The second week of March is dedicated to patient safety awareness, a time for refining clinical protocols and benchmarks for excellence. However, before healthcare organizations can truly elevate their standards of care, they must recognize a fundamental prerequisite that’s often overlooked: provider safety.
When healthcare staff feel unsafe, they are more likely to feel overwhelmed and distracted, increasing their risk of error. This directly links provider safety to patient safety. Patients and their families can also sense when a care team is operating in a state of hypervigilance. When clinicians appear anxious, rushed, or unfocused, that emotional tension erodes the foundation of care and hinders patient experience.
These truths show that workplace safety and patient safety are inextricably linked, and healthcare organizations cannot achieve one without the other.
The data: Connecting staff safety to quality of care
The link between workplace conditions and patient outcomes is backed by rigorous research. A study published in the Journal of Nursing Care Quality analyzed 13 workplace conditions to predict the quality and safety of patient care delivery. The findings were clear: physical safety and psychological protection ranked as two of the top three most important predictors of a facility’s patient safety grade.
Furthermore, the stability of the workforce directly impacts patient mortality. Research published in Health Policy in 2024 revealed a sobering statistic: a 10% increase in staff “intention to leave” was associated with a 14% increase in inpatient hospital mortality. When healthcare organizations lose experienced providers to safety-related burnout, the cost is measured in more than just recruitment dollars – it is measured in patient lives.
Burnout as a catalyst for risk
Burnout is often viewed as a symptom of long hours or administrative burden, but for many, it is the downstream result of unresolved psychological harm. In an industry where more than two nurses are assaulted every hour on average, burnout becomes a major contributing factor to unsafe practices.
Recent surveys found that 45–61% of nurses plan to leave their jobs within the next 12 months, and more than half (58%) report feeling burned out most days. This presents a major challenge for healthcare leaders, who are left to strategize on how to retain their workforce. The key to success? Increasing their safety and protecting their well-being.
When a culture of safety is strong, staff are more engaged, and patients report higher-quality care. They feel the difference when their caregivers feel supported.
Building a holistic culture of safety
A study published in BMC Health Services Research found that while many healthcare providers ranked their organization’s ‘patient safety’ culture positively, substantially fewer providers reported a positive ‘workplace safety’ culture. This suggests that while organizations are dedicated to clinical excellence, the same dedication isn’t always afforded to the workforce.
The study also identified three specific workplace safety factors that most strongly correlate with a high-performing patient safety culture:
- Strong support from leadership when workplace safety events arise
- The ability to report safety incidents or concerns without consequences
- The overall perception of workplace safety by providers and staff
These findings provide actionable insight and offer a starting point for improvement. When leadership demonstrates a visible commitment to staff safety and fosters an environment where concerns can be reported, without fear of retaliation, they aren’t just protecting their employees – they are directly driving improvements in patient safety.
A layered approach to increasing safety
Ensuring healthcare workers feel safe when they show up to work requires more than verbal support. It takes a layered approach that mitigates risk, empowers employees, and accelerates response.
Organizations must move past the idea that there is a “silver bullet” or a one-size-fits-all solution. Instead, leaders must begin with an honest assessment of their facility’s unique vulnerabilities. Once gaps are identified, the strategy must be multi-dimensional: combining environmental modifications and robust training with technology that empowers every single employee to take action. For example, if staff feel unsafe walking to their cars after their shift because of frequent encounters with strangers in a dimly lit parking garage, it may be worth investing in increased lighting, security rounds, and a way for staff to summon help immediately if they encounter a threat, such as wearable duress buttons.
This “umbrella” of safety strategies is most effective when reinforced by leader-driven communication that explains how and when to use each resource, and why they are essential to protecting everyone on campus – from staff to patients and family members. By layering intentionally selected solutions into their strategy, leaders can ensure safety is felt across the entire campus rather than being misbranded as a patient-only privilege.
The mandate for organizational leadership
The American Nurses Association defines a culture of safety as the core values and behaviors that emerge from a collective, continuous commitment by leadership to prioritize safety over competing goals. Similarly, The Joint Commission defines safety culture as the sum of what an organization believes and does in the pursuit of safety.
For healthcare executives, addressing workplace violence is no longer just a security mandate; it is a clinical and operational necessity. As healthcare organizations continue to strive for exceptional patient care, it’s imperative that the foundation includes a protective and supportive environment for healthcare workers. This is how to stabilize the workforce and sustain the delivery of care for our communities.
Photo: marchmeena29, Getty Images
This post appears through the MedCity Influencers program. Anyone can publish their perspective on business and innovation in healthcare on MedCity News through MedCity Influencers. Click here to find out how.