Nurses and Bullying: 4 Things You Can Do

Bullying is real. It happens in all workplaces, including settings where we work as professional nurses. How can you recognize it? What can you do about it? Nurses General Nursing Article

Cindy was an older new grad. She went back to school after a long and successful career as a chemist, deciding that she wanted to be a nurse and explore other avenues of service for her “second half” of life. Capable and efficient in her first line of work, it was a shock to find herself as a novice where everything felt unfamiliar and where mastery was a ways off. Her first place of work was on a busy ortho floor. The second week at work, she called me crying. “Their expectations are so high. They keep threatening me.” I tried to listen without judging or offering advice, but something just seemed off. Every few days she texted or called and what she described didn’t seem like anything I had ever experienced as a nurse: where there should have been mentoring, there was censoring; where there should have been guidance, there was abandonment; where there should have been counseling, there was silence and isolation. The source of most of the problems was her preceptor, a young nurse, who my friend described and very physically attractive but unkind. As it turns out, she was a bully.

Nursing is Not Immune to Bullying

While we would hope that in such a caring profession, we would find a greater percentage of people with compassionate care agendas, sadly there are also a number of practitioners who exhibit the characteristics of a bully: they are critical, negative, they isolate their victims, avoid meeting with them, and generally make life miserable.

According to a study by Etienne, “Bullying in the nursing workplace has been identified as a factor that affects patient outcomes and increases occupational stress and staff turnover.” (Exploring Workplace Bullying in Nursing)

Signs of Bullying

The trouble with bullying is that it is often subtle and therefore difficult to recognize as such. While the playground bully may be overt and even violent, the adult bully is usually disguised under heavy layers of professional accomplishment and years of experience with manipulating others. They come in all shapes and sizes, both men and women, old and young. The “mean girls/guys” from 7th grade grow up, don’t they? But sadly, they sometimes don’t leave behind their old ways of treating others, and they bring those tactics with them when they put on their scrubs and head to the nursing workplace.

One of the primary manifestations of bullying is that the victim often feels that it is all his/her fault. After exposure to the bully’s tactics, they may even think to themselves, “If only I did this or that better, then they would not treat me this way.” The thought processes at the center of the bully/victim relationships can sometimes be lifted straight from our textbooks about abuse. Just as victims of domestic abuse many times blame themselves, nurses who are victims of bullying find themselves looking inward and wondering if there is something wrong with them.

What are some of the classic signs of a bully boss or co-worker? 20 Subtle Signs of Bullying at Work

More Subtle Signs

Deceitful and manipulative- making promises but not keeping them or using promises to purposely disappoint.

Shaming and blaming- bullies want the victim to blame themselves.

Ignoring or undermining work- purposely “forgetting” to notify someone of meetings, belittling their work or accomplishments.

Intimidating and criticizing- setting impossible standards and even threatening.

Diversion and mood swings- bullies might avoid the victim so that the work issues cannot be resolved in a timely manner; and they are subject to widely varying moods (which boss/co-worker will be coming to work today? The sweet one or the nasty one?)

Overt Bullying

Aggression and intrusion- actual physical altercations with the bully entering your personal space.

Belittling, embarrassing and offensive communication- using their position to cause you harm, either physical, psychological or professional.

Coercion and threatening- pushing the victim to do things they don’t feel comfortable doing and using threats of termination or other punishment to get compliance with their demands.

So, if you or someone you know is being bullied in the workplace, what can you do?

Document- Keep a record of any threatening or inappropriate emails, texts or interactions. Should it become necessary to report the bad behavior, it will be important to have specific occurrences, words used, and frequency of episodes. Also, learn your workplace policies on bullying and what your recourses are.

Detach- Try to look at the occurrences in light of how this person treats others. Have you been “picked out” for special scrutiny? Bullies are sometimes bullies across the board but at times they pick out a few victims, zero in on those and treat others as allies, making the other staff members into (sometimes) unwitting accomplices for their own bad behavior.

Dare to Defy- Standing up to a bully is hard and practically can be impossible. Often, persistent bullying requires cutting our losses and moving on to another position. But adult and boss bullies—like those on the playground—can respond to pushback: maintaining eye contact, standing firm, ignoring or not acceding to their demands. This is harder to do than it sounds, because the victim of a bully at work frequently is not in a position to resist and finds themselves being jerked around by the perpetrator’s continually changing and escalating demands, whims and moods.

Defend- Be on the lookout for bullying behavior around you and if you see something, say something.

As for Cindy, in the end, she resigned after 3 months and went in search of another job—certainly not the route a new nurse wants to have on her resume—but a physical and psychological necessity given the bullying she experienced. After the rocky start, she went on to have an extremely successful career as a nurse and to find the profession a satisfying fit for her talents.

Have you witnessed bullying in your workplace? How have you been a victim of bullying?

This is a good point. I hadn’t noticed it in my first reading.

I guess I was drawing on my on turbulent early years in nursing.My first preceptor was less than five years out of nursing, we were on the busiest floor of the hospital and she was not warm and cuddly, but very abrupt. I thought she was mean. However, she never called me a name, or belittled me or cut me out of “the group”.

My next job preceptor *did* belittle, gather her friends around her and talk about me (in just a loud enough voice so I knew I was being run down, but not loud enough I could legitimately break into the conversation).

With maturity and hindsight, I realize my first preceptor wasn’t mean, but overworked from being on a floor where the NM was desperately trying to prove to *her* bosses that she was such a great manager that she’d take on patient census and acuity that the other nurse managers would say “no” to.

My second preceptor was a bitter mean girl disappointed in how her own life turned out and I was an insecure easy target.

On 12/7/2019 at 5:29 PM, Daisy Joyce said:

This is a good point. I hadn’t noticed it in my first reading.

I guess I was drawing on my on turbulent early years in nursing.My first preceptor was less than five years out of nursing, we were on the busiest floor of the hospital and she was not warm and cuddly, but very abrupt. I thought she was mean. However, she never called me a name, or belittled me or cut me out of “the group”.

My next job preceptor *did* belittle, gather her friends around her and talk about me (in just a loud enough voice so I knew I was being run down, but not loud enough I could legitimately break into the conversation).

With maturity and hindsight, I realize my first preceptor wasn’t mean, but overworked from being on a floor where the NM was desperately trying to prove to *her* bosses that she was such a great manager that she’d take on patient census and acuity that the other nurse managers would say “no” to.

My second preceptor was a bitter mean girl disappointed in how her own life turned out and I was an insecure easy target.

I can relate to the bitter, mean girl part. I have worked with some really unhappy people. Their personal lives were a mess, they brought their misery to work, they took it out on newbies like me. 40 years later, I recall their ugliness, their meanness, their selfishness. I should have a fake funeral for them, where I bury them once and for all. Maybe that would help me forget them. Of course, they were great examples of how not to be. Many times, I've been told how helpful, friendly, otherwise wonderful I was by students and by coworkers. Mainly, I don't talk about personal stuff, I get to work on time and actually do my work, I help others when possible, and try very hard to be friendly and courteous.

Yes, I wish I'd known way back when that personal misery came out as ***ery at work. I took it personally, like I was the one doing wrong. Later, I figured out it could't have all been me. From these horse's asses, I learned and have always practiced being a pleasant fellow to all.

Stand up for yourselves, guys. No one else will or should have to.

Specializes in Faith Community Nurse (FCN).
9 hours ago, Kooky Korky said:

I can relate to the bitter, mean girl part. I have worked with some really unhappy people. Their personal lives were a mess, they brought their misery to work, they took it out on newbies like me. 40 years later, I recall their ugliness, their meanness, their selfishness. I should have a fake funeral for them, where I bury them once and for all. Maybe that would help me forget them. Of course, they were great examples of how not to be. Many times, I've been told how helpful, friendly, otherwise wonderful I was by students and by coworkers. Mainly, I don't talk about personal stuff, I get to work on time and actually do my work, I help others when possible, and try very hard to be friendly and courteous.

Yes, I wish I'd known way back when that personal misery came out as ***ery at work. I took it personally, like I was the one doing wrong. Later, I figured out it could't have all been me. From these horse's asses, I learned and have always practiced being a pleasant fellow to all.

Stand up for yourselves, guys. No one else will or should have to.

Thank you for your response and glad you stayed with it! Joy

Does anyone else think it's strange how we get bullying articles posted on the company's website (or emailed to us). "How to recognize bullying", etc, but everyone knows you can't get fired for bullying (unless maybe you physically strike someone). The company culture needs to change somehow.

Specializes in Critical Care.

How do you bully an adult? Tell them to &*^% off.

Specializes in Emergency, critical care.
On 11/27/2019 at 3:28 PM, Jedrnurse said:

Ouch. You can make your point without getting so personal.

Actually, as a 20 yr. experience travel nurse, I agree. Lots of hidden, influential connections at a new job, i.e. nepotism, cronyism, gangsterism too. Not every co-worker is a sweetie, or even 'professional'. (Some places, it is obvious why they need to supplement staffing with contract nurses.) ((That being said, I have worked across the country with some of the BEST.)) My opinion? if you made it to R. N., you're not exactly victim-hood material, you're a pretty strong person, so I'm going to listen to the complaint and give it its due.

Specializes in Prospective Student Nurse.
On 11/27/2019 at 1:17 AM, Snatchedwig said:

I don't care what anyone says. Bully can only go so far. It takes ONE time to man up and put them in their place, problem solved. Hell the ones that were considered bullies at my job and I get along perfectly well because I put them in their place the first time they tried.

HI! what are the ways to put them in their place? Reall want to know how without becoming a bully myself

Specializes in Critical Care.

It’s easy.. you just stand up for yourself. We had this nurse who used to “bully” everyone on the floor. As a new nurse I just figured she was a very good nurse and expected the best from everyone. So I just took it, and apologized for my shortcomings... until I realized she wasn’t.. if you didn’t know every detail about every aspect of the patients history she would talk down to you and act like you were a moron, even if it was completely irrelevant, but you could ask her something like “what were the last vitals?” “Oh I don’t know child... they normal... I didn’t pay attention” or she would straight up say “I don’t know, I ain’t gon’ lie, his wife was gettin on my nerves so I just stayed out of that room”

I just started telling her about herself, and within a couple weeks she was on another unit. And when that unit would float over they complained about her and said “Y’all need to take her back!”.

Its hard to bully an adult. What are they going to do? Stuff you in a garbage can? Hit you? I wish they would. I would sue them so hard I wouldn’t have to work anymore ?