Ten Ways To Know You're Burning Out

Here's a primer on how to recognize nursing burnout......BEFORE it destroys your career and lands you in the booby hatch. Nurses Stress 101 Article

Here's something a little different from the writer who usually brings you the funny top-10 lists.

Recently, a good friend of mine I'll call "Viv"---an LPN who's worked at the same LTC for eight-and-a-half years---suddenly up and quit her job. Without notice. Just went to work one morning, told the DNS, "I'm done", handed in a hastily scribbled resignation letter, and shook the dust of the place from her feet.

Not surprisingly, Viv is having trouble finding a new job, even though she's one of the best nurses I know and would hire in a New York minute if I had a position for an LPN. Quitting a nursing job without notice, especially in this economy, is a cardinal sin for which I fear she may pay a terrible price. Yet she is oddly calm about the entire episode, because, as she says, "there are worse things than being unemployed.....like going on the way I was."

Now our group of friends are left to wonder what drove such a wonderful nurse to such a desperate act. Even Viv herself doesn't fully understand what happened; all she knows is that the stresses and strains incurred on the job quietly piled on top of each other for years, until critical mass was reached and she couldn't take it anymore. Now, she's just a statistic---another victim of nursing burnout.

Most of us have been there. I know I have.......more than once. So how do nurses learn to recognize the signs that we're getting a little crispy around the edges and take measures to combat burnout, rather than wait until we're completely fried and then commit career hara-kiri? Here are a few clues I wish Viv had listened to before flaming out in such spectacular fashion:

Ten Ways To Know You're Burning Out

1) Take inventory of the shifts you've worked over a period of at least 4 weeks. If the bad days outnumber the good ones, it may be time to look at changing positions. Life is too short for sucky jobs; to avoid burnout, you have to take action when the suckage overrides the benefits of staying put.

2) Do a gut-check. Are you mostly satisfied with what you do at work, or do you dread going in every day? Again, if you're having two or three bad shifts every week, you are probably not enjoying life even OUTSIDE of work and it's time to consider other options.

3) Ask your family and/or friends if you seem more on edge than usual. They're almost always the first to feel it when a nurse is in the early stages of burnout......oftentimes, before we're aware that we're getting frazzled.

4) Note your overall mood and energy levels. Sometimes, what we think of clinically as 'depression' strikes us when we're starting to brown around the edges: we start feeling anxious, sad or blue; we may sleep or eat excessively (or not sleep/eat enough), and so on. Other times, it may simply be a free-floating unease that we can't put a finger on.....we only sense that something isn't quite right.

5) If you spend a lot of your waking time daydreaming about winning the lottery or counting the years/days/minutes till retirement.....you may be approaching burnout.

6) If you constantly think about the job, talk about the job, have nightmares about the job......you're probably already there.

7) How's your overall health? Is your blood pressure creeping up? Have your diet and exercise habits changed? Are you still enjoying all of your normal off-duty activities, or do you find yourself saying "I'm too tired" and begging off whenever you're invited to go out with friends or family?

? When was the last time you read a good book........went to church........saw a movie........knitted a sweater........played a game with your kids?

9) If you have vacation time saved up (and what nurse with symptoms of burnout doesn't?), take a week or two and see how you feel after you've unwound for a few days. Imagine walking back in to your workplace; does the thought inspire a reaction like "Yes, I'll be ready to go back to work," or "OMG---if I never went back it'd still be a day too soon"? If it's the latter, you may want to consider using the last few days of your vacation to look for another job.

10) If, when you ask yourself whether you can imagine doing this for the rest of your life---or even for the next twelve months---and the answer is "Oh, HELL no".....you are burnt to a crisp and had better call for help before you get hosed. Believe me, if you're burned out, your supervisors have noticed it, and there are too many hungry new grads and older, experienced nurses out there who need work......so do whatever you have to in order to quell the flames and refresh yourself. Your career, your emotional well-being, and even your health may depend on it.

Learn more about nursing burn out

ten-ways-to-know-youre-burning-out.pdf

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

You know..........I sometimes think/fantasize about leaving nursing entirely, even though I love my current job and can't imagine where else I could make the kind of wages I earn now. (Not like I have a choice---I'm the lone breadwinner in a family of three and too young to even think about retirement.) Still, I AM getting older, but more than that, my body has gone through some major changes in the past year or two and just doesn't handle things as well as it used to. I don't recover from these 5-day weeks as easily as I once did; and of course now that I'm a diabetic, I have to be very careful with my diet and stress levels so that my blood sugar doesn't spike and then crash, which just wipes me out.........sometimes for as long as an entire day.

But, like so many others, I'm trapped: I simply do not have the means to quit, work part-time, or change to a different field entirely. So I thank God every morning for my job---which is actually the best one I've ever had---and every night for giving me the strength to get through another day, another week, another year.

And if I could make a living as a writer, I'd leave nursing so fast it'd make your head spin. That's the honest truth......not to discourage anyone from pursuing this career, I hope, but I really have had about all of the 24/7 responsibility, the street-rat crazy families, the bureaucracy, the unending battles with insurance companies and doctors and corporate people I can handle in one lifetime. :chair:

Isn't it somewhat normal to experience anxiety symptoms before heading off to work? Especially if you've been off for awhile (six day stretch or more, like someone else said). I mean, there's a reason why we're paid to work. It's tough stuff and can be quite unpleasant. That's what the money is for. So, if you just spent a full week relaxing, enjoying your life and family, and having the best time of your life, any reasonable person would dread going back to work!

Specializes in Hospice, HIV/STD, Neuro ICU, ER.

Thanks OP for your comments. It's sad that nurses are driven to these extremes. I have never actually walked out, But I have been VERY close countless times!

I just found this article on nursing burn out. It is long, but it is hands down the best information re: nursing burn out I have ever read.

http://www.netce.com/coursecontent.php?courseid=548

I think you have to pay for the CE credit, but reading the information is free :)

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

Wow........that's a lot of information! Which is why I've bookmarked it for reference. :) Thank you for sharing this with us; there's a lot of food for thought here, and it made me think about some ways I might want to change how I cope with working too many hours and being too involved in the resident/family/staff dramas. :yeah:

Specializes in Hospice, HIV/STD, Neuro ICU, ER.
Wow........that's a lot of information! Which is why I've bookmarked it for reference. :) Thank you for sharing this with us; there's a lot of food for thought here, and it made me think about some ways I might want to change how I cope with working too many hours and being too involved in the resident/family/staff dramas. :yeah:

Thanks. It provided me with some valuable insight as well. I am once again starting on that downhill slope of burn out. I have felt burned out in every nursing job I've had after a year or so.

I've been thinking about this a lot lately. My question was "Is it the job or is it me?" After reading this article, I now understand it is truly a combination of both. I found some things I can work on to help stop (or at least slow down) the burn out process. I truly do not want to be labeled as a job hopper, but unfortunately, changing jobs seems much easier than changing me!

Kudos to Viv. That takes courage.

I've been there, but didn't have the courage. When the clinic I was working in closed down, I was not disappointed or fearful for my loss of job: I was delighted. I didn't have the courage to leave myself, but somebody had done it for me.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.
Thanks. It provided me with some valuable insight as well. I am once again starting on that downhill slope of burn out. I have felt burned out in every nursing job I've had after a year or so.

I've been thinking about this a lot lately. My question was "Is it the job or is it me?" After reading this article, I now understand it is truly a combination of both. I found some things I can work on to help stop (or at least slow down) the burn out process. I truly do not want to be labeled as a job hopper, but unfortunately, changing jobs seems much easier than changing me!

You can say THAT again!! :uhoh3:

You are not alone. I'm in the same boat---I've wound up getting restless and agitated in every single nursing job I've ever held, including this one (even though it's head and shoulders above all the rest and I should still be thanking my lucky stars to have it). But like you, I'm going to work on the things I CAN do to cope and to make work life more enjoyable, because I really don't have the luxury of leaving nursing right now.

One thing I've decided is to get my butt OUT of the building promptly at 5 PM, unless it's on fire or I'm actually coding somebody. Too often, the med aides start getting a bunch of MD orders in around 1630 and then other things come unspooled between 1630 and 1700, so more often than not I end up staying late to deal with it (and then, of course have to document everything). There have been two solid weeks of this recently, and Thursday when they came running to me with a resident complaint that didn't require an RN to handle ("what do you do when I'm not here??!") I said "NO--I'm not doing this, you need to take care of it because I've been here all day and I am going home."

Of course, I felt guilty about it all the way home because the staff had goggled at me like I'd suddenly sprouted three heads, but I told myself it was well worth the momentary discomfort and talked myself out of it by the time I pulled into my driveway. Like most nurses, I tend to think that the whole dang opera's going to fall apart if I'm not there to sing the aria, when the truth is that the backup choir is perfectly capable of carrying it off. Besides, if the administrator can get out of there by 1700 on four out of five days in a given week, I certainly should be able to.

The other thing I've promised myself is to begin laying the groundwork for an eventual departure, re-evaluate my career when I turn 55, and if I still feel the same way I do now, I'll get out. That's only a little over two years away, but it's plenty of time to explore what else I might be able to do and plan how we can downsize our lifestyle to accommodate part-time work and/or lower wages. By that time my hubby will be eligible for Social Security (he had to retire last year for health reasons) so that will take a little of the pressure off me.

In all honesty, I think I could probably last another 10 years if I didn't have to work five days per week. My old four-day weeks at the nursing home were great, and a three-day week would be just about perfect; but my administrative job doesn't lend itself well to three 12's per week, even if I could handle the long shifts physically, and I couldn't go back to the floor even if I wanted to because of my bad back and knees. Six of one, a half-dozen of the other.......either way, I'm not going to have an ideal schedule, and indeed, I'm not sure such a thing even exists. :cool:

Isn't it somewhat normal to experience anxiety symptoms before heading off to work? Especially if you've been off for awhile (six day stretch or more, like someone else said). I mean, there's a reason why we're paid to work. It's tough stuff and can be quite unpleasant. That's what the money is for. So, if you just spent a full week relaxing, enjoying your life and family, and having the best time of your life, any reasonable person would dread going back to work!

I don't agree, while relaxing and not being at work is great, there are nursing jobs out there, where you can look forward to going to work. How easy they are too get, where you live is a different matter. I think the problem above isn't the work itself's but the balance between work and everything else. It would be nice, but ? utopia to live in a world where you could work 70% of the time,. etc and have 30 % off for example. but the world economy is built on needing full time work to just pay the bills.

I am there. I love the field, love the patients. I ended up at the wrong facility. Three Don's, two Administrator's and the business has been sold in three years. The Clinical Director does not have a Nursing License and the new Executive Director is a "he said, she said" "her perception, his perception" do nothing Nurse. I'm there, but not for long. Networking and job hunting as I type. I did not work my but off for this foolishness! This girl knows when to go! ;)

Specializes in Geriatrics.

What SUCKED about my last job was, not the job itself, but the administration!! The DON hated conflict, so she'd pick on the most-unlikely-to-talk-back (MOI). I got chewed out for trying to assert my authority with the CNA's, I got blamed when another nurse didn't properly do HER assessment and the patient ended up in a bad way, I seemed to be the only nurse that got in trouble over leaving blanks in the books, ad nauseum, ad infinitum!

I am totally burned out, and I am just a new, unexperienced nurse.

Graduating in Dec. 2010, and taking and passing boards in March,

I could not find a job, so I applied to a hospital where I had my clinicals that I did not like.

I hated the clinicals on this particular unit I re-thought nursing during that last semester.

However, I have been orientation a long time because it is taking me very long to catch on with

the hustle and bustle of the floor.

I have been in orientation since the last week of June, but have not had a consistent preceptor;

I would say about 15+ preceptors or whoever is available. 10+ nurses including both managers have

left the floor. I am stressed and cannot learn in the environment.

I go home with pounding headaches and even though I'm young I can feel my blood

pressure rising.

I cannot do this on this med-surg/vent floor.

Any suggestions as to how I can get out?

P.S. I have my BSN and in the Chicago-land area.

I cannot do this job and am thinking maybe I should have went into a less stressful career like education.

However, deep down inside I feel there has to be other nursing jobs out there less stressful.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

I don't know if there are nursing jobs that are less stressful....but there are jobs that don't give you constant headaches or HTN. Your hospital sounds like the workplace from Hell, and all I can say is what I did on the first page: Life is too short for sucky jobs. It took me fifteen years to figure it out, but NOBODY is going to reward you for sticking with such a job---all they will do is sap the life out of you until nothing is left, and then kick you to the curb like yesterday's garbage. I know. I've seen it happen. It's happened to me as well....twice, in fact. And the only thing I ever regretted about those jobs---other than taking them in the first place---was waiting as long as I did to get out.

Wishing you the best......it's a tough decision in this sort of economy, but I can't in good conscience tell you to suck it up and live with it. Get out, I say, while the "gittin's good".