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When Burnout Meets Short Staffing: How it Impacts Clinic Performance

This isn’t about people failing. It’s about systems under strain. 

Vet med is no stranger to being busy. But there’s a difference between a busy clinic and a clinic that is running on empty.

When burnout and short staffing collide, the impact goes far beyond long days and tired teams. It affects:

  • Patient care
  • Communication
  • Workflow 
  • Decision-making
  • And ultimately, the risk of mistakes

And the most important thing to understand is this:

Mistakes in these environments are rarely about lack of skill.
They’re about lack of capacity.

 

What Burnout Actually Looks Like in Vet Med

I know we have talked a lot about burnout before, but because it is such a prevalent issue in our industry, we are going to talk about it some more. Burnout doesn’t always show up as someone saying “I’m overwhelmed.”

More often, it looks like: 

  • Mental fatigue and slower processing
  • Irritability or emotional detachment
  • Decreased attention to detail
  • Forgetfulness
  • Reduced communication
  • “Going through the motions”

In a profession that requires constant focus, emotional presence, and precision, these changes matter.

 

What Short Staffing Does to a Clinic

Short staffing doesn’t just mean “fewer people.” It means increased load on every person who is there.

That leads to:

  • Multitasking at unsustainable levels
  • Constant interruptions
  • Skipping steps to keep up
  • Delayed communication
  • Longer wait times
  • Pressure to move faster than is safe

Even highly experienced teams struggle under these conditions.

 

Where Mistakes Start to Happen

When burnout and short staffing overlap, small breakdowns begin to appear

Communication Gaps

  • Missed messages
  • Incomplete handoffs
  • Unclear instructions

Documentation Errors

  • Incomplete charts
  • Delayed notes
  • Missing details

Workflow Shortcuts

  • Skipped double-checks
  • Rushed procedures
  • Increased mental fatigue

 

Why High Performers Are Often Most Affected 

Ironically, the strongest team members often get the most impacted.

They:

  • Take on extra responsibilities
  • Cover gaps
  • Push themselves harder
  • Try to protect others

Over time, this leads to:

  • Deeper burnout
  • Reduced resilience
  • Increased likelihood of error

Reliability becomes overextension.

 

The Compounding Effect

Burnout and short staffing don’t just cause isolated issues – they compound over time.

  • A missed detail creates rework
  • Rework slows the schedule
  • A slower schedule increases stress
  • Increased stress leads to more mistakes

It becomes a cycle that’s difficult to break without intentional change.

 

Why This Is a Systems Problem, Not a People Problem

It’s easy to look at mistakes and ask:
“Why did that happen?”

But the better question is:
“What conditionals allowed that to happen?”

When teams are:

  • Overloaded
  • Interrupted constantly
  • Expected to maintain speed and perfection
  • Operation without enough support

…mistakes are not surprising – they are predictable. 

 

What Practice Managers Can Do

You may not be able to fix staffing overnight, but you can reduce the risk and help support your team. 

  • Slow down critical processes
    • Identify tasks that require precision (medications, anesthesia, discharges) and protect them from interruptions.
  • Reduce unnecessary work
    • Look for tasks that can be:
      • Streamlined
      • Delegated
      • Automated
      • Eliminated
  • Set realistic scheduling expectations
    • Overloading the schedule doesn’t increase productivity…it increases errors.
  • Encourage double-checks without judgement
    • Create a culture where verifying information is expected – not seen as a lack of competence.
  • Acknowledge the reality
    • Naming the strain helps your team feel seen – and opens the door to problem-solving.
  • Consider additional support
    • Whether through hiring, restructuring, or outside services (like us!), increasing support reduces pressure across the clinic. 

Final Thoughts

Veterinary professionals are highly skilled, deeply committed, and incredibly resilient. 

But no amount of dedication can fully compensate for:

  • Chronic understaffing
  • Constant overload
  • Prolonged burnout

When clinics operate under sustained strain, mistakes don’t mean people are failing. 

They mean the system needs support. 

And the most effective clinics aren’t the ones that expect their teams to push harder.

They’re the ones that build environments where people can perform well without burning out. 

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