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.

work-cited.txt

I dont get why people dont take the 2 minutes to pee. Take care of yourself before taking care of others.

Ok, I'm generally a person that eventually goes to pee when I need to. But it's ridiculous how many people are saying it only takes two minutes. Maybe for you guys that can just whip it out if your staff bathroom is close, but it takes more than two minutes just to do the walk to and from the bathroom for me. Add in pulling down my pants, and singing the ABCs while I wash my hands...

I've taken to prioritizing my needs the same as I prioritize my patients. My need to pee gets added to my to do list just as if it was one of my patients that needed to pee.

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.

Agree. If you have to eat your lunch in 5 minute increments, you didn't get your lunch. And the plain fact of the matter is our ratios suck, they're created based on how many patients can a nurse handle if everything goes perfectly like it should, then add a couple because that's too expensive still, and blame the nurses for their poor time management when things never do go perfectly.

Specializes in Focusing on Epidemiology.

Be careful, there is a link between Bladder Cancer and not relieving yourself when Nature calls. No job is worth that. Stress will also Kill You while somebody else is making money off of your suffering, so try and find something you can love. I wish you luck with your future.

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
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.

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

Thank you. I fully agree with your perspectives. Too many people condone the practice of nurses scarfing down 'lunch' in a few minutes and holding in the urge to poop or pee.

Well, every place I've worked had a staff BR on the unit. Where do you work that it's a two minute walk to the BR? That must suck. I totally agree that nursing can create a work environment that makes it difficult to take a break or lunch. Even if I could squeeze in a fifteen minute meal in here or there, it wouldn't be worth the stress of falling even *further* behind in my work. But I maintain that there's no reason to being unable to take a simple pee break at least once or twice a shift. Sure, I might hold it for a little while, but there's nothing so important going on for eight hours that can't wait a couple minutes. I'm a grown a** man and if I gotta go, I'm gonna go. Unless my patient is cyanotic or writhing on the floor or something they can wait two minutes.

Specializes in OB/GYN/Neonatal/Office/Geriatric.

I worked with neonates. Not able to take a pee break was standard. Short staff with unstable babies. After awhile, one's bladder just becomes accustomed to it. Meals were different though. I get mean as a bear when I am hungry!!

Thank you. I fully agree with your perspectives. Too many people condone the practice of nurses scarfing down 'lunch' in a few minutes and holding in the urge to poop or pee.
I don't condone the working conditions that prevent us from being able to take the breaks we're entitled to. I never experienced this before becoming a nurse. It's not okay. But I AM incredulous when someone says they worked for 12 hours and "couldn't" take a pee break. You CHOSE not to stop to go to the BR. Again, maybe it was hectic and you didn't want to fall further behind. But unless people are dying left and right, there's always time for a quick BR break at some point. All I'm sayin....
Specializes in Case Manager.

I always thought the concept of a "break" was time off the clock, away from work, WITHOUT interruptions from work for a specified period of time. Anything that contradicts that or violates any of those rules isn't a break to me.

Specializes in Emergency, ICU.
But I AM incredulous when someone says they worked for 12 hours and "couldn't" take a pee break. You CHOSE not to stop to go to the BR. Again, maybe it was hectic and you didn't want to fall further behind. But unless people are dying left and right, there's always time for a quick BR break at some point. All I'm sayin....

Brandon, some days, in the ER or ICU, people are crapping out left and right and taking a pee break could be a disaster.

With that being said, thank goodness for UNIONS! I always get a 1 hr lunch + 15 min breakfast break. Even if my patient is dying -- someone will cover me because then I will cover them. If I really can't leave my bedside, then I get paid for working through a meal break.

Nurses need to stop being martyrs and demand respect for their hard work and time.

I will NEVER work for a non-union workplace. The pay may be slightly less, but someone's always got my back.

Sent from my iPhone using allnurses.com

Specializes in LTC/Skilled Care/Rehab.

There have been shifts where I didn't pee. That is usually because I didn't drink anything all shift either. I have learned to make myself eat something, even if it is only 5 mins. I wish I had someone to cover me so I could take a real break. Unfortunately there is only 2 nurses at a time on our floor. Leaving for 30 mins makes it difficult for the other nurse working with you.

It can be the same for vet techs...but after several years I became too old to deal with the non-sense and when I had to go to the potty I went and to heck with anyone who said otherwise. I learned that no one really cared if I took two moments to potty, and the world did not end while I was away.

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.
Those of you in Trauma Level I hospitals , ask a lab/BloodBank employee...
Specializes in neuro/ortho med surge 4.

I always take a pee break. Sometimes I can forget I have to go if that makes any sense. An actual break away from the floor and patient care aint happening. First of all, I refuse to burden another nurse with my patients plus their own. Even if my patients are settled and stable who know what can happen. The charting and the craziness makes it insanely busy. If we only had to deal with our patients and not all the other departments a break may be feasible most shifts. it is usually not the direct patient care that ties us up but all the other "stuff". As nurses we know what all the litlle time stealers are that add up to shifts where we are run ragged.