Speaking up is widely positioned as a core expectation of nursing practice, embedded in professional standards, codes of conduct, and organisational policy. Nurses are taught that raising concerns is central to patient safety, ethical care and professional accountability. Yet for many nurses, the experience of speaking up in practice falls short of this promise. This discussion paper examines the gap between policy rhetoric and workplace realities, and how this disconnect shapes nurses' behaviour, wellbeing, and professional identity. Drawing on contemporary literature, we explore how nurses learn informal rules about voice through everyday interactions, observing how concerns are received, who is protected, and whose voices are marginalised. In settings where encouragement to speak up is not matched by reliable protection, nurses are required to navigate significant psychosocial risk. Repeated exposure to negative responses, scrutiny, or exclusion can contribute to moral distress, hypervigilance and emotional exhaustion. Some nurses respond by limiting engagement, withdrawing from discussions, or avoiding situations in which concerns may arise. These behaviours are frequently misinterpreted as disengagement or a lack of resilience, rather than understood as adaptive strategies for self-protection in environments perceived as unsafe. We argue that silence in nursing should be recognised as a rational response to organisational conditions that fail to safeguard those who raise concerns. Reframing silence in this way shifts attention away from individual blame and towards the structural, cultural and leadership factors that shape whether speaking up is genuinely safe in practice.
Kornhaber et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: