Boundary Setting in Nursing Leadership: My Story of Saying “No”
- NursePathwaysPro
- Aug 4
- 2 min read

I had to hold my boundary and it wasn’t easy.
As a Director of Nursing, I stepped in to support the clinic during an unexpected staffing gap. Nurses were out due to illness and PTO, and while I offered to help with urgent needs, I made it clear:
I would not be providing routine care like injections or assessments that the provider team could manage.
The Moment It Was Tested
A provider asked for my help with routine care.I responded calmly:
“I won’t be able to help with that today.”
She seemed surprised.
“Oh, you’re not seeing patients?”
“No,” I replied again. And yes, it felt awkward to say it out loud. Even as a nurse leader, saying what you mean and sticking to it can feel uncomfortable. But I knew it was necessary.
Leadership Means Reflecting, Not People-Pleasing
Afterwards, I asked myself:
Why did this feel uncomfortable?
Here’s what I uncovered:
I was being perceived as a clinical nurse
But my role is administrative
The lines blurred in that moment and that didn’t sit right with me
So, could I have handled it differently while still maintaining my boundary?
Next time, I might:
Personally update providers on what “urgent care only” means
Clarify that I’ll handle acute changes, not routine injections or patient education
Choose one common nursing task I’m willing to take on, on my terms
Your Boundaries Deserve Reinforcement, Not Regret
Think of your boundaries like a fence. A strong wind (ie. workplace challenge) comes through and shakes it. After the storm, you don’t take the fence down, you reinforce it so it stands stronger next time.
✨Final Reminder:
Set your boundaries. Say them out loud. Stick with them. Because when you lead with clarity, you nurse better.