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How to Adapt to a New Software in Healthcare: Tips for Frontline Staff
by Mickey DeAngelo on Mar 18, 2026
Let's be honest: no one loves being told there is a new system to learn. On top of an already demanding shift, change can feel like one more thing piled onto an already full plate. The training gets scheduled, the go-live date arrives, and suddenly, you are expected to do your job in a completely different way.
That frustration is valid. Change in healthcare is challenging.
But here is the thing: whether a new initiative succeeds or fades out often comes down to the people on the floor. Leaders can design the perfect strategy and invest in the best technology, but without the buy-in of the people delivering care every day, even the most well-planned rollout will stall.
Understanding the theory of change management is one thing. Living it out in a busy unit is entirely different.
Change can be disruptive. But it also offers an opportunity to shape your work environment for the better. Here are four practical tips to help you navigate it:
1. Stay Curious and Ask "Why"
When a new process is introduced, it is natural to feel skeptical. However, instead of shutting down, try to understand the intent behind a change so that the disruption is easier to handle.
Tip: If a new policy doesn't make sense, ask the manager about the goal behind it. "Can you help me understand what we are trying to solve with this new process?" This might uncover that the change addresses a safety issue that you weren't aware of, or the question might help leadership realize they haven't communicated the "why" clearly enough.
2. Provide Constructive Feedback
Leaders can't fix problems they don't know about. Venting to a colleague might feel good in the moment, but it rarely leads to a solution. Constructive feedback is a powerful tool for improvement.
Tip: Whenever a snag happens, frame feedback around the solution. Instead of saying, "This new system is terrible," try, "The new login process takes too long during rounds; could we extend the timeout period?" This increases the likelihood that such concerns will be addressed quickly.
3. Support Your Peers
Change affects everyone differently. Some colleagues might pick up new technology instantly, while others may struggle. In a high-pressure healthcare environment, peer support is often more effective than formal training.
Tip: After mastering a new workflow, offer to help a colleague who looks frustrated. Fostering a culture of teamwork makes the transition smoother for everyone and strengthens the bonds within a unit.
4. Give Change a Fair Shot
It's normal to feel a dip in productivity and morale right after a change is introduced, but this discomfort is temporary, even when it doesn't feel that way.
Tip: Commit to trying the new way of working for a set period, say, three months, before deciding it doesn't work. Acknowledge that the first few days will be clunky. This mindset helps you push through the initial discomfort to reach the point where the new process actually starts to save you time or effort.
The Power of Working Together
Ultimately, the most successful implementations happen when leaders and frontline staff view change as a partnership. It is not about leaders dictating and staff obeying. It is about creating a better future for the organization together.
This requires a continuous feedback loop. Leaders provide the resources and direction, staff provide the reality checks and operational expertise, and together, you iterate until the process works.
When implementation is approached with a collaborative spirit, replacing "us vs. them" with "we are in this together" naturally builds resilience. Organizations that don't just survive change but thrive on it become more adaptable, which means they can deliver better care to the communities they serve in the long run.
If the tips in this post resonated with you, consider sharing this article with your manager or charge nurse. The more leaders understand what frontline staff need to navigate change successfully, the better the outcome for everyone, including your patients.
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