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.

I think its way to sad that our administration can't see what its doing to this profession. I totally understand what you mean by being "thrown out", and I too think its from salary maxes- they can hire two new for the price of one old- however when you have no old/experienced nurses the quality of care goes down- then administration can't seem to get a handle on why the satisfaction scores are down both from the patients and the staff. I also know what it means to work without ancillary help- nobody to answer the phone, no one to be the go getter, no one to relieve the nurse from her bedside tasks so that she can do the "paperwork" that has to be done for accreditation and reimbursement and legal reasons. Nurses now have to do the work of at least three additional people- housekeeping, nursing assistant and unit secetary. (and on our unit - lab tech). However, no increases in salaries came with adding these job descriptions! - Oh well I guess Florence would be proud of the Twenth century nurses and how we are struggling to keep patients comfortable, aide them in healing, teaching them how to prevent disease and complications while escorting them out the swinging doors, only to readmit a new patient in their bed before it cools off!

Specializes in med-surg,tele,vents.

:banghead:Amen...sister. That's the way iy is. GOD bless the new nurses in the field.:redbeatheI hope the fact that they didn't know it as it once way,the way Florance wanted. Patients appear to be the last concern..The dollar is first,documentation to assure that dollar,them get them out so that they can get the next dollar. :twocents: unfortunatelly,that's want I believe now...35+ years into the profession

Specializes in criminal.

again Randeen you are soooooooooooo right

Specializes in criminal.

Ya'll are soooooooooooo right, as usual.!

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

Been reading about Burn out and something new to me called "Compassion Fatigue" it a bit different than burn out, but never the less has the same ill effects and SXs

Specializes in "Wound care - geriatric care.

Wow....you are going through a lot. I have not started to work as a nurse yet so I can't really say I understand your suffering. I do know somethings about nursing after being in nursing school and through my wife who has worked for more than 20 years as a LD nurse. All I can say is that as a nurse you are really covering two fronts of intense work. For one you are dealing with patients and their physiological needs and that is huge; but you are also dealing with the whole emotional side of dealing with real people and in real situations where the emotional toil is as real as the physiological because we are not just biological mechanisms without emotions.

For this later aspect I believe most nurses are ill prepared; at least I wasn't very well prepared. You see for dealing with such heavy emotional matters such as death, and dying requires as much preparation as to how to infuse drugs or putting an NG tube but they didn't tell you that in school. We as a society don't consider these matters of much importance because we focus on the cure of disease and not on prevention and it does not take a genius to figure this out. I think the end result of lacking training on this spiritual/phsychosocial aspect can result sometimes in burnouts.

Know that you can only do what you can do and nothing else. The heart of those who help others have two wings: one is compassion the other is wisdom which will save you from the emotional black hole you might find yourself sometimes. Wisdom here is where you know not to get involved and protect yourself. Protect yourself first because you are the care and without you everybody is in trouble so you know to take care of you first, without blame or guilt. know that you can only fly if both wings are flapping. Know that you are a wonderful human being and don't let anyone distract you from that. Do your work and know that you are doing the best that you can do for the situation at hand; everything else is out of your hands. There is nothing pretty about carrying the whole world on your shoulders.

As for the doctors they are just part of the team; and what the hell do they know anyway...don't let their ego get the best of you.

I think the topic of Compassion Fatigue is very interesting!!!!! We use to toss around the idea of Post traumatic Stress for nurses, but.... it never really fit. Not sure who coined the termology but it really fits the profession- and if you add in the idea that a large number of nurses suffer from co-dependency you really get a good fit!!

As I understand it, I don't think I have compassion fatigue. That's part of my problem. I care too much. I still care about how I take care of my patients and want to do the best job I can. When we are understaffed and overworked, I know I don't give the kind of care I want to. This bothers me. I take it home with me. I worry about what I might have missed. I'm afraid until something bad happens the hospital I work for won't have a clue how bad it is. When something bad does happen, you can bet the nurse will be the one that gets the blame. It's just good to have some place to vent besides at work. I've seen ups and downs in healthcare. I've been doing this a long time. I'm just hoping that when the economy turns around the staffing will get better again. All we can do for the time being is just hang in there I guess.

Specializes in med-surg,tele,vents.

thankyou from the apex of my heart. Your kind words of empathy and encouragement mean so much to me. I wish the hospital supervisors and administrators understood this half as well as you all do. I breaks my heart that after all these years I went out on my knees. multitasking will catch up to you,even the best nurse, if too much responsibility is heaped on you. Protect yourselves anyway you can.

Specializes in PICU, NICU, L&D, Public Health, Hospice.

You are ready for hospice. We need you. It is time for you to bring your level of caring, your particular brand of burn out to a different place. Join us in putting the patient's dignity, wishes, well-being above ALL else. Bring your excellent clinical skills, your outstanding assessment skills, your honesty and sincerity to a place where you will empower patients and families on a daily basis. A place where you will be greatly rewarded on a regular basis. A place where your professional confidence will put scores of frightened people at ease, where you will enjoy a level of autonomy not easily found in the ICU. Find this place where your care of the patient includes ALL aspects of his pain...the physical AND the emotional AND the spiritual. We need people like you...committed, compassionate, ready for a new oath. Solomon wrote that there is a time and season for all things...you are thinking perhaps that this is your season of burnout, but what if this was simply your season of change? You have a lot to offer, you are well prepared for your next mission.

Specializes in LTC, CPR instructor, First aid instructor..

Know I have experienced the closeness of death, and nobody need be afraid of it. You just fall asleep. There is a lot of peace on that. I believe I survived in order to teach others that there is no fear in death. You feel nothing, you definitely do rest in peace with the aid of hospice care.

Specializes in med-surg,tele,vents.

the suffering i am in has to do with giving and giving and feeling misunderstood in sooooo many ways. I'm hot and tired and going to take a xanax and chill out. Thanks to all for love and caring. i really do appreciate it. peace