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

Wow, that's powerful encouragement and advice. Thanks.

Yes, I am not a quitter, even though I'm young, college age and

have had a couple of jobs, I have never quit a job like what

I'm contemplating doing.

I have been looking fervently and spend time filling out applications.

My target areas of interest include: homehealth, peds homehealth,

school nursing (much later down the line), and perhaps psych.

But you are right. I cannot sacrifice my mental wellbeing for a job.

Because at this point, I'd rather work as a cashier full time with half my pay than

what I'm doing now, and that is sad.....

Thanks for input...I'll keep looking and stay positive:cool:

P.S. I had a meeting with the manager last week, and she

tells me she doesn't want me to quit; apparently they have an

extremely high turnover for new grad RNs.

Specializes in Geriatrics.

I imagine there are, but they all have their own brand of stress. WHY does every nurse think they HAVE to work in a hospital to be/feel competent ?? As an RN, one has many other choices!! Doctors offices, home health, LTC, school nursing? Tell me if I'm too far off base here. Again, its not usually about the job, its about the administration or lack thereof. I'm so sorry you feel this way at such a young age and so early in your career.:(

As a wise man told me once and he had 40 years on the Job. He said "Son, this place was here and running before you go here and it will be here long after you are dead and gone"

Specializes in LTC/REHAB/GEROPSYCH/WOUND CARE/ICU.

I ,too, had my fair share of being burnt out. There a time when I was having multiplejob assignments.

Worked as woundcare nurse , 3-11 supervisor and doing the audits for psychtropic meds documentation such as behavior charting fora 180 bed capacity LTC. It was tough. Then the administrator quit and then almost 50% of the r

RNs who worked for the facility for a long while up and left the facility. Then A few months after the DON left too . I was stuck because I had a 3 yeArs contract and I was barely a year in that facility when everything happened. Itwas no fun at all. We had agency nurses filling the gaps. No continuity. It was hard for everybody . Talk about hurting between the scapular area d/t tension. Dragging yourself out of bed to be at work on time. Unable to sleep at night because you are trying to think how to get everything organized at work or thinking about what it would be like inthe morning. Being so busy at work your energy is spent and all you want to do on your day off is sleep.

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.

True, but I've dreaded school, old jobs, etc., but not enough to make me want to almost trade in everything

to go back.

Sometimes I wish there was a rewind button to go back to school and change it all....

There has to be light at the end of the tunnel, and a better nursing job

Well, luvroses, I too am a 2010 December grad, licensed in March and now working in a LTCF. I am five month into this job, working 12 hour shifts, three days per week. I am really feeling the "burn" and am wondering what I got myself into. It helps to read these posts just to know it's not just me feeling overwhelmed with this line of work.

Specializes in peds, med/surg, oncology, telemetry.

It feels so good to see what I am going through out in others thoughts. I was just fired a month ago for what seemed like a minor incident. I have to admit though, I was having a lot of health problems too over the last two years. I had switched to the day shift and things seemed to be going better and then this hit me. Needless to say I was a little suprised because I had worked for this hospital for over 16 years. Just today I realized how good I feel now - I bet I lost about 10 pounds that had been sitting on my shoulders!! I have applications out there where I can use my newly acquired masters degree and I am starting to get some response so I am very excited. I have a strong passion for nursing and still love being a nurse and it felt like they had taken part of my identity away. If this is how others are feeling, I would encourage a good soul searching to decide what is best for you and your career and take the necessary steps to make that happen. :)

Stay well

thats why there are 34 CA facilities striking thursday the facilities think they can do anything to us that they want///Slavery , how's that working for us?

Specializes in ER, Cardiac, Hospice, Hyperbaric, Float.
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.

As a former educator-turned-nurse, I can tell you firsthand that education is NOT less stressful. ANY profession in which your primary role is to help people is stressful. Period. The misconception that teachers have a low-stress job is just about as annoying (and wrong) as the misconception that nurses spend their days flirting with doctors and giving sponge baths.

Nursing is a profession with SOOOOO many options. It's not just med/surg and long term care. I was a "job hopper" for my first few years who couldn't seem to find a specialty I liked (I did med/surg, walk in clinic, hyperbaric medicine, ER, ICU, cardiac tele, pediatrics, and hospice) and now I am a "float" in a hospital and PRN in a hospice agency, and I LOVE it! I basically do a little of everything (except L&D - I know I hate L&D for some reason). Look around, shadow some folks in different areas, think "outside the box". Check out the ridiculous number of different specialty areas on this website alone.

If you made it through nursing school, my guess is you really are meant to do this "nursing thing" but you haven't found your niche. Until you have checked out several areas/specialties, I really don't think you are burned out of nursing per se, rather you are burned out of the TYPE of nursing you are in, and/or the ATMOSPHERE of the workplace you are currently in. Looke around, move on, and keep the faith!

:hug:

I quit a management job one time. I was so stressed not only from the job, but from my husband being out of work again. I almost had a nervous breakdown. I was in a meeting crying one day. It seemed like everything I was doing it wasnt good enough. Getting mixed signals from management. Instead of management talking to me, she would tell the LPN and the LPN would tell me. I thought about this, and didnt have a job set up for backup. I woke up one morning and didnt go in to work. I had quit my job. Management really thought I was gonna take their ****. I had a job a week later. So I say the hell with them. Nobody is gonna run me in the ground. I knew what kind of nurse I was and that something would eventually come up. I never told my husband that I quit. I would wake up and go to the library or do school work allday.

Specializes in School Nurse.
OP, thank you for this article. I think I am on that slippery slope towards burnout. Weird thing is, I do love this job, or at least the idea of it. I like caring for children, the schedule is great, relatively low stress as far as nursing jobs go...but yet I find myself dreaming of winning the lottery or "boring" office jobs, where I don't have to care. I think it's called compassion fatigue...I'm just tired of trying to summon up the will to care anymore :(

I too work with children as a school nurse. You said it perfectly, "tired of trying to summon up the will to care anymore." It seems that you just give, give, give until you have nothing left to give anymore, then you have to go home to your family and "try to summon up the will" to GIVE more. But what do we get in return? The thought that we know we helped someone today. Please, give me a break. Most of the children I see either don't want to be in class, want to go home, or can't deal with little stupid things they created (like picking a scab.) Meanwhile, I can't get done the things I need to get done like state mandated vision and hearing screenings, entering immunizations of new students and kindergarten students, medications, and dealing with children who really are sick, etc.

Rntracy

Specializes in LTC.

I kinda disagree about the dreams. lol

I dream about work. Usually after a rough shift. And its usually about what went bad during that shift. Not a nightmare but just a dream of me being at work and **** hitting the fan like it usually does. Although during the bad shift I feel like walking out the door. I would say my ratio of bad shifts to good shifts is 1 of 10.