The Aging Nurse in the Workplace

A scholarly treatise on the aging of the nursing workforce and its future impact on a failing American healthcare system. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

GOTCHA!!!!!

I haven't written a 'scholarly' anything since college, and I'm not about to start again at this lI'm a Registered Nurse and writer who, in better times, has enjoyed a busy and varied career which includes stints as a Med/Surg floor nurse, a director of nursing, a nurse consultant, and an assistant administrator. And when I'm not working as a nurse, I'm writing about nursing right here at allnurses.com and putting together the chapters for a future book about---what else?---nursing.ate date. Come on.....you didn't really think I was serious, did you? :rotfl:

What I am going to talk about here is Nursing: Baby Boomer Edition.

Now, I'll be the first to tell you I'm not really an 'old' nurse---I received my license exactly 14 years ago today---so I don't have as many years on the job as most nurses of a similar vintage. (In the nursing world, that's seasoned, not sagging.) But I do share a number of the same aches and pains, the same worries, and the same indignities as my colleagues who have been in the field for decades.....and it's these that make late midlife as an R.N. "verrrrrry interesteenk".

Ironically, up until about three years ago I was often mistaken for someone five to ten years younger, even though I was working floor shifts in a LTC facility that whipped my butt every night. Then I hit the half-century mark, and woke up one morning shortly thereafter to find that my mother had taken over the bathroom mirror and wasn't giving it back. Even so, I didn't know I'd aged THAT much until the first day at my current assisted-living position, when two of the residents walked up to me and said sweetly: "Well hello, dear. You must be the new move-in."

OK, so I'm getting a little gray around the edges. Actually, I'm getting gray all over, so I love it when a gaggle of Boomer nurses, who still have the ticket stubs from the rock concerts they attended back in high school, gathers together in the break room for what I call an "organ concert". This consists of a litany of complaints about the state of our organs. "Ohhhh, my poor dawgs," one will whine as she rubs her aching, bone-dry feet after a grueling 12-hour shift........"You know, he REALLY needs to get that checked out," says another, wrinkling her nose at the cloud of toxic fumes emitted by the dietary aide with gallbladder disease who just dashed in to use the restroom......."I swear, my back is gonna break in two at the waistline if I have to help turn that 500-pounder down in room 216 one more time," groans a third......well, you get the idea.

Speaking of foul winds........I think Boomers are the first generation in history to acknowledge, and even celebrate, the fact that humans really do have gas. Nurses have been talking about flatus for ages, but we might as well 'fess up the fact that we produce plenty of it, thanks to our lust for the greasy, spicy, fatty fare we consumed in our younger days.

We are arguably the best-educated and best-fed people who have ever walked the earth, but for some reason we keep forgetting that our middle-aged tummies don't handle pizza and pepperoncini as gracefully as they used to.....with predictable, odoriferous, and often hilarious consequences. (Even my 60-year-old husband, who is NOT a nurse, and I have been known to laugh hysterically when one of us bends over to retrieve the dog's toys from under the sofa and a goose flies out. Just goes to show we never grow too old to get some juvenile jollies over a call from "your son Rip on line toot".)

But all is not quiet on the Western front, or the Eastern, Northern, or Southern fronts either, when it comes to our future both as nurses and as recipients of health care. We know we're doomed. Most of us will have to continue working, in one form or another, until we're 70 or even older. We don't make enough money to pay for health care ourselves, we make too much to qualify for public assistance, and our employer-paid insurance stinks on ice. But we can count......and one of the scariest numbers is 75+ million. Try as I might, I can't see how the Medicare 'experts' will manage to cram that many Boomers into a system that was designed for only about half that. Forty or fifty years ago, most people just didn't live long enough to draw benefits for decades; now, it's expected that the majority of us will live at least another fifteen, and maybe even twenty or more years beyond official Medicare age. Now who's going to pay for all the care we're going to need as we grow older? And who's going to replace us in the workforce?

I don't know about you, but I like my plan better than anything the politicians have come up with so far: I'm just going to work until I literally can't put one foot in front of the other any longer, and then I'm going to go out into the woods like the ancient Native Americans did, and allow nature to take its course. No nursing homes for me with their tile floors and their understaffing; no cardboard box in an alley with no warmth and only the street rats for company. If I've learned anything in these years of being a Boomer nurse, it's this: sometimes, there are worse things than dying. And being destitute, elderly, and sick in a world that views such people with contempt is, to my mind, one of them.

Now if I could just remember where I put that letter I was writing to my Congressman, I could really bring older nurses' concerns to the forefront of..........oh crap, what was I talking about again??

Specializes in Med nurse in med-surg., float, HH, and PDN.

Viva - You are an absolute TREASURE! My hubby thinks I'm nuts when I'm reading your posts and blogs ; I'm laughing and groaning "You got THAT right! " and " Now, THAT'S a fact!!". I feel so...UNDERSTOOD, when I read your writing and the responses from the other posters ( especially in THIS particular thread ) I'll be 62 in less than two weeks. Like you, everyone assumed I was 10-15 years younger, well, for a long time. But lately I've noticed that the " You don't LOOK your age" has become " You don't ACT that old." :yawn::zzzzz Yeah, yeah....whatever!

My turn will be coming up in 2 months when my temp position ends. Like others here I've been sending out resumes and no positive responses. They really don't want us over 55's in nursing. Very scary thought- and to try to get rid of social security and medicare. What in the heavens name are we to do?? AARP is not very upbeat either.

yep, i am right behind yah. only been an rn for 3 years, but know the aches and pains.

Specializes in pacu/er/med surg.

I am currently out on temp disability as well. I'm tired, frustrated and whatever else comes along I guess..lol..but really, I too had to start some where. I'm hoping to get some rest if nothing else. Good luch eh?

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.
Viva - You are an absolute TREASURE! My hubby thinks I'm nuts when I'm reading your posts and blogs ; I'm laughing and groaning "You got THAT right! " and " Now, THAT'S a fact!!". I feel so...UNDERSTOOD, when I read your writing and the responses from the other posters ( especially in THIS particular thread ) I'll be 62 in less than two weeks. Like you, everyone assumed I was 10-15 years younger, well, for a long time. But lately I've noticed that the " You don't LOOK your age" has become " You don't ACT that old." :yawn::zzzzz Yeah, yeah....whatever!

You know, my sister (who is turning 65 this year) just told me another way to know you've crossed over from "middle-aged" to "old": when some young person laughs appreciatively at something you say and then goes, "Oh, she's so CUUUUTE!"

Specializes in Med nurse in med-surg., float, HH, and PDN.
You know, my sister (who is turning 65 this year) just told me another way to know you've crossed over from "middle-aged" to "old": when some young person laughs appreciatively at something you say and then goes, "Oh, she's so CUUUUTE!"

Ugh-Ugh-Ugh! And to top it all off: Yesterday I was getting hubby some fried chicken take-out ( per his request) and I said to the girl at the counter, " I only have X # $$, so can I get this order, including tax for this amount?" She calculated it and said (AHEM!) "If we give you your Senior Citizen Discount, it will cover it." I opened my mouth, then shut it abruptly, took a deep breath and said "OKAY." (mental shoulders sagging):mad:

Such a distressing topic. You all have made me feel so fortunate. Yes, I am a "seasoned nurse". Lots of pepper and salt. Work my butt off still hospital floor nursing along with other "seasoned nurses". My knee is going. My back hurts but what can I do? Finding a job as one of you has at assisted living is not easy as there are not many nurses needed. So I work till I drop. Our charge nurse is 75. I am fortunate because I can still do it and that the economy in my area has not suffered. Even tho I have $ in the bank, I cannot stop working because the health insurance will do me in. I guess it could be a lot worse. I am finally getting a vacation (first one in 2 years) and plan on drinking a lot of wine, eating a lot of chocolate, and hanging with good friends. I am now "electronically updated" so my laptop and I-pod here I come.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.
Ugh-Ugh-Ugh! And to top it all off: Yesterday I was getting hubby some fried chicken take-out ( per his request) and I said to the girl at the counter, " I only have X # $$, so can I get this order, including tax for this amount?" She calculated it and said (AHEM!) "If we give you your Senior Citizen Discount, it will cover it." I opened my mouth, then shut it abruptly, took a deep breath and said "OKAY." (mental shoulders sagging):mad:

Hey, AARP helped finance my whole coast trip this past weekend---I'm not too proud to show my card and get the 10% (or more!) discount on meals, hotels etc. I'm not "senior" enough for most store discounts or those prime parking places at WalMart, but all I've gotta do at the restaurant or the check-in desk is whip out the ol' AARP card, and I'm "golden". Takes a little getting used to, but if it saves me some cold hard cash, I don't care if some waitress knows I'm no spring chicken. (Like I can fool anybody these days??)

In fact, I'm one of the folks you'll see in a T-shirt saying "I'm a Senior---Gimme My Damn Discount!" in a few years.:lol2:

I am not senior enough for movie discounts but........I just say "two seniors please" and the youngsters just ring them up. Same at restaurants. Waiting till I am a few years older as many countries have great senior train passes, like 50%! And southwest also, so I will sure use what I can in this "economy deficient U.S.A" which truly I do not believe. Has anyone been to Europe this summer? Crowded, can't find a table. Cruise ships are at full capacity. Yes, there are people struggling but there always have been and always will. Try going to a middle cost restaurant these days? Can't even get a seat at a bar or have to wait to eat. mmmmm interesting. Ever go out in the middle of the day and see tons of people and wonder "do they have jobs"? And then they are shopping with bags, and eating out.

Specializes in FNP- psych, internal med, pediatric.

Well, all I can say is this old gray mare ain't what she used to be, but on the flip side, I'm actually new to nursing, and I so appreciated the vivid description of walking into the woods like an American Indian to go back to the Skypeople before trusting the government to take care of anyone planning on living significantly longer than "they" originally planned. Well said...all of it! And I'll watch those toes of yours should I enter your domain knowing the thoughts that pass through one so keen. Thanks for that laugh!;)

Just like most of our society emphasis on youth is everywhere. pity, because with age come INTELLIGENCE

Well all I can say is we are all getting old together. I definitely see an aging workforce in my second job, my part-time job. In fact I think only one nurse is younger than 49. Some are retirees that work part-time to supplement SS. It is scary, but when so many of us are boomers and the boomers are in management, I don't think the worst discrimination is there so much anymore. Maybe still in larger learning hospitals filled with the young grads and students.

I worry about applying for jobs. When did this aging thing happen? I remember being the youngest in my department and patients saying I look too young to be in home health. Now I am one of the "older nurses" with the grey and the memories of the old days. I used to highlight my years of experience, now I realize it makes me sound old.

Hope I can find a place to settle down and eventually retire from. I am not so worried about working conditions anymore, other than no swing shifts- I just can't do it anymore! Now I am worried about benefits. How your perception changes!