ABSTRACT Instability within the nursing workforce undermines service continuity, patient outcomes and staff wellbeing in urology services. Workforce retention remains a persistent challenge across the NHS, particularly in specialist teams where continuity, advanced expertise and relational care are critical. This paper presents a critically reflective leadership and service improvement project undertaken within a specialist urology cancer nursing team ( n = 20) working across four hospital sites at a London oncology centre in the UK. The team comprised 16 senior Clinical Nurse Specialists (Band 7) and 4 Clinical Nurse Specialists (Band 6). The project was undertaken as part of the Rosalind Franklin Leadership Programme and was designed to inform leadership practice rather than generate generalisable research findings; therefore, it did not constitute a research study or audit. Data sources included exit interviews with staff who voluntarily left the service ( n = 5), documented one‐to‐one reflective leadership discussions ( n = 20), structured staff feedback sessions, and organisational workforce datasets (Great with Talent Annual Report, April 2024–March 2025; QSR1 workforce dataset, June 2025). These sources were analysed to identify recurrent patterns influencing workforce stability and to guide iterative leadership interventions focused on career development, recognition, role clarity, team cohesion and psychological safety. Four recurrent drivers of turnover were identified: limited career progression, inconsistent recognition, structural role ambiguity and unclear pathway ownership. In response, targeted leadership interventions were implemented, including structured career development pathways, mentorship, enhanced recognition practices, clearer role definition and transparent performance management. Over the subsequent 6–12 months, voluntary resignations reduced from five to one, alongside reported improvements in staff morale, role clarity, team cohesion, continuity of care, and perceived organisational support. This critically reflective leadership project demonstrates how compassionate, adaptive and systems‐based leadership approaches can address workforce instability in specialist nursing services. While context‐specific, the learning offers transferable leadership insights aligned with national workforce priorities, supporting sustainable retention, workforce resilience, and strengthened organisational culture.
Ana Filipa Goncalves Semedo (Thu,) studied this question.