Burnout

I know now how burnout occurs. It occurs with the death of nursing. It occurs when the compassion well has been overturned by those who insist on inflicting both nurses and patients to the moral depravity of never-ending torturous care. Nurses General Nursing Article

Burnout starts with an oath, taken at the pinnacle of pride and passion when entering a new profession. Burnout starts with caring, which is a quality we hope all health-care workers possess. Burnout starts with hope; hoping that we can make a difference in our patient's lives.

I took an oath on the day of my pinning; my graduation from nursing school. It was the Nightingale Oath. Here is that oath:

"I solemnly pledge myself before God and in the presence of this assembly, to pass my life in purity and to practice my profession faithfully. I will abstain from whatever is deleterious and mischievous, and will not take or knowingly administer any harmful drug. I will do all in my power to maintain and elevate the standard of my profession and will hold in confidence all personal matters committed to my keeping and all family affairs coming to my knowledge in the practice of my calling. With loyalty will I endeavor to aid the physician, in his work, and devote myself to the welfare of those committed to my care."

I have broken every aspect of that oath in my endeavor to care for my patients. My life is not pure. It is tainted with the misery of the broken that I care for. I don't practice faithfully. When my patient of six months is asking for death and an end to the monotonous routine of turns, dressing changes and mouth care, my faith fails me. I no longer have the faith that my patient will live a meaningful life.

I have not abstained from the deleterious and mischievous. Many of the therapies prescribed in the never ending ephemera of standing orders and the imperial standards of care, while trying to preserve the hospital's legal standing, bring harm to my patients. I position them in spine twisting angles which limit breathing and stiffen limbs placed on pillows to elevate bottoms and heels and hands. I have bloodied mouths with the routine mouthcare no matter how soft the sponges.

Every drug that I administer is harmful. I promote blood pressure at the cost of digits. I give life-saving antibiotics, yet I rob patients of their kidney function and hearing. Every drug has a cost. . . .

I attempt to maintain and even elevate the standard of my profession through my intelligence, my compassion, and the eternal search for knowledge. I interweave therapies with the delicacy of a spider weaving a web. If one part fails, the web falls. I manipulate each organ system with a symphony of drugs in an attempt to create a harmonious whole. And when the physician calls me the mindless bedside attendant, or when the physician states that my tasks are so easy that a monkey could perform them, I smile with inner strength because I know that the physician does not even know how to work the pump to infuse the drug, and does not possess the skill to access a vein for their pharmacopeia's remedies.

I have broken confidence with families. I give reality. I give the grand picture. I comment on quality of life and last wishes. I talk of death with dignity. I broach those subjects which are so taboo to us. I give hope. I give reason. I give honesty. I give my heart and I have given my tears. I cannot uphold an image painted by a patient's service of hope and recovery when experience and statistics tell my heart the truth. I cannot support a physician that states a patient will walk out of my ICU when he is so weak that he cannot lift a finger, and can merely shake his head no to decline care. I can only do what my conscience and my heart guide me to do.

I have limited loyalty for physicians. I cannot bear dishonesty. The physician is no longer the captain of the ship steering the course to recovery. It is my job to question, to demand, and when called for, to take a stand between my physician and my patient when decisions are poorly made or when decisions are against my patient's wishes.

The one portion of my oath which I have steadfastly upheld to the best of my ability is that I have devoted myself to the welfare of those committed to my care. I have cared for my patient and my families more than I have cared for myself. I have become the object of ridicule on behalf of my patients. I have, despite great fear, risked myself professionally to uphold my patient's wishes by taking a stand on the patient's behalf.

And now, after having lost another fight on my patient's behalf, I feel like the nurse in me has died. The spark that lit my way to healing and the flame that guided my intentions has burned to ashes in the aftermath of flood reaped upon me. I am morally depraved and ethically sullied and I have become an empty shell.

I am no longer a nurse. I am tender. I tend to the garden of patients with little mind for needs and a conscious drive of simply meeting obligations of care. This is burnout.

Is there a way to re-light the flame of nursing? I think it would take a new oath, one less pure, and one of less responsibility.

Specializes in ER.

I'm already feeling burned out and I started working in January. =0( I work in a hospital setting.

I have been an RN for 34 years, working in a variety of areas during the early years after graduation. For the past 29 years, I have worked almost exclusively in psychiatric or substance abuse nursing. During that time, I've experienced burnout, or the warning signs that it is beginning to set in again, may times. What works to diffuse it for me? Talking with a trusted friend who knows or is familiar with the responsibilities of nursing. Relaxation in a quiet, beautiful place where the wind blows, or the river runs, or the lake waves lap the shore. Standing in front of a tree or at the side of a large body of water, palms open and facing out; repeating once for each finger, "Please remove the anger, fear, resentment, and fatigue from me." Most of all, reviewing the day to see if, in some small way, I have made a difference to one person just for being there. Sometimes, the last one is the most important for me. I didn't become a nurse to cure illness; I didn't stay in mental health nursing to cure mental illness. I keep going back each scheduled day because I can make a difference. When policies, dictums, interpersonal stress on the unit get too much for me, I go to the desert, or to a lake, or to a river, or to a tree, and repeat the familiar and comforting rituals until my insides relax and the feeling of balance returns. Hope this missive helps.

Margaret

Specializes in ICU,ER,med-Surg,Geri,Correctional.

Well I have been in this business for over 30 yrs. I started in this deal when it was not a business but a humble service. When we had real time to spend with our pts sometimes just talking or listening. A time when we had no phones hooked to us, a time when pt care was more important then the appearence of pt care. When a pt was not considered a customer. When our care we provided was our comercial, and not hollywood like productions played on the TV, to encourage folks to come to your hospital. At time when we had the small community hospital being supported by the large medical centers instead of the large medical centers taking over the smaller hospitals. yes I am burned out, been that way for years. But still my pts need me and thats what I became a nurse for and if I get out and quit this profession, then this new beast welcall healthcare will win.. I am not going down easy. I will believe that, even as the administration is getting their bonus and their over paid saliries and then they tell us "things are going to get worse" I still feel that we are going to get so fed up with what nursing is becoming that we will regain our momentum and unite realize the power we have together and be advocates for both our healthcare workers as well as the patients. Oh by the way I always try and help the new nurse and encourage them to stay. As for me I'll stay ,turn gray and miss those good old days......and pray for SINGLE PAY!!!!!

"There's a better day a coming

I have been in the medical field since I was fourteen as a Candy Stripper. Those were the good old days when you did not see the bad parts in nursing. Then I grew up to be a Nurses Aide, not so bad but you could still enjoy your patients and get some satisfaction. On and upper to the LPN. I truly miss those days, Nothing against RN's but they sat on their butts and we were the care givers. Now I'm an RN BSN wanting really badly to get my MSN so I can teach. I do adjunct with a two year college and actually found enjoyment again with nursing. The administrators of the hospitals are clueless unless they have been nurses and then they forget and get their heads above the water and leave us to drown. Sorry if I'm stepping on toes former nurses, but the truth shines through. I worked for a hospital for 17 years of my life and what did I get? NOTHING they did not know that I was gone for at least 6 months when they saw me on the street shopping. Now I work in a smaller community hospital and I swear there are microphones every where, or a lot of snitches. What is trust anymore??? My patient are my priority and I do the best I can with what I can. I love nursing, but I don't love what it has turned into. I love to sit and make my patients laugh, but don't get any over time doing it(sure) "We want the best for the patient, but make sure you get those charge stickers in so we get our money." I get tired of hearing it just like you all do. This is my 32nd year and I'm proud to have climbed the ladder, but I too also feel the burn of the fire to get out. Please fellow nurses keep up the good work and boltster each other with good thoughts:redbeathe

Specializes in med-surg,tele,vents.
:banghead: i know how burnout occurs. too much multi-tasking. delegate and prioritize as much as possible. yeah, it puts it on someone else. But, save yourself. I'm deep into real burnout. in fact, i lost my job due to it.:cry:take your breaks. drink water,coffee. I recommend cranberry juice with gingsing as a late afternoon pick me up.:nurse:if you feel burnout coming,take some timeoff to pull yourself together. I wouldn't want what happened to me to happen to anyone else.:typing I've been out for 7 months. no joke. on antidepression meds, alldue to that tougher than nails job.:yawn: yelling to administration didn't help. pledding didn't help. crying got some attention,but didn't help me not to lose my job. I feel discrimminated against. i'm a great nurse....who'se sitting home,jobless,and sick. this was years in the making. i'm 35+ years nursing,the last 3 were the worst. the last 6 months were intorrible.:cry: but with therapy and meds, i'm getting better. also the time off. Getting gruff fromthe family dueto lack of normal income...but i'm trying to deal with that. feel sorry for me? well, me too. DON'T LET IT HAPPEN TO YOU.

I'm sorry for your troubles. I can see how it could easily happen. The stress level at our hospital has gotten worse over the last few months. We get less help and have to work harder to keep up. The administration doesn't understand. Our nurse manager even got in trouble for speaking out. That's just not right. The administration wants to gripe at us if we don't get out on time, but how can we when we don't have time to chart during the day. I put my heart into taking care of my patients, then worry about the paperwork later. We never get any catch up time. If we still got a nurse aid in the afternoon maybe I could catch up then. That's when I used to. If the administration really looked at it, 3-4 RN's staying 1-2 hr past shift they could add it up and see they could pay for a nurse aid. I'll hang in here as long as I can, but I really need to work 10 more years to retire. Unless things change, I'm not sure I can do it. The funny thing is I still like what I do. I like patient care, just not when I'm so overloaded I want to cry.

Specializes in med-surg,tele,vents.

:yeah:thanks for the understanding. Sorry you have troubles too,but it seems to be the norm:typing

Specializes in criminal.

After 36+ years it is the norm!!!!!!!!!!!!! I too am out of nursing, and do not think I could with all my heart recommend anyone to choose it as a career and that is truelly sad.

I have been nursing for five years plus now. I started when I was 42 after fifteen years taking care of others in lesser capacities, ie home support, health care aide, psw, emerg team attendant etc... I still like my job but my attitude has changed quite a bit. Thank god I didn't start with some noble goal like the nightengale pledge. I find that we are doing more with less every year. I still have the walking pts who walk out of this ward with a smile. Sometimes life here is fairly merciless for both pts and staff but we pull together and help each other. You have to laugh really.. it's a lifesaver.

Specializes in med-surg,tele,vents.

trying to get back into it,but in a different setting. nursing home is not as intense,so I'm applying there.praying for a miracle that it goes well and i can do a few more years prior to retiring.:typing:yeah::redbeathe

Specializes in LTC, CPR instructor, First aid instructor..
I have been in the medical field since I was fourteen as a Candy Stripper.
Dragonfair, know this message is not in any way meant to put you down, or tease in any way. Your first sentence just struck my sick sense of humor...otherwise known as my funnybone. To what you did when you were 14? Woo hoo what a way to start out nursing.:D:yeah:

Respectfully,

Fran

Specializes in med-surg,tele,vents.

to all serious nurses,how ever and whereever you got started. Pace yourselves. It's a tough road ahead. sure there are rewards...liike being a hero,even though your purple heart is a broken heart. the feild let me down. I was sick a little too long and my facility threw me out,after 20+ years of high quality service. I suspect because my salary level was maxed and they don't want to pay. well something has to account for experience. it's certainly not thankyou.