I didn't accept the keys.....

Specialties Geriatric

Published

Well, I finally did it. I refused to take report/keys in a LTC/Rehab facility that is critically understaffed. Here's the deal. I was hired as a night shift RN supervisor. Almost immediately after I started the DON who hired me was fired. That left no DON for two months, also no administrator. By the third month, with all the call out's, no shows, and people quitting, I was floating between all carts full time. And STILL expected to be supervisor when needed. So last night was the final straw.

This is what I was set up for:

30 pts on THREE halls

5 IV's

2 med passes

4 skin checks

30 full assessments (no one actually does these they just copy the previous)

30 nsg notes

30 chart checks

pain pills all night

and by the way CHANGEOVER so 30 MARs and TARs.

All in an 8 hour shift.

The two regular nurses both called out so that left me (totally unfamiliar with the pts, and the MARs), and a day shift nurse helping out, to do the work. The company REFUSES to call in agency, and no one else was willing to come in and help.

So, I called the new DON, left a message, hugged all the nurses I enjoyed working with, and left. That was 8 hours ago and I am still STEAMING. How is anyone expected to get good nursing care under those conditions? How is a nurse supposed to make safe decisions under those circumstances?

Still so angry I could SCREAM! But sad because I loved my job.

sniff.

You are SO right!!! Good for you! Now if more nurses stood up to grossly unacceptable working conditions, we would all be better off! The new norm would be well-staffed facilities that treat their staff right ! I had a day from h3ll at the SNF I work at too (25 patients though) , and on the drive home I said to myself --- "I can't go back there again". I just can't. It's not safe, or at all the type of place that will allow me to take GOOD care of people, which is what I got into nursing for!

I completely support OP. We always feel so responsible for our patients that we routinely find ourselves in unsafe situations because if we don't take the assignment then "who will take care of our patients"? I'm beginning to think that unionizing may be the only way to get administrators to listen to the front line nursing staff... They keep requesting "ideas" to improve scores, when really the only way is to improve staffing so we have the time to do true quality care, not just checking all the boxes...

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