Night Shift For Newbies

Not everyone LIKES night shift, but all of us can survive it and many (if not most) of us have to work it at one time or another. Here's how to survive. Nurses General Nursing Article

Most of us don't get much choice over whether or not we work nights, although we might get a choice about when. We also get a choice about how we handle our night rotations. There are pluses and minuses to working eight-hour shifts, to working twelves, to working straight day shift, straight night shift or rotating. That's for you to decide for yourself but here are some tips that have helped me and some of my night shift colleagues survive and thrive on the graveyard shift.

Attitude is everything

You can moan and whine about your lousy fate and getting stuck working graveyard shift, or you can approach it with a positive attitude. Guess which one is more pleasant and might possibly even be more fun?

Night shift can be fun

Often there's some downtime (not as much as some people think) where you can sit and chat with your coworkers and get to know one another. You can pick each other's brains about what to do in case of x or y and learn tips and tricks from the experienced nurses on your shift. I met my husband working night shifts with him, and our first date was an eight am drink after work. Just us and all of the local alcoholics bellied up to the bar. Drinks after night shift got to be a Monday morning tradition and soon the entire shift was congregating for one -- or more -- drinks at the Scarlett letter. Because we got to know and like each other outside of work, we became a cohesive group and we had each other's backs. Years later, I still miss the teamwork and camaraderie.

Get your sleep

Take your sleep seriously. I've known more than one new nurse who regarded the days before and after her night shifts as days off and spent them cleaning, shopping or having fun. It's tempting, especially when we all know there aren't enough hours in the day but it's a dangerous precedent. Your body cannot function without sleep and sooner or later your brain won't function either. Worse, you may not realize when you're making bad decisions and overlooking the obvious. Install black-out curtains in your bedroom, invest in an industrial strength fan to block out the sounds of barking dogs and lawn mowers and take Ambien or Benadryl or whatever you need to sleep. If you cannot afford blackout curtains, aluminum foil over the windows works, although your neighbors may think you're growing marijuana in your spare time. (but that's another story for another article.)

Tell your mother, your sister, your best friend and your boyfriend that 9am to 5pm (or whatever works for you) is your sleep time and you are not to be disturbed unless there is blood (lots of it) or flames. You'll have to tell them more than once and sometimes less than tactfully. Some people won't get it until you call them at 3 am to discuss your life insurance needs or to chat about your cousin Hilda's new man. If you absolutely have to be available for emergencies with children or aging parents, get a beeper or a cheap cellphone and don't give anyone the number except for one person whom you trust to recognize an emergency and not to disturb you unless it truly is one. He might not realize this, but your husband is just as capable of discussion Timmy's misbehavior with his teacher or meeting Ellen at the emergency room.

Get some exercise

Go to the gym before work, swim after work or walk on your break. You know you need to do this, and night shift doesn't make it any less necessary.

Eat. Eat real meals

Don't make the mistake of thinking that because it's night time you can snack all night without consequences. I have dinner with my husband for breakfast, leftovers for "lunch" at 1 am or thereabouts, and breakfast when I get home before I go to sleep. (if I don't eat, I wake up starving after far too little sleep.) That schedule may not work for you but whatever you do, eat meals and drink water. You need it.

Drive home safely

It can be done, even by those of you who are absolutely certain it cannot be, at least by you. I've driven home with the windows open and the radio going full blast, singing along with the most obnoxious songs on the radio. Getting angry helps me stay awake, hence the radio tuned to right wing talk shows. There are days I've bargained with god -- "just let me stay awake until the next exit and then I'll pull over and nap, god, honest!" sometimes I do pull over and nap -- even five minutes may be enough to get you home in one piece. Some people drink coffee and swear it doesn't keep them from sleeping once they get home, and some people eat breakfast on the way home. Figure out what works for you and do it.

Avail yourself of the opportunities for afternoon coffee with your friend the stay-at-home mom on your Wednesday off or breakfast with your sister after your shift and before she goes to work. Meet your family for church at 8 am on Sunday and go to bed afterward. Chat with your friend on the opposite coast in the wee hours if you have time at work, or on your night off. You may not have Saturday night off every weekend, but you can make the most of the time you do have off. Make the most of the opportunities to look up procedures, study the disease process you're most likely to encounter in your patients or make drug cards. There's often time in a night shift to do those things that you can't do during day shift when visitors vie for your attention.

Ask your colleagues at work (and on allnurses.com) for strategies that help them survive night shift, and if you have a great tip pass it along. I'd love to hear what works for you.

night-shift-for-newbies.pdf

Specializes in Adult ICU/PICU/NICU.
When I worked nights (not in nursing), the thing that helped me the most was keeping the same hours even on my days off. Long story short: would sleep during the day and stay awake at night. If I had to do something during the day, I either scheduled it before 10am or waited for the late afternoon/early evening.

I had tried to go back to a day existence on my days off but I found that I lost not one but two days in trying to transition. So it was easier for me to adapt the vampire existence. However, also keep in mind that I lived in NYC at the time, where it is possible to sleep all day, be awake all night and still have plenty of things to do to make life interesting :)

I love working nights, I just wish my current circumstances would allow it. Oh well.

I too, was a vampire when I worked nights. Unlike you, I don't live in NYC....but I did my best cooking and baking when everyone was asleep. I haven't worked nights regularly since the late 70s, but even now after I'm retired from "real" nursing....if I cant sleep....I'll get up and bake a pie.

I loved nights too, but I liked being a grandmother more.....hence why I stopped.

.

1 Votes

Thanks for all the tips. I am scared about the drive home more than anything else. I have an hour commute, and am freaked out about the driving. Does anyone take a quick nap in the car before driving home, or does the sleepy feeling hit halfway through your commute?

Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.
thanks for all the tips. i am scared about the drive home more than anything else. i have an hour commute, and am freaked out about the driving. does anyone take a quick nap in the car before driving home, or does the sleepy feeling hit halfway through your commute?

i get sleepy as soon as i hit the interstate. so either i avoid the interstate or i talk to someone on the phone while i'm driving -- with a hands-free headset of course.

Specializes in I.C.U,PERIOPERATIVE NURSING,BSN.

thanks for the reassuring words Ive learnt a lot from you, I'm not particularly a fan of the night shift,

but Ive learnt to cope either ways whenever i have to do my night shift.

I work in a facility where we run both day and night shifts, and i seriously remember those moments when i say long prayers just because am about to begin my shift, but good enough those days are over as ive learnt to adjust with time.

you leave when the others are just about to start their work, just about the time when the heat is

on

As for snacking its a "NO" for me i eat more of fruits and veggies, with plenty of fluids.

while driving home i chew gum to keep me alert and play good music.

1 Votes
Specializes in Med-Surg, ICU.

Question: I'm trying to figure out how to revert back to a regular sleep schedule on my days off. Is it better to sleep through the day and then try to sleep through the next night? Or do ya'll just stay up all day after your last night shift and then sleep through the night? Where I live is not interesting enough to make me want to keep the vampire lifestyle, lol. Me and Benadryl are BFFs ;)

Specializes in Community, OB, Nursery.

I have to switch back and forth so on my last day off I sleep for a few hours (usually 4-5) and then go to bed around 2230 that night. Sometimes it takes a while to fall asleep but if I can get a good 5 hours of sleep in that first night off I'm at least functional the next day.

Specializes in ICU/Telemetry.
Working nights, I got very little sun exposure, and was surprised to find out that my Vitamin D level was in the sub-basement, despite the fact that I take Viactiv. You might like to talk to your doctor about taking some extra Vitamin D--it really made me feel a LOT better.

I have the same exact problem too! I bet this a more common occurrence with night shift nurses. I actually forgot about my doctor telling me about 6 months ago that my vitamin D level was low, so thanks for the reminder!

I love making 11,232 dollars more base pay as a night shifter...that, and not having certain nuisances breathing over my neck!

1 Votes

[color=pink]thanks for the tips, i will soon be working night shift.

Specializes in Peds.

GREAT ARTICLE! I rotate, so that in itself is a task! However, strangely enough, I find that I get MORE sleep when I am on nights. I'm a night owl, so when I am working days, I usually dont get to bd until 12-1am, and I'm back up at 5...but on night shift, I tend to go to bed as soon as I get home if I don't work out or have some other errand to run and I sleep until 4pm, shower and dress, then eat dinner and relax until I leave out at 6:15 pm.

Eating on night shift is also an issue. Since I eat dinner before coming to work on nights, I feel guilty for eating another meal during my shift, so I do tend to eat unhealthy snacks. I may or may not eat when I get off night shift, which in itself is bad. *shame on me*

I need to try cutting off my cell phone. The sun doesnt bother me, it's my friends/family that txt/call me, knowing this is my week to work nights. I literally had to hold my tongue after my boyfriend called TWICE this afternoon while I tried to sleep to rest for my 2nd night in a row....he has yet to understand why I sleep during the day (he works nights as well,at times, but will stay up all frickin day...NOT I!).

I love night shift!

I love the patients, who are more open with talking and sharing at night, with no families and no ancillary staff; and not every doctor on the case running in and out.

I love the camaraderie with my coworkers. We are a well oiled machine during a night shift crisis, we have to be.

I love being home when my angel comes home from school, and we can have dinner together.

I am blessed to be close enough to walk to work, and jog home, so I keep up with my exercise.

Oh, yeah, don't ask if I want to switch to days.

;-)

1 Votes
Question: I'm trying to figure out how to revert back to a regular sleep schedule on my days off. Is it better to sleep through the day and then try to sleep through the next night? Or do ya'll just stay up all day after your last night shift and then sleep through the night?

Sounds horrible, but I stay up. I am switching to twelve hour shifts this week, so we'll see how that goes, but on 8 hour shifts I would stay up. I got more of a day in and then it "forced" me to sleep that next night because I was tired. I find that Benedryl makes me sleepy, but it doesn't knock me out... so if I am not dog dead tired when I take it, I will wake up and be absolutely exhausted yet unable to fall asleep.