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I have been an LPN >8 yrs. and am currently doing pre-reqs for my RN. I am doing a paper on "burnout". I have had some frustrations of my own in the med/surg unit in the hospital I'm at. I can clearly see how understaffing and high nurse/patient ratios can contribute to burnout. I worked medsurg for the last 2 mos and the 6:1 ratio was making me HATE my job. I went back to ICU where the highest is 4:1. Anyway, I'm looking for any other situations, reasons, or ideas that anyone might feel contributes to burnout.
Thanks
Just thought I would share my story. If you look at my prior posts (I dont want to be labeled a hypocrit) I have just raved about 12 hour shifts. I have now been a nurse for only a year (on 12 hour shifts) and I feel as if I am exhibiting the Oh so popular burnout symptoms. I have recently accepted a 8 hour position in the ER (cant wait ) and part of my decision was that I feel the 12 hour shifts burned me out quick !! I am sharing my story because these 12 hour nursing shifts are new to SOME facilities and maybe future research will prove that these shifts are burning nurses out, maybe leading to more errors, etc. I just found that the every other weekend 12 hours on Sat and 12 hours on Sunday was too much for me and too much for my family. I will now work a totally different shift that I NEVER said I would work 3-11 four days a week. NEver say never in the world of nursing Hope I have helped with your research. Good Luck
For my part, I prefer the 12-hr shift -and I prefer to do three in a row, and have four days off. When I start to feel like I'm beginning to burn, I schedule a vacation and take a couple of weeks to 'regroup'. It works for me, anyway. I burnt out in EMS -had all the classic signs -though I wasn't really aware of it at the time. I can't say I'm as excited about nursing as I once was, but by no means am I burnt out.
Causes: not enough:
rest/sleep
support from management
family/friends to talk to away from work
activities that you enjoy that take your mind off work issues
proper nutrition/fluids
exercise
spiritual support or participating in spiritual activities
Last edited by bargainhound : Mar 26, 2007 at 08:50 PM.
Reason: needed to correct
Causes: inadequately educated/prepared co-workers
other departments in hospital that function poorly
maltreatment from families/patients
maltreamtent from doctors/management/people in power
Let me add my
* Chronic short-staffing at all levels
* Mandatory and other forms of overtime (paid or unpaid)
* Ever-increasing acuity coupled with just-as-rapidly increasing busy-work
* Lack of leadership
* Lack of flexibility in the system from the top down
* Lack of meaningful recognition
* Management that is out of touch with what's going on on the units
* Patients and families that demand attention out of proportion to their true needs
* Violence in the workplace
I have been an LPN >8 yrs. and am currently doing pre-reqs for my RN. I am doing a paper on "burnout". I have had some frustrations of my own in the med/surg unit in the hospital I'm at. I can clearly see how understaffing and high nurse/patient ratios can contribute to burnout. I worked medsurg for the last 2 mos and the 6:1 ratio was making me HATE my job. I went back to ICU where the highest is 4:1. Anyway, I'm looking for any other situations, reasons, or ideas that anyone might feel contributes to burnout.
Thanks
i have never heard of a ICU ratio that high. that's horrible. that's unsafe and unfair to the nurse and the patient. i think what contributes the most to burn out is the aciuty of the patient. people are soooo sick and living longer and require more complex care. i see the "shortage" getting worse just because of this. i personally plan to do bedside no more than 3-4 years and then i may only do it prn.
multiple roles and difficulty to work with co-workers: I'm an RN in LTC. 2 years after I passed my boards, our facility had to downsize staffing and bed certification due to chronic low census. There were several positions eliminated by way of retirement and resignation. So many of the tasks of those who left were divided among those who stayed and positions were combined. I now have the title of "Pt. Care Coordinator" - operate as an RN supervisor, MDS coordinator, New hire orientator, inservice director plus I'm a Train the Trainer in our facility. There is one other full time RN who also works in the office, strictly as an RN supervisor. So I often feel very overwhelmed by what to do first and very pulled in many directions. The other corker is that I don't make any more money than the other FT RN other than what I get for longevity.
Just a thought,
High Nurse turnover contributes to burnout as the more experienced nurses leave, you get less experienced ones in thier place, requiring the more senior nurses to precept all over again.