Do Other Professionals Skip Restroom Breaks And Meals?

Nurses routinely skip restroom breaks and lunch periods, especially if they are employed in bedside settings. However, no reasonable person can work nonstop, day after day, year after year without feeling some type of resentment, bitterness, and burnout. To optimally take care of patients, we need to take care of ourselves first. It is time to start taking our breaks. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

I sometimes believe that inpatient bedside nursing is intertwined in a bizarre professional culture where the skipping of bathroom breaks and lunch periods is not only common, but occasionally encouraged by our peers and the powers that be.

Can you name any other professionals who systematically place the needs of their clients above their own?

Countless nursing staff members who work in inpatient bedside settings such as hospitals and nursing homes frequently bypass the breaks to which they are legally entitled. According to a study that was supported by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (2005), nurses are regularly sacrificing their breaks and meal periods to provide patient care. Although many of us already knew that that this practice was going on for quite some time, it does not bode very well for our personal health or job satisfaction.

After all, who wants to work anywhere from eight to twelve hours in a physically demanding role without any breaks?

I can see why numerous nurses explore career options away from the bedside.

According to Fink (2010), while the research confirms what nurses have known for years-few nurses get full breaks; long shifts + heavy responsibility + lack of breaks = fatigue and increased potential for mistakes-part of the blame may lie with nurses themselves. Some nurses forgo their breaks, especially in facilities with toxic work environments, because their callous coworkers or unsympathetic supervisors will endlessly gripe about having to cover an additional patient load during the time away from the floor. Other nurses skip breaks because they feel they might fall further behind with their tasks if they sit down for an uninterrupted lunch or leave the unit to use the restroom.

And even though healthcare facilities must legally pay nonexempt employees who work through unpaid meal periods, the managerial staff at some of these workplaces may subtly discourage nurses from completing 'no lunch' paperwork by taking disciplinary action against workers who submit a large number of these forms.

It is clear that both bedside nurses and the powers that be share some blame for this problem. Facilities need to do their part by encouraging staff to take all legally entitled breaks while taking steps to ease the intense workload.

The workload of bedside nurses can be made more manageable through safe staffing ratios, more streamlined charting, less redundant paperwork, and supportive management. Nurses must do their part by taking all breaks to which they are entitled and willingly covering the patient load of coworkers who wish to leave the floor for a break. Some hospitals employ part-time relief nurses who are on the unit solely to cover for breaks.

In summary, we must take care of our bodies and minds by taking breaks. No reasonable person can work nonstop day after day, year after year without feeling some type of resentment and burnout. To optimally take care of patients, we need to take care of ourselves first.

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Specializes in Med Surg.

I don't understand how nurses can't find 2 minutes to pee. There is something seriously wrong with a unit if some form of a break can't be taken. We get insanely busy, but unless there's an emergency, there is time to pee. Sometimes the only option to eat means grabbing a quick bite and then getting back to charting, but I just don't believe that this is normal for most nurses. I agree with studentdrtobe, if this is the norm for a nurse (especially someone with experience), they have serious time management issues. This may be TMI, but I know the flow on my unit and when things are more likely to be slower--that's when I'll eat something or have a BR break, even if I don't need it--it's like the rest of my nursing practice, I try to get everything finished ASAP so I'm ready when all hell breaks loose.

Specializes in Psych, LTC/SNF, Rehab, Corrections.

Every dept in the hospital at one time or another has to skip or postpone (I should say) meals.

We don't do 'all around care' like our nurses, but pt care is paramount and takes precedence throughout the hospital.

In radiology? You shoot, shoot, shoot...until there's nothing left. Some days are busy. Some days...not.

Our dept used to get slammed twice a day (as a result of Fam Prac and others throwing ALL of their pt's at us at a lunch and when it was time for them to go home)? Seriously. They'd send them all to places like xray.

No one sat down until the waiting room was cleared out.

I was doing the manager thing and it'd get so busy at times? I was slapping on my TLD to help out or QC film or teach (b/c we had students on the floor). Just to give my techs a decent lunch break.

Hey - you gotta take care of your people. It's a team-effort.

The military sure as heck will postpone eating. It's work, work, work...until work is done.

I never had a 'designated' break until I became a civilian. Every hour, people were whining for a break.

I thought, "Ugh, lightweights..."

I couldn't even get into the groove of working for being forced to break every 45 minutes.

LOL

To this day, I hate when my breaks are scheduled. Like, as a nurse aide? "You take a break right after resident mealtimes..."

No - I don't like that b/c I come back and everyone's wet with beds to be stripped.

I don't like to take breaks until I finish my work. That's just how I've been conditioned.

The waitstaff and hospitality folks do tend to bust their butts and they're treated with less respect than a dog at times.

I've never done it, but I've observed.

That's why I always tip so well.

I don't understand not peeing. That's strange.

I was a truck driver for 10 years, in a construction setting (paving roads, etc) I almost never stopped for lunch. I just ate on the go, grabbing a bite to eat at the gas station when I DID finally get the chance to pee. Having said that I loved my job. I regularly worked 5-6 days a week, 10-12 hours a day. Sometimes more. Sure I did get burned out every 6 months or so, but I'm a bit of a workaholic. :)

I never did understand how people don't have time to pee. Even during my busiest shifts, I still have time to pee. It takes maybe 2 minutes to pee and get cleaned up. How do you NOT have 2 minutes to spare? I don't get it. I can understand not having time to sit down and take a proper lunch. For that, I encourage packing snacks and little things to munch on. I've had shifts where I didn't have time to take a full break, but as far as holding my pee for 12 hours? No. That's insane. And, I tend to think you must have bad time management skills and/or bad co-workers (in case you need someone to watch your pts) if you don't have 2 minutes to spare. Just my 2 cents.

I have IBS, and if I don't go to the bathroom when the urge hits, it's gonna be messy. I always make time for the bathroom. Meals I may have to go help someone, answer the phone, etc, but me taking a few minutes to make a pitstop isn't gonna derail my day. Or anyone else's. Smokers make time to smoke, don't they?

Unless it's one code blue after another, I don't get how a nurse can not have time for a pee break. Skipping lunch because you don't want to fall further behind, maybe. But not having two minutes (or less) to pee? Really? If you don't take a pee break, it's because you chose not to. Back to the old "martyr syndrome" so common in nursing....

Soldiers. Police. Firefighters. EMS crews. Flight Medical crews. Physicians. Shall I continue?

I don't think skipping lunches or pee breaks should be a regular thing. If it is, then the unit must be sorely understaffed. But there are occasions in several professions where the professional is called upon to put up with some discomfort and forgo their own needs

For the record: I have been a soldier, paramedic, flight nurse/medic, ER nurse, SAR medic. I am married to a physician. There have been quite a few times for both of us when the job simply demanded we do or give more. Including missing a meal break or bathroom break or sleep. We chose these jobs, and that comes with the territory; though it

With all due respect... the positions you listed require that duties are performed in a emergent setting.

Basic hospital nursing should not require us to forgo all of our breaks in a 12 hour period because we have been assigned too many patients , in order to save money for corporate profit.

It "shouldn't be a constant", but it is..... and it is becoming the norm in hospital nursing now.

"I think our noble and demanding professions sometimes require this of us."

I don't want to be noble... I want time to eat and get off my feet. Like the fat cats in administration increasing the staffing ratios.

People who wait tables may go 12 hours without a break. I've done it many times. It was just too complicated to find someone to watch my tables, get all undressed to use the restroom, and get all back together the way I needed to be in a short enough amount of time. There were many days I work 8-12 hours without a full dinner/lunch break when we were busy.

Here is an example of why nurses are not considered professionals, treated as such, or compensated as such.

The comparison of waitressing to nursing has gone unnoticed.

"Waitress... my ventilator is alarming!"

Unless it's one code blue after another, I don't get how a nurse can not have time for a pee break. Skipping lunch because you don't want to fall further behind, maybe. But not having two minutes (or less) to pee? Really? If you don't take a pee break, it's because you chose not to. Back to the old "martyr syndrome" so common in nursing....

So many posters are replying to the "no time to pee' comment in the original thread. Throwing the problem back on nurses that hold it.

No, it's not that I "chose to hold it". I merely turned off that need, along with the need to eat, hydrate myself.... etc. I simply got TOO BUSY!

Another prime example of nurses not supporting each other in the grand scheme of corporate manipulation to run us ragged for company profit.

So many posters are replying to the "no time to pee' comment in the original thread. Throwing the problem back on nurses that hold it.No, it's not that I "chose to hold it". I merely turned off that need, along with the need to eat, hydrate myself.... etc. I simply got TOO BUSY! Another prime example of nurses not supporting each other in the grand scheme of corporate manipulation to run us ragged for company profit.
I don't understand, are your pts so unstable that they would die or come to serious harm if you popped in the BR for two minutes. Anything less than a true emergent situation can wait a couple minutes. Pain meds can wait. Assessments can wait. Dressing changes can wait. Enven a new admit or a transfer can wait as long as they're stable. Even if I'm way behind at work I can stop to take a leak. What are you afraid is going to happen in two minutes? No one will die.
Specializes in SN, LTC, REHAB, HH.

I almost never get a break on the night shift. when im working days or evenings with the agency forget a break. i told this one nurse i was taking my lunch and asked if he wanted to go before me, he looked at me like i was stupid for saying such a thing. he said "no i dont take breaks but if you want go ahead". he's not the only nurse that says that. we nurses encourage our patients to rest take breaks so they can feel better, but we dont seem to follow our own advice for our health.

Specializes in Med Surg.
So many posters are replying to the "no time to pee' comment in the original thread. Throwing the problem back on nurses that hold it.

No, it's not that I "chose to hold it". I merely turned off that need, along with the need to eat, hydrate myself.... etc. I simply got TOO BUSY!

Another prime example of nurses not supporting each other in the grand scheme of corporate manipulation to run us ragged for company profit.

How in the world in 12.5 hours do you not find time to hit the BR or eat? I'll grant that there are nights when my lunch break comes in 5 minute increments, but how is it possible not to find time to take that short of a break? I'm not being snarky, I'd really like to know what your job entails that you have zero downtime. Either you work in the worst environment known to man (in any career) or there is some hyperbole in your replies.