Every May, National Nurses Week gives us a moment to recognize the people who hold the front line of patient care. This year, the Massachusetts Nurses Association marked the occasion with something more than recognition. The 2026 State of Nursing in Massachusetts survey, conducted by Beacon Research across RNs statewide, offers a detailed look at where the healthcare workforce stands today and provides insight for hospital leaders who are already working hard to make their environments safer and more sustainable.
The Numbers Behind the NoiseSeven out of ten nurses surveyed across Massachusetts say the quality of patient care has deteriorated over the past two years. That figure has climbed by more than 30 points from pre-pandemic levels and has held stubbornly high. Three in five nurses identify understaffing as the primary obstacle to the care their patients need.
The downstream effects show up in concrete ways. Eight in ten nurses report that patients go without adequate comfort and assistance because capacity simply does not allow for it. Nearly three-quarters say discharge planning and patient education fall short for the same reason. Half are aware of medication errors tied directly to excessive workloads. Decades of research reinforce what nurses are describing: heavier patient assignments correlate with worse outcomes and higher mortality risk, and wait times in emergency settings climb steeply with each additional patient a nurse must manage in a shift.
For hospital leaders focused on care quality, these numbers describe conditions they have every reason to want to change.
One figure in this year's survey deserves particular attention: 79% of nurses with five or fewer years of experience personally encountered workplace violence or abuse in the past two years. That is 10 points higher than the already significant overall rate of 69%.
Newer nurses are entering the profession during one of its most challenging periods, with less established clinical footing and fewer of the informal support systems that experienced nurses build over time. The exposure to violence at this stage in a career accelerates an exit decision that many organizations can least afford. Nearly a third of all nurses surveyed say they plan to leave the profession earlier than originally intended.
This is where the opportunity for leadership is clearest. Institutional protection has become one of the most meaningful signals an organization can send to someone who is just beginning their career. A nurse choosing between employers is evaluating, often at an instinctive level, which organization will take their physical safety seriously as a structural priority, not just a stated value.
Workplace violence in healthcare does not appear in isolation. It tends to develop in conditions already present in an understaffed unit, long before anything escalates.
When nurses cannot adequately comfort and assist patients and cannot complete discharge education, patients and families experience a care environment that feels uncertain. They do not always understand the operational reasons. What they feel is anxiety and a loss of control during some of the most difficult moments of their lives. Research consistently shows that unmet basic needs and extended wait times are among the strongest precursors to patient frustration escalating into aggression. The staffing and safety challenges are closely connected, and they can be addressed together.
Leading health systems across Massachusetts are reshaping the questions they ask about safety. Rather than focusing only on how to respond after an incident, they are building environments designed to prevent escalation and to support staff rapidly when situations do arise.
Integrated safety infrastructure plays a meaningful role here. Wearable alert systems that allow a nurse to quietly notify security with a single motion, without leaving the room or interrupting care, close one of the most persistent gaps in staff protection: the time between when a situation begins to deteriorate and when support arrives. Communication platforms that connect clinical staff, security teams, and supervisors in real time enable coordinated responses in seconds rather than minutes.
Technology is one layer of a broader approach. The organizations making the most progress tend to combine visible security presence, behavioral health rounding in high-acuity areas, and structured processes for identifying situations early. Think of it as a lattice: each element supports the others, and together they create protection that holds under real-world conditions.
Massachusetts has more registered nurses per capita than almost anywhere else in the country, and the pipeline remains strong. The challenge described in this year's survey is not a supply problem but an environmental problem, and the environment is something leadership can act on directly.
When nurses see that their organization anticipates their risks, invests in the right tools, and responds meaningfully when they raise concerns, something shifts. The survey data clearly shows that the factors that would persuade nurses to stay are not primarily compensation-related. Adequate support, manageable workloads, and the sense that leadership has their back rank at the top of the list.
The path forward is hopeful. The nurses working in Massachusetts hospitals right now want to stay in this profession. Giving them an environment where they can do that is both the right thing to do and one of the most practical investments a healthcare organization can make.