I am an RN working night shift at a prison infirmary. We rotate positions every few months so that none of the nurses get burned-out doing the same job over and over. My recent rotation to the infirmary has displaced the long-time infirmary RN, who is now doing med-pass (which used to be done only by LPNs).
It has been brought to my attention by a few fellow nurses that the former infirmary nurse (I'll call her "Nurse X") is bitter at having to give up "her" infirmary post to me only to be "demoted" to med-pass. No job is considered higher or lower than another--they all equally contribute to the smooth running of our operation.
I believe she feels threatened by me, especially since I was recently chosen over her to participate in a program designed to groom shift supervisors. Additonally, the company hired a few more RNs, so Nurse X is no longer the "big fish in a small pond," so to speak.
I have never said anything unkind to or about her or anyone else with whom I work. However, I have personally witnessed Nurse X's subtle backstabbing many times. And now that I have "her" infirmary position, it seems that I have been added to her "list."
I have noticed that Nurse X seems to gain great satisfaction when, after her constant grilling or meddling, someone looses it and answers her tersely (yes, she treats others this way too). The other nurse will be trying to explain the rationale behind her actions and Nurse X will condecendingly say, "It's OK...just calm down, don't get so defensive." This is always accompanied by a snarky "gotcha" grin and a laugh.
Nurse X has taken aim at me lately, and I would like some advice on how to respond to her without making it appear that I'm getting ticked off because that is her goal. My wish is that she will get bored with me and leave me alone to do my job. I suppose I just need more assertiveness training or something, LOL. :-)
Thank you!
Featured Replies
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later.
If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Here is the gist of my situation:
I am an RN working night shift at a prison infirmary. We rotate positions every few months so that none of the nurses get burned-out doing the same job over and over. My recent rotation to the infirmary has displaced the long-time infirmary RN, who is now doing med-pass (which used to be done only by LPNs).
It has been brought to my attention by a few fellow nurses that the former infirmary nurse (I'll call her "Nurse X") is bitter at having to give up "her" infirmary post to me only to be "demoted" to med-pass. No job is considered higher or lower than another--they all equally contribute to the smooth running of our operation.
I believe she feels threatened by me, especially since I was recently chosen over her to participate in a program designed to groom shift supervisors. Additonally, the company hired a few more RNs, so Nurse X is no longer the "big fish in a small pond," so to speak.
I have never said anything unkind to or about her or anyone else with whom I work. However, I have personally witnessed Nurse X's subtle backstabbing many times. And now that I have "her" infirmary position, it seems that I have been added to her "list."
I have noticed that Nurse X seems to gain great satisfaction when, after her constant grilling or meddling, someone looses it and answers her tersely (yes, she treats others this way too). The other nurse will be trying to explain the rationale behind her actions and Nurse X will condecendingly say, "It's OK...just calm down, don't get so defensive." This is always accompanied by a snarky "gotcha" grin and a laugh.
Nurse X has taken aim at me lately, and I would like some advice on how to respond to her without making it appear that I'm getting ticked off because that is her goal. My wish is that she will get bored with me and leave me alone to do my job. I suppose I just need more assertiveness training or something, LOL. :-)
Thank you!