My Reasons For Avoiding The Acute Care Hospital

Some nurses have never worked one day inside a traditional acute care hospital during the entire length of their nursing careers. How could this possibly happen? While I cannot speak for other nurses, I will provide an answer to the question that multiple people have asked: "Why don't you want to work at a major hospital?" Nurses General Nursing Article

I've been asked the same question by members of allnurses.com, real-life coworkers, and even some of my own family members: "Why aren't you interested in working at a major hospital?"

My relatively short nursing career consists of experience in long term care, rehabilitation (acute and sub-acute), and psych. For the past two and a half years I've been employed at a small specialty hospital that provides acute rehabilitation services, and to be honest, I think it's wonderful when a patient discharges to home with the ability to walk and talk when he was bedridden and unable to speak just two weeks ago.

My career is about to traverse into a new chapter when I enter the realm of developmental disabilities nursing starting next week. Twelve years ago, when I was 19 years old, I was employed as a direct care staff member and caregiver at a group home in a residential area that housed six developmentally disabled clients. I mostly enjoyed working with this particular patient population and will be thrilled to finally work as a nurse in this specialty.

Meanwhile, let's venture back to the original question. . .Why do I not want to work at a major hospital? Honest introspection is a major part of my career decision. In addition, my experiences while attending clinical rotations during nursing school at multiple hospitals in two different states cemented my choice to avoid acute care like the plague, especially after seeing how appallingly the nurses were being treated. After much painstaking self-reflection, I realize that an acute care hospital job is not for me. Some people would interject and say, "Well, you'll never know unless you try it!"

To be perfectly blunt, I know my personality is not compatible with acute care. I'm a mellow type B girl who does not like responding to codes. I dislike dealing with changes in condition. I detest taking off orders that constantly change on the whim of the doctor, nurse practitioner, or physician's assistant. I cannot stand constantly performing procedural skills such as IV starts, Foley catheter insertions, nasogastric tube drops, or blood draws. I despise having to drop what I'm doing to address a stat order. I do not look forward to constant interaction with physicians, families, dietary staff, visitors, RT, and other people.

I hate the liability involved with acute care. I do not enjoy the idea of not knowing exactly what I'm going to walk into. I do not like making decisions NOW, and in acute care the nurse must make decisions NOW. Acute care involves a pace with which I'm not comfortable. I'm not an adrenaline junkie. My preferences include low acuity patients, low liability, minimal stress, and the same old routine. I know that several years of acute care hospital experience would be vastly beneficial to my career as a nurse. After all, you don't know what you don't know. However, if I would likely be unhappy during those years, why follow through with it? If I could steer clear of the acute care hospital for the remainder of my career, I'd be content.

Some uninformed people insist that real nursing only takes place inside the walls of the acute care hospital setting. People can think whatever they darn well please. As long as I'm happy, secure, and comfortable with the work I'm doing, that's all that matters to me. Patients outside the hospital setting need nurses, too.

The Commuter.......even rewind years in the past I enjoy anything you've written and write!

Always so on point and this one is exactly me, also. And just as expected people always try to convince me different but even after they exhaust all thier good excuses why......I still say I have no desire to work in a hospital.

I aspire you The Commuter!

Specializes in PCCN.

Thank you for acknowledging that you don't like the liability of acute care nursing. I totally agree with you on that one.

Specializes in Critical Care; Cardiac; Professional Development.

I did four years of acute care with some internal drive that made me continually feel like I wasn't good enough, needed to advance, needed to compete, get ahead, eye on the next rung. I was barely doing the stuff I became a nurse to do and I was stressed out of my mind, though I didn't realize how badly. I knew it was bad but I truly didn't know HOW bad.

This past Fall a former employer requested I return. The job offer was one of those "too good to be true" things that only happen once. I jumped on it and man, has it been an amazing eye opener ever since. I miss some things about acute care, but not nearly enough to want to go back. I get sucked into Type A stuff easily but on the squishy inside I am a Type B educator type who wants to have all the time I need to teach and support both coworkers and patients alike. I love my new job.

I don't regret my time in acute care. I learned a LOT about myself and this career and it benefits me greatly in what I do. I am not sure the avenues open to me now would be if I didn't have that experience. However, I am not ashamed that I am unlikely to ever do floor nursing again. Life is far more balanced now.

I'm going to be graduating in December. So far I don't think I want to start in acute care for the same exact reasons as the OP said. I'm a very laidback person and the hospital to me right now seems intimidating because there is too many things going on at once. I also like rountine and Knowing what I'm walking into. I'm currently doing an externship in the hospital and I think it seems like an unsafe mess. I choose nights thinking it would be a good pace for me to learn once I graduate but the night shift nurses get more pts than days. As an extern sometimes I have 16 patients and I don't even know the admitting diagnosis for some of them because I barely have time to look. The nurses are constantly busy they pretty much only have time to give medictions and barely have time to assess the patients. They just pretty much keep them alive.

I don't mind acute care but I just want to work somewhere at slower pace that will allow me to learn and think and build my knowledge base. Any ideas anyone?

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
I don't mind acute care but I just want to work somewhere at slower pace that will allow me to learn and think and build my knowledge base. Any ideas anyone?
I spent the first six years of my career in long-term care (a.k.a. nursing homes).

One commonly overlooked option is group homes for the developmentally disabled. Other options include adult daycare, occupational health centers, psychiatric hospitals, jail intake centers, prison infirmaries, and blood banks.

Great Topic

I have to really sit down myself and think hard.

I am most likely going to stay out of non-acute care,and probably going to work Private Duty Nursing for a long time.

I really do not have the brain power(or will) to complete the Bsn.

So the question is this: Why do I want to rush to get a Bsn when I most likely won't work in acute care at all?

Specializes in telemetry, cardiopulmonary stepdown, LTC. Hospice.

Wow, this is an older article, but you sure match my feelings on the matter. I did 6 months in an inner city hospital solid organ transplant and med/surg, then almost three years at another city hospital in cardiopulmonary stepdown. That was enough for me! I loved the learning but couldn't stand the pace. I have worked long term care since then, currently in assisted living. I had a lot of people tell me that if I switched from acute care to long term care I was destroying my career and I'd be sorry. Really? What, you don't think long term care needs good nurses, too? Because I do! There needs to be some major changes done for the elderly care and I'm going to be getting my masters degree in gerontology to see if I can help make some of those changes. People don't stop mattering when they enter the "elderly" classification!

Specializes in IMC, school nursing.
I wonder if part of the reason people are so adamant about new nurses needing to start out in med/surg and get that golden year of experience is because it's what they did...

I am a proponent of hospital experience. I totally understand Commuter's perspective, I too am laid back and like my excitement in small doses. I now work LTC and love it, however, critical thinking is not valued there. I would probably guess that critical thinking is not valued at many non acute settings. That doesn't mean that it isn't necessary, and your clientele is worse off for that. I would never go back to acute care, but I also would say that it is a necessary step in rounding out your education. I also experience the shock that nurses can't be nurses if they are not in hospitals, but I also have the luxury of age and decades of experience that give me a pass. I have found that LTC is every bit as demanding as acute care.

Specializes in Med surge/ tele.

Hi! I don't know if you'll see this since it's been so long but I am in your current situation. Except I had a chance to do psych but I went with the acute care setting. Now mind you, after working as a tech at the psych facility for 2 months I began to get somewhat bored with the routine & the emotional draining kinda got tiresome.. that quickly. & deep down I want so more but I think my anxiety & fear holds me back. It's like knowing what you want to do but having your fear overcome your ability to do so. Also I did want to have some type of hospital eclxperience. Anyways can you tell me did you ever transition? Or did it get better?

Specializes in Critical Care and ED.

It's interesting to read other's perspectives. I myself could not imagine working anywhere else but in an acute care hospital, and I gravitate towards the biggest level 1 hospitals and the highest acuity patient in the ICU. I'm never happier than when I have a super-sick patient who is 1:1, intubated, sedated and on a million drips. I would absolutely hate to work in a small outpatient setting. It doesn't appeal at all. I love walking in to a massive busy hospital with all the hustle and bustle. I've just applied for a job in the biggest and busiest hospital in my state and I can't wait to get back to the ICU. Good luck to those of you who like the quieter, smaller more predictable environments but I would be bored out of my mind. I guess I'm an adrenaline junkie.

Specializes in CVICU, MICU, Burn ICU.
It's interesting to read other's perspectives. I myself could not imagine working anywhere else but in an acute care hospital, and I gravitate towards the biggest level 1 hospitals and the highest acuity patient in the ICU. I'm never happier than when I have a super-sick patient who is 1:1, intubated, sedated and on a million drips. I would absolutely hate to work in a small outpatient setting. It doesn't appeal at all. I love walking in to a massive busy hospital with all the hustle and bustle. I've just applied for a job in the biggest and busiest hospital in my state and I can't wait to get back to the ICU. Good luck to those of you who like the quieter, smaller more predictable environments but I would be bored out of my mind. I guess I'm an adrenaline junkie.

I can relate to only wanting to work in acute care -- one of the many reasons I decided against FNP. I also really like the sick 1:1 patient. I like the team, the problem solving, and giving amazing nursing care to people because I can (with only 1 or 2 patients). On some level - I guess I like rising to the challenge when things are going wrong. But I also don't like when things go wrong (I get irritable and bossy) -- if that makes sense. And I am most definitely NOT an adrenaline junkie (many assume ICU and ED nurses must be). I'm thankful I can ramp up when the situation calls for it, though. And yeah, I really love working in the hospital. Takes all kinds, I guess.

Specializes in Critical Care and ED.
I can relate to only wanting to work in acute care -- one of the many reasons I decided against FNP. I also really like the sick 1:1 patient. I like the team, the problem solving, and giving amazing nursing care to people because I can (with only 1 or 2 patients). On some level - I guess I like rising to the challenge when things are going wrong. But I also don't like when things go wrong (I get irritable and bossy) -- if that makes sense. And I am most definitely NOT an adrenaline junkie (many assume ICU and ED nurses must be). I'm thankful I can ramp up when the situation calls for it, though. And yeah, I really love working in the hospital. Takes all kinds, I guess.

We must be twinsies! :yes: