Constantly monitoring and balancing workload

Health and wellbeing are not separate from productivity they are preconditions for it. When workload is consistently excessive, the consequences extend far beyond missed targets.

Quality & Performance

  • Errors increase. Documentation falls behind. Decision-making becomes reactive rather than considered. Standards drift.

Long-Term Health

  • Chronic overwork leads to burnout, anxiety, musculoskeletal problems and cardiovascular risk. The damage accumulates invisibly.

Legal Duty

  • Employers have a legal duty under health and safety law to ensure workloads are reasonable. This applies to NHS teams and leaders.

What good workload monitoring looks like in practice

✓  Regular review of caseload numbers and complexity

✓  Team huddles that surface pressure early

✓  Tracking sickness, overtime and missed breaks

✓  One-to-ones that include capacity conversations

✓  Using data to plan ahead, not just respond

✓  Acting on early warning signs before they escalate


The importance of taking proactive steps

Proactive leadership means acting on information before it becomes a crisis. In the context of workload and wellbeing, it means supporting strategic planning rather than constantly responding to immediate pressure.

The ripple effects of not taking action

If you don't act...

The ripple effect

One nurse reaches capacity

→  Caseload is absorbed by others → fatigue spreads → sickness absence rises → remaining staff face even higher pressure

Documentation falls behind

→  Risk is not recorded → handovers become unsafe → patient outcomes are compromised → regulatory risk increases

Staff concerns go unheard

→  Trust in leadership erodes → morale drops → experienced staff leave → institutional knowledge is lost

What proactive steps look like in strategic planning

›  Building wellbeing conversations into team meetings and supervision

›  Using workforce data to anticipate capacity gaps before they occur

›  Escalating workload concerns to senior leaders with evidence

›  Redesigning rotas or roles to distribute pressure more equitably

›  Creating psychologically safe spaces where staff can raise concerns early

Common signs of excessive workload and early burnout

Burnout rarely arrives suddenly. It builds gradually through unaddressed pressure. Recognising the early signs — in yourself and in your team — is one of the most important skills a leader can develop.

Signs of excessive workload

Early signs of burnout

  • Consistently working beyond contracted hours
  • Skipping breaks, lunch or supervision regularly
  • Tasks carrying over day after day without resolution
  • Increasing errors or near misses in documentation
  • Staff completing admin at home in personal time
  • Rising sickness absence or frequent short-term leave
  • Emotional exhaustion, feeling drained before the day begins
  • Detachment or cynicism towards patients or colleagues
  • Reduced sense of personal accomplishment or purpose
  • Increased irritability, withdrawal or low mood at work
  • Difficulty concentrating or making decisions
  • Physical symptoms: headaches, disrupted sleep, fatigue

Reflect on Sarah's team

Two experienced nurses have quietly raised concerns about fatigue. Staff skipped breaks during the inspection. Documentation was completed at home in evenings. Several of the signs above are already present which ones can you identify? This is exactly the situation you will explore in the activity that follows.