Home HealthWant to Show Your Nurses Appreciation? Fix Your Hospital Communications

Want to Show Your Nurses Appreciation? Fix Your Hospital Communications

by Staff Reporter
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Health systems across the country will recognize their nursing staff for National Nurses Week on May 6-12, with everything from team lunches and awards to professional development opportunities. This year’s theme, “The Power of Nurses, highlights the critical role nurses play across patient care. But while these celebrations are all well-intentioned, they simply will not land if the day-to-day experience of the job remains unchanged. Let’s face it, nurses are struggling in ways that extend far beyond a catered lunch.

The massive NYC nursing strike earlier this year brought national attention to the country’s nursing crisis. Much of the conversation has centered on staffing shortages, compensation battles, and general burnout – and those issues are real and urgent – but there’s a hidden (and fixable) problem shaping how nurses experience their work every shift: hospital workplace communication has not kept pace with how care is delivered. 

One of the most persistent challenges in nurses’ day-to-day life is how information is delivered to them, and whether it arrives in time to actually be useful. Nurses are constantly moving – between patients, units, emergencies, and priorities that can shift in an instant – and outdated communication systems often fall short. Messages show up late, buried in long updates, or disconnected from what’s happening on the floor.

The result? More time spent tracking down updates, more friction in their workflows, and less time to focus on patient care – and, worse, nurses are still missing important messages that impact everything from safety to compliance to well-being. 

When critical updates come too late

A recent survey found that one in nine hospital nurses say they have learned about policy or procedural changes only after those changes already went into effect. Many of those updates directly affect patient care and safety, whether it’s a change to a certain protocol or a staffing switch-up. 

At the same time, the volume of communication continues to increase. Updates come through multiple channels, at all hours, and with varying levels of importance. Nurses are left to sort through what matters most while managing patient needs, and important information often gets skimmed, delayed, or missed completely. 

Unfortunately, the impacts are felt beyond internal teams, with more than 80% of nurses saying they have experienced patient care issues tied to communication failures. Any sort of delay in treatment, lapse during a shift change, or gap in coordination can directly contribute to medical errors and patient safety risks.

Miscommunications lead to burnout 

While turnover rates have improved just slightly, burnout in nursing (and all medical fields, for that matter) has hit “crisis levels.” Nurse well-being needs to be a top priority to reduce churn, and communication plays a make-or-break role. 

In general, frontline employees, healthcare included, rank “better communication” among the top improvements they want from their employers – alongside “feeling cared for.”

A well-executed approach to hospital communications can help nurses feel a sense of belonging while arming them with information they need to work effectively – but poorly executed approaches only contribute to burnout. For example, repeatedly feeling out of the loop or having to track down basic information during a shift slows things down, only adds unnecessary stress, and makes an already demanding job harder to sustain. 

Built for offices, not hospital floors

These communication breakdowns are not happening because nurses aren’t paying attention or because they don’t care. They are happening because the systems delivering information were not designed for how nurses work.

Many hospital communication strategies still rely on tools like email, intranet posts, and even bulletin-board announcements. These approaches assume time and attention that frontline staff often do not have, and they rely on nurses to determine what is relevant after the fact. 

In practice, that model creates more work. Nurses are pulled out of their workflow and into separate systems just to stay informed, often while balancing patient care. When communication operates outside the flow of work, it becomes something to manage rather than something that supports the job.

Hospitals have invested heavily in “modernizing” clinical systems, such as EHRs and monitoring tools, that are designed to deliver accurate, timely information to the right person. Communication, however, has not been prioritized with that same level of precision.

What it takes to fix communication

Too many hospitals think improving communication means increasing the volume of messages, but ultimately, it requires rethinking how information is delivered in the first place. 

That starts with relevance. Information should be tailored by role, unit, and shift so nurses receive what actually applies to them, not a constant stream of broad updates. 

It also requires meeting nurses where they are. Mobile-first delivery ensures that updates reach staff in real time, without requiring them to step away from patient care or log into separate platforms.

Equally important is integration. Communication should sit closer to clinical and operational workflows, reducing the need to search across systems for critical updates.

And finally, there needs to be visibility. Leaders should understand whether messages are received, understood, and acted on – especially when patient care, protocols, and safety are involved.

None of these changes requires more communication. They require delivering information in a way that actually fits how nurses work throughout their shift.

Communication is part of the care infrastructure

In high-stakes environments like healthcare, communication should not be viewed as just an HR or IT function. It needs to be treated as part of the clinical infrastructure.

When it works, communication enables coordination, speeds up decision-making, and supports consistent care delivery. When it doesn’t, the impact is clear: missed updates, operational friction, and breakdowns that reach the patient (and, frankly, the hospital’s bottom line). 

For hospitals looking for ways to actually celebrate, support, and retain nurses, improving communication is one of the most immediate and controllable places to start. The right approaches can shape how work feels, how teams function, and how reliably care can be delivered.

Recognition matters, but fixing the communication systems that support nurses every day matters more.

Photo: Hiraman, Getty Images


Melissa Hensley is a healthcare experience and communications leader with more than 15 years of experience helping organizations connect, engage, and support their workforce. As VP, Healthcare at Firstup, She works closely with health systems to modernize internal communications and strengthen culture across complex, frontline environments.

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.

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