Don't Risk Your Job Over Social Media

It's so easy to post anything on social media and to believe you're in a safe bubble with just you and your friends. But you're not. Nurses General Nursing Article

Social media

The use of social media and other electronic communication is expanding exponentially; today's generation of nurses grew up in a social media milieu.

Social media provides wonderful online communities for nurses to post and interact. I myself have met amazing colleagues on Twitter I would not have otherwise met. I've been on Twitter as @bhawkesrn since 2009 and thankfully never violated HIPAA or posted an over-the-top rant.

Thankfully because social media is far-reaching and nothing can be easily and permanently deleted once posted.

Poor Judgement

Lindsay posted a picture of herself on Facebook at a party showing a lot of side boobage.

It was shocking and hard to reconcile the image of her as a responsible nurse in scrubs with a blatantly sexy picture. Of all the hundreds of images she posted, this may have been most memorable. She took it down, it stayed up only 24 hours, but the damage was done. It's not that it wasn't attractive, it's poor judgment.

Sheila posted in a large Facebook group that she was looking for a job... because her nurse manager played favorites...unfortunately her nurse manager was tipped off by someone in the same group. It can blur the lines and pose a risk when you friend your boss on Facebook.

I'll never forget an ED nurse I knew personally who took a picture of a tattoo located on a patient's genitalia- what was she thinking? "I'll never see something like this again, I have to get a picture and show my friends"? To make it even worse, there were four other employees in the group and no one said anything. Until later, when one nurse was bothered by the incident and spoke up. She reported it to the manager, and of course, the nurse was fired.

My heart goes out to this patient who trusted himself in our care and was taken advantage of.

Katie Duke, a popular nurselebrity, starred in a medical reality TV show a few years back, ABC's New York Med. As a nurse in the ED, she dealt with trauma and death every day.

One day she posted an image on Instagram of a room after a code in a trauma room. A man had been hit by a train and had been treated in this room. If you've ever been in a code, you can picture the scene.

The gurney is gone, leaving a clean floor space in the center of the chaos. The room looks as if a bomb went off, with paper wrappings thrown on the floor, discarded supplies, maybe a bloody sheet...you get the idea.

It was an evocative picture but did not reveal any patient information of any sort. Even though she did not violate any HIPAA laws, she was fired that same day from New York Presbyterian Hospital, where she had worked for seven years, being insensitive. Katie claims that the image was taken by a doctor, although shared by her, but that the doctor was not reprimanded.

I'm sure she suffered a lot afterward and regretted her choice.

Other examples include nurses posting X-rays on Facebook, employees taking shots of residents in nursing homes, and posting without consent. Sometimes an employee will only receive a warning at work but typically these violations are not taken lightly, and the current trend is to be terminated.

Impulse and Anonymous Posts

Impulsive posts, venting, inappropriate humor...we see it all the time on social media. Remember humor doesn't always translate well in text and can backfire.

I have been on social media for many years, but never as anonymous. It was a boundary that kept me in check especially when I wanted to vent, and it prevented me from using bad language or making other poor choices.

My rule is to only post whatever I'd be OK with my mother reading and seeing. If I hadn't done that, I could easily have sabotaged my own career down the road. I would not have been able to become a nurse author and write a book, I'm sure.

HIPAA

As professionals, we must never breach hospital policy or violate the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, a law known as HIPAA, that protects patient privacy.

Most facilities have social media and patient privacy policies in place- be sure and read yours.

ANA

The American Nurses Association (ANA) and the National Council of State Boards of Nursing (NCSBN®) posted a joint statement on professional responsibility in social media. have mutually endorsed each organization's guidelines for upholding professional boundaries in a social networking environment.

According to NCSBN Board of Directors President Myra A. Broadway, JD, MS, RN:

"Nurses must recognize that it is paramount that they maintain patient privacy and confidentiality at all times, regardless of the mechanism that is being used to transmit the message, be it social networking or a simple conversation. As licensed professionals, they are legally bound to maintain the appropriate boundaries and treat patients with dignity and respect,"

Consequences

Inappropriate posts on social media can get you kicked out of nursing school, fired, or not hired at all.

If you think only your "friends" see your postings, remember that curious hiring managers can simply google your name and check your online presence and postings with little effort.

Protect your online presence and if you question whether you should post something- you probably shouldn't.

So now you are not allowed to be a nurse and "blatantly sexy"? Let's just go back to wearing white caps and dresses and stockings. Posting a revealing photo of yourself at a party is "hard to reconcile with a responsible nurse in scrubs"? There is literally no correlation between how virtuous you are and how good of a nurse you are. Half of the nurses on my unit are single 20-somethings that drink and party at least once a week, and when a fresh trauma with his legs amputated receiving massive transfusion rolls up there is absolutely no difference between them and those who don't.

We are nurses, not politicians or nuns. We get judged on such a high pedestal but god forbid we are not completely tolerant and understanding of others like screaming, ridiculously entitled IV drug users, those who abuse the ER 365 days a year, violent criminals, the Muslim family patriarch who refuses to acknowledge a female nurse, or the dialysis patient that refuses to go to dialysis. In some areas nurses are little more than servants, unable to utter a word in their defense without management reprimanding them even though a family member screams at them because no one came to bring her mom ice while a patient down the hall is being coded.

Nurses are people, if a girl wants to post a "side boobage" on facebook then who cares? Is this somehow worse than them posting a bikini photo? Am I not allowed to post a shirtless photo of me on the beach without repercussion because that's "blatantly sexy"? God forbid anyone sees that I have a large chest tattoo, that should be grounds for firing as well. How utterly ridiculous, this stupid standard we are expected to uphold in our personal lives in light of the poor staffing, ridiculous patient demands, and all the other problems of nursing. Good riddance to any employer who fires me because I curse on a facebook post---not a place I want to work and there are thousand hospitals in this country seeking experienced nurses. So many nurses are anxiety-ridden messes terrified of being fired, fearing their license will be taken away because they didn't scrub the hub for fifteen seconds. It's absurd.

Posting HIPAA violations and things like that are understandable to punish, of course.

The first thing you have to do and the first thing I ever did was to create a personal social media policy. It does not afford complete protection but do not ever "friend" coworkers on FB. EVER! Even after I leave a position I do not friend them. If they're offended by that, too bad. The 2nd thing in all of that is do not ever make disparaging remarks about anyone with whom you work, including your employer.

Many a person has lost their job because of FB & Twitter. As some here already know, I can be a loudmouth and that includes on social media. But, who's gonna fire you over political view unless they want to be an a**.?

The biggest tragically stupid posting on Twitter that I can recall was the woman who posted before getting on her flight to South Africa, was fired in mid flight and realized it after landing. All because of an ignorant racist remark she made.

Best advice. Think before hitting that send button!

Specializes in Nephrology, Cardiology, ER, ICU.

There have been comments that being a nurse puts you on a pedestal, doesn't allow you enough freedom to express yourself, etc.

This isn't only in the nursing world, many companies check out your social media presence prior to employment. They do this for a number of reasons:

1. Ensuring they are projecting a positive image as in they don't want their customers viewing their employees unfavorably

2. Looking at the organizations, FB pages, FB communities, etc that you belong to to see if they are in line with company policy

3. Overall seeing if you are a person that posts off the cuff, resulting in later apologies

Specializes in Geriatrics, Dialysis.

"Lindsay posted a picture of herself on Facebook at a party showing a lot of side boobage.

It was shocking and hard to reconcile the image of her as a responsible nurse in scrubs with a blatantly sexy picture. Of all the hundreds of images she posted, this may have been most memorable. She took it down, it stayed up only 24 hours, but the damage was done. It's not that it wasn't attractive, it's poor judgment." QUOTE FROM OP [sorry, no quote button with the original article.]

Poor judgment? That I'm sorry is lousy. No reason a nurse shouldn't be able to go out wearing whatever he or she wants. If there is any professional fallout from an employer that wouldn't be a place I'd want to work anyway.

Specializes in Tele, ICU, Staff Development.
"Lindsay posted a picture of herself on Facebook at a party showing a lot of side boobage.

It was shocking and hard to reconcile the image of her as a responsible nurse in scrubs with a blatantly sexy picture. Of all the hundreds of images she posted, this may have been most memorable. She took it down, it stayed up only 24 hours, but the damage was done. It's not that it wasn't attractive, it's poor judgment." QUOTE FROM OP [sorry, no quote button with the original article.]

Poor judgment? That I'm sorry is lousy. No reason a nurse shouldn't be able to go out wearing whatever he or she wants. If there is any professional fallout from an employer that wouldn't be a place I'd want to work anyway.

You can't control employer's perceptions, and unfortunately, whatever you post becomes part of the perception.

Think what would happen if a judge posted highly immodest or suggestive selfies on social media.

"Lindsay posted a picture of herself on Facebook at a party showing a lot of side boobage.

It was shocking and hard to reconcile the image of her as a responsible nurse in scrubs with a blatantly sexy picture. Of all the hundreds of images she posted, this may have been most memorable. She took it down, it stayed up only 24 hours, but the damage was done. It's not that it wasn't attractive, it's poor judgment." QUOTE FROM OP [sorry, no quote button with the original article.]

Poor judgment? That I'm sorry is lousy. No reason a nurse shouldn't be able to go out wearing whatever he or she wants. If there is any professional fallout from an employer that wouldn't be a place I'd want to work anyway.

I also found this to be a little extreme. I have a large top in comparison to the rest of my body and if I wear anything remotely low cut it could be considered "inappropriate." (Although I will avoid showing off any cleavage on a day to day basis, sometimes I like to wear a fancy cut out top on a rare night out.

You can't control employer's perceptions, and unfortunately, whatever you post becomes part of the perception.

Think what would happen if a judge posted highly immodest or suggestive selfies on social media.

You're talking about what does happen; the previous poster was talking about what should happen.

I'm well aware that employers are legally allowed to police the private lives of their employees and fire them for whatever reason they want in most states. That's their right, by law. At the same time, I also believe that your example's degree of off-hours morality policing is driven by either an insufferable sense of moral prissiness, or callous and cowardly wariness of defending an institution from any and all criticism at the expense of the individuals who make up the institution. As such, anyone who considers firing a nurse for a 'racy' photo (that still meets FB's terms of service) deserves condemnation. Screw those jerks.

Specializes in Tele, ICU, Staff Development.

I also believe that your example.... is driven by either an insufferable sense of moral prissiness, or callous and cowardly wariness of defending an institution from any and all criticism at the expense of the individuals who make up the institution.

Point taken. Thank you for your point of view.

Specializes in LTC/Rehab, Pediatric Home Care.

I use both Facebook and Twitter, and here is my policy. I don't ever post protected health information or air my employer's dirty laundry. Other than that, I reserve the right to post whatever I want, whenever I want. If my employer can't handle it, they can fire me. I love to debate and I've taken positions that were controversial. I've even dropped a few F-bombs. I would rather not work for a company who feels the need to censor me.

Specializes in OB-Gyn/Primary Care/Ambulatory Leadership.

A very good reason why I do not post where I work, and I do not friend anyone who also works at my place of employment.

"Lindsay posted a picture of herself on Facebook at a party showing a lot of side boobage.

It was shocking and hard to reconcile the image of her as a responsible nurse in scrubs with a blatantly sexy picture. Of all the hundreds of images she posted, this may have been most memorable. She took it down, it stayed up only 24 hours, but the damage was done. It's not that it wasn't attractive, it's poor judgment." QUOTE FROM OP [sorry, no quote button with the original article.

I know of a nurse that is an aspiring Instagram model and she has posted several topless photos to her public profile, in addition to 100s of other modeling photos. On the same profile she has posted selfies from work. I don't think she's been a nurse very long though, I think she was doing the modeling first. It doesn't seem to have effected her negativity but, I can see how it could.

I know several people that have been fussed at over social media where I work, although I don't know if anyone has ever been fired. I keep my Facebook private but, I do friend coworkers. I try not to post anything questionable really. 90% of my posts are pics of my dogs, lol.

augh will never forget having a meet and greet with mother,as far I knew the meet and greet went swell went home logged into my fb and she was posted as a friend suggestion..which means she looked me up immediately after I left fortunately I hardly ever post anything on fb I more so log in to see what other ppl post ...needless to say in the end I didn't accept the case.