I hate being a nurse

Nurses LPN/LVN

Published

hey everybody, I've worked as a nurse for four years in a long-term care facility/rehabilitation center. I can honestly say that being an LPN in my setting is probably the worst job anybody could ever have. I make more money than I would anywhere else, but it's definitely not worth it. I know what you're thinking. Nursing varies so much. Why don't I just change fields? But, I'm married with children. I can't take a ginormous pay cut because I'm not happy at work.

Any nurse knows that I'm beating a dead horse when I bring up staffing, but it has to be said. How the hell can 2 nurses and 3 nursing assistants take care of 60 people? This ratio is rationalized by saying that in a rehab setting the acuity level is lower than that of the hospital. ********! The acuity level is whatever the patient's status is when the hospital bleeds the payor source dry and needs another bed. I've got 35 patients to be responsible for, and they are no less acute than they were when on the unit. State legislation mandates a minimum ratio for staff to patients. This doesn't help because when checking for compliance, the facility is including all the office nurses (directors of nursing, assistant directors of nursing, assessment coordinators, staff development, etc). Corporate and other contracts involved dictate a labyrinth of rules involved when staffing for the shift. Which might I add is a duty that falls right in the lap of the staff nurses. surprised? Corporate says you may have a maximum of X amount of staff. (God forbid that there be a second to...I don't know talk to a patient. this would constitute down time) The state then says you must have a minimum of X amount of staff. They try to make it sound like there is some room to play with it, but in all reality. X=X. Corporate dictates that we can not staff anymore than the minimum. the maximum is the minimum. :uhoh3:

That brings me to my next point. Nursing as an institution is so top heavy. Take my unit for example. Two nurses do the work. Meanwhile, 8 nurses supervise. Yea, I said 8. And they are not alone. Then you have the administration and their quest for quality control. Then there's the therapists and other various non-nursing staff and their never ending concern for what the nurses are doing. Wouldn't the patients be better served with 2 supervisors and 8 hands-on nurses. Can anybody say MICROMANAGEMENT? To the "jump off a bridge" degree. It doesn't stop there. That was only the in-house supervision. It doesn't stop there; not even close. It goes on to include OSHA, corporate, the state board, the ombudsman, social services, etc, etc, etc. Everybody wants to know what 2 ******* nurses are doing.

Don't get me started on the absurdity of pain control scrutiny. when I have to wake you up to give you your pain medication because you rated it a wopping 10 on a scale of 0-10. sleeping at a 10? get real. and annoying family members." NO! your 100 year old mom is not better than she was 90 minutes ago. She is still brain dead. can I get off the phone now?" "she's been here for years and I've never met you, and you wanna come in and scrutinize the staff." "TAKE THEM HOME WITH YOU if you can do so much better" They can try to argue that they're paying out the ass for good care. What they don't know is that I can open the chart and see that the payor source is medicare and medicaid every time. So whose paying what? In fact, I am paying out the ass for the care that I provide. Don't get me started on the google'ologist. You know what I'm talking about. The person who just got done reading about every side effect and possible cause....on some dot com web site. Do they know that I can go on wikipedia and say that vitamin C causes coronary artery disease right now and a million people idiots would quit drinking juice by tomorrow? I'm all for patient advocacy, but nurses are not the bad guys. and I'm all for patient empowerment through education, but **** it let me do my job.

Nursing shortage? what nursing shortage? Did you know that the current number of available nursing positions in America pales in comparison to the number of licensed nurses that are not working as such. These people came to nursing with good intentions, couldn't stand it anymore, and left nursing just like that. It would be naive to think that they made that decision without much thought. Think of all the time, energy, and money spent on education to work as a nurse. Then think of what it would take to make people turn their backs on it. It's not an illusion. I'm not just one burned out nurse who didn't like his job. You've just heard the voice of thousands.

I am soo sorry you feel that way, Nursing is a call not a job. You should reconsider working in other areas of a hospital setting. I don't blame you at all, I could not and will not work in a place like that. That's why all my experienced has been in the ER, ICU, PACU, TEL and Burn unit. At the end of your shift you'll feel great that you help someone in need and not feel just like a body, cleaning rears, pushing bed pan and emptying urinal...Nursing is more than that, but a lot of employers try to use us as nurse assistance or slaves. Do what would make you happy, something that you could feel proud of what you do day in and day out, and not just a job that puts food on the table. Good luck and change jobs...you'll see, you will like it..I promised!

Nursing is a call not a job.

It's a job and being a martyr helps no one. Maybe you want to slave away for peanuts because "it's a calling", but most of us don't.

At the end of your shift you'll feel great that you help someone in need and not feel just like a body, cleaning rears, pushing bed pan and emptying urinal...Nursing is more than that, but a lot of employers try to use us as nurse assistance or slaves.

Well, if it's really "a calling", you shouldn't mind doing any of that. You shouldn't feel like a "slave". Why is tending to the patients most delicate and basic needs so awful? It's what we do!

And the job nursing assistants do IS our job.

I completely agree with you, HQ, as far as it is our job. I work in LTC...it's my first nursing job and I've been there about 15 months...but I COMPLETELY understand what the person who wrote this post was feeling....my job is exactly the same way and I'm feeling the burn already because I try to do too much.

But back to what I was saying, it amazes me that my cnas thank me for helping them roll someone or toilet someone and it completely blows my mind when I hear stories similar to such and such a nurse chased me down to get a resident a cup of water. We may make more than the cnas...but they are nursing assistants...which implies that we all share some of the same responsibilities...like cleaning a bedpan and wiping bottoms.

I love that you said all this.

I'm in LTC and feel exactly the same. Exactly.

I haven't found a solution yet, but I've been applying to doctor's offices.

I completely understand! As a former LTC nurse, how are we supposed to pass meds to 30+ people, do accu checks, give insulin, chart, help feed, another round of meds, treatments, more charting and God help us if someone falls! I am soon to be out of the nursing field altogether. I'm a pediatric home health nurse and these families are just as demanding as the administrative carpet walker nurses in the skilled nursing homes.

Specializes in Psych, case-management, geriatrics, peds.

Give her a break. She's just venting and obviously, she is burnt out.

Specializes in Psych, case-management, geriatrics, peds.

Yep, I've done it. I would never work in a traditional nursing home again. I'd rather starve on the street. In fact, one would be hard-pressed to find a bedside nursing job where you're not treated like crap. Yes, you can change careers. I have a couple other degrees now and 2 other careers so I would never have to do nursing again. Many people with kids (and even single moms with kids) change careers. At least, for now, do something else besides long term care.

Specializes in VA, Ortho, Med/Surg.

Does anyone know if memory care facilities are better than traditional nursing homes?

I understand your frustration completely, I've worked in a similar situation on nights and I was responsible for 20-30 patients with 1 CNA. It's not fair to work under these conditions and that's why turnover is so high in transitional care/rehab settings. Staying at a job you hate can and will make you a bitter, jaded burned out nurse. Look for another job in another area of nursing. Your happiness is the most important thing.

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