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Mindfulness and narrative interventions show short-term promise for nurse leader well-being

Stress Evidence: RCT · n=157 · Randomized controlled trial with 3 parallel groups and 2-week follow-up 2026-07-18

A randomized trial of 157 US nurse leaders tested mindfulness, narrative, and combined interventions over 2 weeks. Well-being improved across all groups, but resilience gains faded by week 2.

Nurse leaders experience distinct occupational stressors that can erode both resilience and well-being. This randomized controlled trial enrolled 157 US nurse leaders and assigned them to three groups: mindfulness training, narrative intervention, or a combined approach.

All participants were measured at baseline, 1 week, and 2 weeks. Well-being scores improved significantly and consistently across all three intervention groups from baseline through the 2-week endpoint. Resilience scores, however, showed a different pattern: they rose from baseline to the 1-week assessment but then declined by week 2, returning toward baseline levels. The authors note that these are low-resource, feasible interventions—suggesting they could be delivered with minimal cost or time burden in busy healthcare settings. The main limitation is the short follow-up window; the study did not track whether gains persisted beyond 2 weeks or whether longer, reinforced interventions might sustain resilience improvements. The researchers conclude that while well-being signals appear robust over this short term, resilience benefits require longer or more intensive follow-up before organizations should adopt these approaches broadly.

Takeaway
Brief mindfulness or narrative interventions may boost well-being in nurse leaders over 1–2 weeks, but whether resilience gains last or require reinforcement remains unclear.

The well-being improvements held across all three intervention types—mindfulness alone, narrative alone, and combined—suggesting that the benefit wasn't driven by one specific mechanism. This is encouraging because it hints that nurse leaders may respond to multiple pathways for stress recovery. The resilience decline by week 2, despite improved well-being, raises an intriguing question: resilience and well-being may operate on different timescales, or the interventions may build emotional resources first before shoring up adaptive coping. The researchers explicitly flagged this as a limitation requiring longer-term studies (4 weeks, 8 weeks, or beyond). One practical implication is that these low-friction interventions appear safe and feasible to roll out—no special equipment, no extensive training—but they may work best as part of an ongoing practice rather than a one-time dose.

Takeaway · Cadence
If you lead a nursing team, these findings suggest that even a brief mindfulness session or structured reflection on meaningful work experiences may lift your sense of well-being in the moment. You might try anchoring a 5-minute mindfulness practice at the start of a weekly leadership meeting, or invite your team to share a recent moment they felt effective in their role. Resilience is stickier—it may require repeated practice or a longer commitment—so think of these interventions as starting a habit rather than a quick fix. Watch your own sense of renewal and notice whether a practice that initially feels good also helps you bounce back from setbacks after a few weeks.
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References

  1. Enhancing Resilience and Well-Being Among Nurse Leaders: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Mindfulness and Narrative Interventions.The Journal of nursing administration (Read the original)
  2. Gianella E, Owens RA, Quinn Griffin MT, Fitzpatrick JJ. A mindfulness-based intervention: effects on psychiatric nurses’ well-being and burnout. J Amer Psych Nurses Assoc. 2025;31. doi:10.1177/1078390
#mindfulness #nurse-leaders #resilience #narrative-therapy
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