Toxic Workplace Mental Health

There’s a thought a lot of clinicians have but won’t say out loud. I think this place is toxic.
Not “I’m having a hard week.” Not “I just need a vacation.” Toxic. The kind of toxic that makes you not want to tell people where you work.
Most clinicians have an instinct for this kind of assessment. We read clinical presentations for a living. We can clock dynamics in a family system in twenty minutes. But when it comes to our own workplaces, we second-guess everything. We tell ourselves we’re being negative. We chalk it up to burnout. We assume it’s us.
It might not be us. Toxic workplaces are diagnosable, and you already have the assessment skills. You’re just not letting yourself use them on your own job.
So this blog is permission. Use the skills.
π This is Blog #29 in the New Clinician Survival Kit Series (Click to explore the series)
Weekly honest support for the struggles every clinician faces: “I hate group therapy.” “I can’t do this.” “My client hates me.” “I’m making it worse.” “I can’t say no.” “They’re going to report me.” “I’m too tired to care.” “What do I even say?” “I don’t know enough.” “They keep relapsing.” “Am I documenting wrong?” “My supervisor doesn’t get it.” “I can’t handle this caseload.” “Nobody told me about the paperwork.” “I don’t like my client.” “My client’s cute.” “My client likes me.” “I got a complaint.” “I want to quit.” “My coworker is terrible.” “The most underrated job in mental health.” “My client scares me.” “Fear of losing a client.” “Fear of what they show you.” “My client died.” “I’m worried my client is hopeless.” “I don’t practice what I preach.” “I freeze in crisis situations.” “My workplace is toxic.”
These aren’t signs you’re failing. They’re signs you’re human.
View All Posts in This Series βHow to Tell If Your Workplace Is Actually Toxic
Most counselors who’ve been in this field for a while can list the signs of a toxic workplace if you ask them. The diagnostic problem isn’t recognition. It’s permission to trust the recognition.
Here’s the working list. If you check more than two of these, the assessment is solid.
Poor staff retention. Good clinicians keep leaving. Not for promotions or family moves β for out. They burn out, go private practice, or leave the field entirely. The people who stay are either new and don’t know better yet, or have been there long enough to be part of the dysfunction.
Chaos as the operating climate. Schedules change without notice. Policies shift depending on who’s asking. Nobody knows the actual rules because the actual rules depend on the day. You spend more energy navigating the workplace than doing the work.
Open complaining about clients and colleagues. Not occasional venting after a hard session. Regular, casual contempt β for clients, for coworkers, for supervisees. The break room sounds like a roast. The people who used to push back have stopped.
The Leadership Signs
Lack of support from leadership. You raise a concern and it disappears. You ask for help and you get a meeting. You report a problem and you become the problem. The official answer is always “we hear you” and the actual answer is always nothing.
Supervisors who overshare and under protect. Your supervisor talks about their personal life, their marriage, their other staff, their last job’s drama β but can’t sit with your hard case. They want connection without responsibility. They want to be your friend until you need them to be your supervisor.
Performance over service. The mission statement says one thing and the decisions say another. The agency’s image matters more than what’s happening with clients. Marketing budget grows. Clinical training budget shrinks.
That’s the list. If you read it and got uncomfortable, that’s data.
When Leadership Is the Toxic Source
Sometimes the coworkers are fine. Sometimes the team is even good. The toxicity is coming from the top.
This is harder to name because we’re trained to be respectful of hierarchy and because pointing at leadership feels like it could cost you your job. It might. That doesn’t make the assessment wrong.
Toxic leadership in mental health settings has a specific shape. Decisions made on a whim with no input from the staff who do the actual work. Profit-driven pivots wrapped in mission language. A pattern of caring more about how the agency looks than what it does. Staff opinions treated as inconvenient. A sense that leadership is performing the mission while the clinicians are living it.
There’s a research framework for this that’s worth knowing. Jennifer Freyd’s work on institutional betrayal describes what happens when an institution that’s supposed to protect you instead harms you. It applies specifically to workplaces that promote a values-based mission while behaving in ways that contradict it. The injury isn’t just that the workplace is hard. It’s that the workplace told you it was something it isn’t, and you trusted it.
That’s a real injury, with real research behind it. Name it that way.
The Venting Trap

Workplaces that get labeled toxic almost always have a venting culture. Staff complain to each other constantly. They commiserate. They roll their eyes. They talk about leadership behind closed doors.
I’m going to defend venting. Counselors absorb other people’s pain all day, work in systems that don’t support them, and deal with chaos they didn’t create. They have a right to vent. Telling them not to is its own kind of toxic.

But venting has a tipping point. There’s a difference between processing a hard moment and feeding a culture of contempt. The first one releases pressure. The second one builds it.
Here’s the move that’s worked for me across fifteen years: validate, then excuse yourself. When a coworker is venting, I don’t moralize at them. I don’t tell them they’re being unprofessional. I don’t lecture them about how they’re poisoning the environment. That’s not my place, and frankly it shuts conversations down without changing anything.
I just acknowledge what they’re feeling β yeah, that sounds frustrating β and then I leave the room. I go back to my office. I work through lunch sometimes. I don’t sit there and absorb forty-five minutes of contempt.
This isn’t avoidance. It’s harm reduction. Their venting is their right. My nervous system is mine. I’m not obligated to subsidize the cycle to be a decent coworker.
Working Alongside Without Absorbing
The other piece β and this one took me a long time to learn β is that you don’t have to fix a toxic workplace to survive one.
You don’t have to convince leadership to change. You don’t have to recruit your coworkers to a higher standard. You don’t have to hold the agency accountable for its mission. You can if you want to. But trying to fix a toxic workplace from the inside is one of the fastest ways to burn out, get pushed out, or become bitter yourself.
What you can do is keep doing your own work. If a co-facilitator flakes on a group, run it yourself. If nobody else is submitting notes on time, submit yours anyway. Keep your supervision relationships clean. Treat your clients well regardless of how the agency treats you. This isn’t martyrdom. It’s a survival strategy.
I’ve worked in places where the team was a mess. I tried to collaborate where collaboration was possible β but I didn’t hold my breath. If a project depended on someone else’s follow-through and they didn’t follow through, I either did it myself or let it die. I didn’t go down with their ship.

When What Looks Like Burnout Isn’t

The cost of working in a toxic place shows up in your behavior before you have language for it. You stop volunteering for things. You don’t suggest the new group idea anymore. You stop staying late. Your charts are accurate but they’re not warm. Your sessions are competent but you’re not bringing the extra anymore.
The field’s instinct is to call this burnout and prescribe self-care. That’s not always wrong, but it’s often incomplete.
There’s a useful distinction in the literature here. Talbot and Dean’s framework on moral injury β originally written about physicians but applicable across helping professions β argues that what we call burnout in healthcare is often more accurately described as moral injury. Burnout locates the problem in the worker. Moral injury locates it in the system. The same exhaustion gets two completely different diagnoses depending on where you look.
Burnout vs. Moral Injury
The same exhaustion, two different diagnoses.
Burnout
Located in: the worker
Internal voice: “I’m exhausted. I can’t keep up.”
Pattern: Generalized depletion across most areas of life
Core experience: Cynicism, exhaustion, decreased productivity
Helpful response: Rest, reduced caseload, self-care, time off
What it asks of you: Recover
Moral Injury
Located in: the system
Internal voice: “This place is asking me to violate what I know is right.”
Pattern: Job-specific shutdown; energy intact elsewhere
Core experience: Protective withdrawal, integrity protest, moral residue
Helpful response: Naming the harm, documentation, exit planning
What it asks of you: Decide
Both can coexist. The question worth asking: does my exhaustion show up everywhere, or only here?
The clinical question worth asking yourself: does my “low motivation” only show up at this specific job? If you still have energy for your clients, your work outside this agency, your professional life in general β that’s not burnout. That’s a calibrated response to a workplace that hasn’t earned your discretionary effort.
When you stop giving extra to a workplace that doesn’t deserve it, that’s not a deficit. That’s your professional self-respect doing its job. Your nervous system is reading the environment correctly.
That said β moral injury is sustainable for a while. Not forever. Even when the response is healthy, the body keeps the score on workplaces too. Living inside a place that requires this much protective shutdown does damage over time. Knowing that helps you decide what to do next.

The Embarrassment Tell

Watch where embarrassment shows up.
When you’re proud of where you work, you talk about it. You wear the t-shirt. You explain the mission to people at parties. You bring up your agency when it’s relevant.
When you’re embarrassed of where you work, you don’t. You change the subject. You give the vague version. You say I’m a therapist and not where. You don’t post about work milestones. You don’t recommend the place to peers looking for jobs. You hope nobody asks follow-up questions. You might not even realize you’re doing it until you catch yourself doing it.
That embarrassment isn’t immaturity. It’s diagnostic. Your professional identity is telling you that the gap between who you are and where you work has gotten wide enough that you don’t want to be associated. That’s worth listening to.
What It Does to Clients
Toxicity doesn’t stay in the staff lounge. Clients feel it.
They feel it when their counselor seems checked out. They feel it when scheduling is chaotic and intake is disorganized. They feel it when their counselor leaves and they get reassigned for the third time this year. They feel it when there’s no institutional memory of their case. They feel it when their counselor seems to like them but doesn’t seem to like the place where they’re seeing them.
Sandra Bloom’s Sanctuary Model describes how organizational stress mirrors itself in client outcomes β when staff are dysregulated, clients regulate worse. When the workplace is chaotic, treatment is chaotic. When leadership doesn’t trust staff, staff don’t fully trust clients. The system replicates itself all the way down.
Clinicians can do good work in a bad place for a while. We can shield clients from the worst of it. But we can’t fully insulate them from a workplace that’s making us miserable. The work suffers. The clients pay part of the price.
This isn’t to make anyone feel guilty. It’s another piece of data when you’re deciding what to do.
What to Do While You’re Still There
The 6-Sign Toxic Workplace Diagnostic
An honest self-assessment for clinicians
Check each sign you recognize in your current workplace. Be honest — this is just for you. Your assessment will appear below.
Poor staff retention
Good clinicians keep leaving. Not for promotions or family moves — for out.
Chaos as the operating climate
Schedules, policies, and rules shift depending on the day. You spend more energy navigating the workplace than doing the work.
Open complaining about clients and colleagues
Regular, casual contempt — for clients, for coworkers, for supervisees. The break room sounds like a roast.
Lack of support from leadership
You raise a concern and it disappears. The official answer is always “we hear you” — and the actual answer is always nothing.
Supervisors who overshare and underprotect
They want connection without responsibility. They want to be your friend until you need them to be your supervisor.
Performance over service
The mission says one thing, decisions say another. Marketing budget grows. Clinical training budget shrinks.
Start checking signs above
As you check the signs you recognize, your assessment will appear here.
Most clinicians reading this can’t just walk out. The job market is real. Insurance is real. Bills are real. Sometimes “leave” isn’t an option this month.
The most important thing is to stop hiding the assessment from yourself. You’re allowed to know what you know. Pretending you don’t know is its own kind of exhausting, and it leaks into your clinical work whether you want it to or not.
Beyond that, the strategy is mostly about protecting what you can while you’re still inside. Keep your documentation clean β the day you leave, your clinical reputation leaves with you, so make sure it’s intact. Maintain professional relationships outside the agency. Attend trainings outside the building. The smaller your professional world is, the more power this workplace has over you.
Watch your discretionary effort. You don’t owe a toxic workplace your extra. Save it for your clients, your own development, and the parts of your life that aren’t this job. That’s not selfishness. That’s resource management.
And document things. If something happens that could matter later β retaliation, a policy violation, a clinical concern that was dismissed β write it down. Email it to your personal account. Keep a record. Most of the time you’ll never need it. The few times you do, you’ll be glad you have it.
Then start an exit plan, even if you can’t leave yet. Updating your resume isn’t disloyalty. Networking isn’t betrayal. Knowing what you’d need in order to leave makes staying more bearable, because staying becomes a choice instead of a trap.
You’re Allowed to Name It
You don’t have to wait for it to get worse. You don’t have to wait for someone else to confirm it. You don’t have to apologize for your assessment.
If your gut has been telling you this place is toxic, your gut is doing what fifteen years of clinical training taught it to do. The same instincts that make you a good clinician are working on your own behalf. Don’t override them just because the people doing the harm haven’t admitted to the harm yet.
Naming it doesn’t mean leaving immediately. It doesn’t mean blowing up the relationship with leadership. It doesn’t mean a formal complaint. It just means you stop lying to yourself about what you already know.
Once you stop lying, the next move usually shows up on its own.

This is post #29 in the New Clinician Survival Kit Series β a collection of honest, non-cheerful blogs about the parts of this work that don’t show up in grad school. If you’ve been feeling something and can’t quite name it, this series is probably where you’ll find the words.
π Next in the Series
Blog #30: “I Don’t Know How to Specialize”
You’ve stopped being new. You can hold a session without panicking. You know your way around a treatment plan. But somewhere along the way, the question shifted from “can I do this work?” to “what do I actually want to be known for?” Next week we look at how clinicians move from surviving the field to building a clinical identity in it β and why that question feels harder to answer than it should.
Until Next Week | The Underrated Superhero
π External Resources & Research
- π Institutional Betrayal Research β Jennifer Freyd β Freyd’s research home page with the full list of publications on what happens when an institution that’s supposed to protect you instead harms you, including the Smith & Freyd 2014 American Psychologist paper that established the framework
- π Center for Institutional Courage β Jennifer Freyd β Freyd’s nonprofit organization with free tools, assessments, and resources on identifying institutional betrayal and building institutional courage in workplaces, including the Institutional Betrayal Questionnaire
- π Physicians Aren’t ‘Burning Out.’ They’re Suffering From Moral Injury β Talbot & Dean (STAT News) β The landmark 2018 article that introduced the burnout vs. moral injury distinction in healthcare, arguing that what gets diagnosed as burnout is often a system-level injury misread as a worker-level deficit
- π Reframing Clinician Distress: Moral Injury Not Burnout β Dean, Talbot & Dean (Federal Practitioner) β The peer-reviewed follow-up to the STAT article expanding the moral injury framework with clinical detail on how chronic moral injury manifests differently from burnout and why the distinction matters for treatment
- π The Sanctuary Model β Sandra Bloom β Bloom’s organizational trauma framework explaining the parallel process between staff dysregulation and client outcomes, with free resources on how organizational stress mirrors itself in treatment quality and why workplaces require trauma-informed structures, not just trauma-informed clinicians
π From This Series
- π Blog #7: “I’m Too Tired to Care” β When compassion fatigue settles in and you start to wonder if you’re still cut out for this
- π Blog #14: “Nobody Told Me About the Paperwork” β Why your documentation is your clinical reputation, especially in workplaces that don’t protect it
- π Blog #19: “I Want to Quit” β When burnout stops being a bad day and starts being a career question
- π Blog #27: “I Don’t Practice What I Preach” β The gap between what you know clinically and what you extend to yourself
- π Blog #28: “I Freeze in Crisis Situations” β When your nervous system reads the room before your training can catch up