding the need to identify and prevent this destructive action in the workplace.

A nurse takes the oath to do no harm to others. Nurses dedicate their hearts and minds to practice faithfully in their profession. The qualities a nurse must possess are to be compassionate, sympathetic, and empathetic towards others. These qualities are especially important for nurse managers so they can guide and mentor nurses along with their career path. A nurse manager who lacks these qualities and does not support their nurses creates problems in their working environment.

An unspoken problem is nurse manager bullying. The nursing issue is that nurse manager bullying can cause intimidation and psychological harassment amongst their employees. This harassment can cause the employee to have devastating psychological, physical, emotional, and social outcomes.

It is time in the nursing profession to break the silence that nurse managers who bully nurses create an unhealthy work environment that can result in health problems or cause nurses to resign. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and suicide do occur in staff who are bullied by their co-workers and/or nurse managers.

It is time to be proactive as nurses and identify bullying behaviors and report them immediately. Look at your co-workers who are being treated poorly reach out your hand and guide them to get counseling so they can heal from this.

Here are some basic suggestions on what to do if bullying occurs in the Workplace:

  1. Send the employee who is being bullied to Employee Health to talk with an appointed staff member who can guide them in where to get counseling.

  2. Remove the employee immediately from the toxic environment and place them in a better working environment so no form of retaliation can occur.

  3. Employee Health should report bullying to the Bullying Task Force. The Bullying Task Force is composed of a Peer Counsel Committee who will review each case. This Peer Counsel Committee is important because it does not consist of management who possibly would not be as objective as a peer.
  4. Implement a Bullying Support Group. This is important in the recovery of staff who are bullied. The Bullying Support Group will utilize a twelve step program much like Alcoholic Anonymous.
  5. Have employees fill out a survey online that can be filled out anonymously and sent directly to the Associate Directors office.
  6. Have Human Resources track all staff who leave a position and have them fill out a bullying survey online.

Exit interviews should be conducted on all employees leaving their jobs. This interview should be kept confidential so it does not interfere with or impact new job opportunities. Surveys should be done that ensure confidentiality in the data collected. In order to collect honest and accurate data, it is extremely important to provide confidentiality. Surveys that ask identifiable data such as age, work level, and sex are often a deterrent for employees to complete the survey honestly. A person's identity can easily be assessed by this information. All of the data collected can be utilized to help strengthen the laws, guidelines, and policies to provide a safe working environment and to stop bullying

Educating hospital staff on the importance of looking for suicide and PTSD symptoms is extremely important. Nurse managers need to be educated that treating their employees in a caring way will help to retain them. They will realize happy employees are more productive and tend to stay in their jobs. Cruelty will cause the human spirit to fail. Nurse managers that bully allow the human spirit to fail in the employees they bully. The human spirit is affected by the consequences of bullying which are physical and psychological changes in the person that is bullied. Jean Watson's Human Caring Theory should be taught to all employees to restore caring in the health care system so bullying behavior can be stopped.

Educating and providing resources to new employee nurses on bullying, the Whistle Blowers Act, and sexual harassment should be incorporated into new employee orientation. All staff would also benefit from a yearly review on these topics. Hopefully, this will keep nurses aware of proper workplace behavior and we can retain nurses. There are programs available for this problem, but many nurses are not aware this issue exists nor how to identify bullying. There are several others that provide information on books, education, and counseling available for anyone who is bullied.

There are no governmental laws that prohibit workplace bullying. Governmental laws addressing workplace bullying should be in place. There needs to be a law acknowledging that bullying exists. Once legislation is established then health care organizations will have zero tolerance in allowing this behavior. Strong institutional policies need to be in place in every healthcare organization to prevent bullying in the workplace.

Report Bullying; Break the Silence; Save Your Co-Workers Life

Sarah Yuengling RN MSN

Specializes in None yet..
Ruby Vee said:
If you don't tolerate disrespectful behavior, you won't be treated disrespectfully -- at least not more than once. When you care enough about yourself to make that happen, change happens.

I don't know about nursing because I am not even a student until this fall. But in one government job in the profession I am leaving, this was sadly not true. Sometimes bullying is so institutionally ingrained and supported that the only way of caring for yourself is to leave. And that's sad for the profession.

I agree with you that it's important to see what I can do on my own, one-to-one, before making a problem a bigger issue. AND... sometimes there is a bigger institutional, cultural issue that needs additional help.

Just my experience from a very sick and twisted state job.

1 Votes

This happens to me now. I work in a small physician office with just three of us. The office manager is not my boss, but she has been acting like she is for the past 2 years. She tells patients little things to make them think I'm incompetent. She tells the doctor everything I do wrong, every time. She has whispered conversations with people, she redirects conversations away from anything that has to do with me, she interrupts my questions or conversations with drug reps, and she tells the maintenance guys nasty things. Patients have told me some things. She shoots herself in the foot, though. She has temper tantrums, seriously HUGE ones, and makes herself look bad. We all know she has a psychiatric disorder of some kind, so it helps to know that. However she is the token workplace bully. Work is uncomfortable, especially when the doctor isn't here, and I've considered leaving before. I have a great relationship with our boss, however, and I don't want to leave him high and dry. It's frustrating... Karma is nice sometimes, though..

1 Votes
Specializes in NICU, PICU, Transport, L&D, Hospice.
nurseybee12 said:
This happens to me now. I work in a small physician office with just three of us. The office manager is not my boss, but she has been acting like she is for the past 2 years. She tells patients little things to make them think I'm incompetent. She tells the doctor everything I do wrong, every time. She has whispered conversations with people, she redirects conversations away from anything that has to do with me, she interrupts my questions or conversations with drug reps, and she tells the maintenance guys nasty things. Patients have told me some things. She shoots herself in the foot, though. She has temper tantrums, seriously HUGE ones, and makes herself look bad. We all know she has a psychiatric disorder of some kind, so it helps to know that. However she is the token workplace bully. Work is uncomfortable, especially when the doctor isn't here, and I've considered leaving before. I have a great relationship with our boss, however, and I don't want to leave him high and dry. It's frustrating... Karma is nice sometimes, though..

You should talk to your boss about her behavior.

When patients tell you that she has said something disparaging about a team member you should report that to your boss and to the physicians, their practice reputation in the community will be damaged by this type of behavior. As long as you are coworkers with this toxic woman keep notes about her behavior.

Good luck.

1 Votes

I have only one boss, and he knows the situation. He's tried talking to her, but every time he does, it gets better for a time. Then, out of nowhere, she gets her feathers ruffled, and it comes out directly at me for some reason. It never really gets 100% better, just tolerable. Right now it's almost not tolerable. I'm thinking about leaving, honestly.

1 Votes

Hi. I witnessed bullying today and I would love to report it! I am a big user of my hospitals' incident reporting... but the current hospital where I work does NOT have an anonymous reporting system and I don't want to jeopardize my job by reporting the bully. I told her she bullied the other nurse and she heard me but told me to manage things on my own. Frustrating.

1 Votes
bbedit said:
Hi. I witnessed bullying today and I would love to report it! I am a big user of my hospitals' incident reporting... but the current hospital where I work does NOT have an anonymous reporting system and I don't want to jeopardize my job by reporting the bully. I told her she bullied the other nurse and she heard me but told me to manage things on my own. Frustrating.

How would you be jeopardizing your job? Especially if you already confronted this nurse and told her she's a bully? Seems like the cat's already out of the bag...

1 Votes