We were all wrong about nursing home nurses

Specialties Geriatric

Published

As someone who's been a charge nurse in a nursing home for some time now (as first RN job) I must admit that I was wrong and many on here have been wrong as well.

The position is looked down upon but I can assure you there is a lot of critical thinking, decision making and responsibility in that position. As the lone RN in charge of 8-10 Aides, 3 LPN and 65-70 residents it is a huge task and responsibility. Not to mention when things go south for a resident, you might as well be a nurse in the rain forest or Kenya (as far as supplies are concerned). All you have is your critical thinking skills.

Nursing home RNs are in fact real RNs.

Specializes in Med/Surg, Ortho, ASC.

I wasn't wrong. I've never looked down on any type of nurse.

Specializes in ER LTC MED SURG CLINICS UROLOGY.

I worked LTC for six years. Definitely had more autonomy in LTC vs the hospital. I have to say I don't really

Miss it all that much.

Specializes in Critical care.
I wasn't wrong. I've never looked down on any type of nurse.

I look down on most nurses!

(I'm taller than them)

I look down on most nurses!

(I'm taller than them)

I look UP to most nurses.

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.

I would love to be able to change that title. It's inaccurate at best. "We" didn't do anything.

I have been in the LTC setting so I know how hard it is. Besides, I try never to look down an ANY nurse in any specialty anyhow. I try not to judge what I know little about.

Many do. Many think the LTC position is the bottom of the barrel and is a job of last resort. Myself included. I now know I was wrong. Even though the pay and working conditions in this area are the bottom of the barrel.

When I think about LTC nursing I think overwhelming responsibility for the staff. I feel angry that of the several people I know who own LTC facilities....they are all obscenely well off when the facilities are providing the bare minimum of staffing.

I completely agree....there is a just plain old jobism (I made that word up) regarding nurses who work in nursing homes. "They" don't have acute care skills is usually the main theme. I know taking charge of LVN's, aides, and 70 residents requires more acute care thinking than how to start an IV! It is a complex, under appreciated, low paying job.

"We" were not "all wrong" because "all" of us did not hold that opinion.

I would rather flip burgers than work in LTC, not because the nurses there are of a lesser caliber. It's because they are tremendously overworked and definitely underpaid. With a background in ICU/OR/Endo, I'm used to small nurse to patient ratios. NO WAY I could handle the work those nurses do without a lot of remediation into time management skills, prioritization, and multi-tasking.

I have a lot of respect for those nurses!

Specializes in LTC Rehab Med/Surg.

I've never seen a negative opinion about nurses who work NH on AN. Granted, I'm not here 24/7, and I don't visit the LTC forums.

I don't work with nurses who routinely make ugly remarks about those who work in NHs, and I personally have only admiration for any nurse who can do that job well. It's where I started, and is the yard stick by which I've measured every job I've had since.

Specializes in Geriatrics, Home Health.

For me, LTC *would* be a job of last resort, not because I look down on LTC nurses but because of the insanely bad working conditions. After my last LTC job, I swore I would sell my body on the street before I worked in another SNF. Now I will only go back if my family is facing immediate homelessness.

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