Nursing is slavery Period!!!

Nurses Relations

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I am probably going to offend some of you and I apologize in advance for that.

However I really need a safe place to vent my frustrations about nursing and

this is the place.

A little background:

I have a Bachelors in Business. I worked in that field for just under 8 years. I liked it but it was starting to get boring and I felt I needed a challenge. I got my BSN and started working as a nurse for a big hospital. I didn't expect it to be all roses however I have to say what I have found in this profession has quickly turned me negative. I have been in this profession for over 2 years now and while I know that isn't long I have to be HONEST and say that I don't feel that I can honestly make it in this job.

Here is what I have noticed about the roles a nurse plays:

to administration: cogs (yet they don't want to pay the price required to keep us

so they keep increasing our task list, Responsibilites, documentation requirements,

etc while not increasing our pay)

to Dr: waitress/slave

to families: waitress/slave

Every job I have done went by satisfactory meaning I have never been written up or even had a verbal warning given. In this job people get written up for stupid stuff and no one thinks to give verbal warnings. The amount of demoralization that takes place on new grads is profound and now I understand why the smiles on new grad faces quickly turn sour. Every Dr I have s/w told me the same thing which is "get out of nursing or go higher fast . . . but do not stay in it"

Thus the message is clear that this profession needs a Major rehaul. Policies change on a daily basis (No Joke) and there is no effective means of getting the information across to all employees such that NO ONE has any idea what is the proper way of doing anything anymore. Everyone I've asked has a different idea and the new policy is not always on the intranet. The more nurses I talk to the more I realize they are not leaving this profession only because they do not have another option. The ones that do take it QUICK!

I keep hearing people tell me that nurses make such great money at the bedside but I have to say Nurses earn every single $ they make NO JOKE. We are expected to work tirelessly without taking bathroom breaks, lunches, etc. There is no regard for our healthy while all focus is given to patient safety. Now I know why nurses burn out at the rate that they do.

And after all is said and done the amount of responsibility and liability that a nurse carries is starting to increase. We live in such an age of Entitlement where people want the best care and they do NOT understand the stressors that are forged upon nurses such that if you don't bring them their cup of tea on time they get upset with you. I thought about pursuing my MSN in the clinical arena however after much deliberation I realized despite the fact that my desire to help people is strong I don't want the amount of liability that comes with it. I am working on getting out of it. Although I do feel like a failure because I will always remember that I wasn't able to make it in nursing.

I have spoken to other new grads about this and they feel the same way in fact a lot of them didn't even finish 1 year bedside nursing before they turned around and enrolled themselves in NP programs to get out of this dreary profession.

Please feel free to comment on this post. . .

First off: Thank you to all who replied. I appreciate all your responses.

2) Thank you applewhitern as you ECHO my sentiments EXACTLY.

3) I am sorry that I offended people by my use of the word slavery.

4) My intention was not to get into "which job, country, etc, has the worst working conditions".

BTW I have yet to find a Bedside Nurse who truly loves her job. All the ones that stand up and say they love it are NOT in Bedside Nursing.

Thank you to all of you who gave me the advice to try other Employers (union based) and possibly other specialties in Nursing before quitting

this profession. You are right I may find something "I love" where I can work in a decent environment without the BS. I am going to try it out!

Angel,

May I ask what do you do now?

Specializes in Bone Marrow Transplant; Education.

I am extremely sorry for your experience with nursing. I have been in nursing for over 20 years. I begin my career as a Bone Marrow Transplant Nurse. Grueling both mentally and physically. Was I working long hours? YES! Did I feel like I was a servant to the patients and family members? NEVER!! Did I feel like I was not appreciated? NEVER!! Was I supported by my employer if I had an issue? 100%!!

I have to agree with a previous comment that referred to not working in a good hospital. I have worked in both a Union and NON-Union hospital. Both have good and bad about them. I would suggest that if you are not happy with working conditions then be a change agent. That is the only way to make your working conditions improve.

I can't imagine doing any other career with all the given problems and concerns Nursing can have I LOVE MY JOB!! I now teach nursing to students. I pass on that passion for this profession with the same eagerness I had as a New grad. I foster the relationships with new grads and support them when they are out there working.

Nursing is one of the those professions that you either have the "caring" gene or you don't. If you recognize you don't then save your money on the degree and do something else. You have to sacrifice your feelings when working with patients because the job is not about you and your feelings at that time. IT IS ALL ABOUT THE PATIENTS!!!

PS: I was in bedside nursing for 90% of my career. I LOVED IT!! If I could physically go back to bedside nursing I would in a heartbeat. I am doing pseudo-bedside nursing with my students in the clinical setting. I STILL LOVE IT!!

Nursing is not a career you should enter because you become bored with another...Nursing is a career you should enter if you genuinely want to help people..It is hard work..physically and mentally demanding and carries huge responsibilities. You have to deal with people sometimes who are not very nice...I think it is interesting that you really don't mention patients..you don't mention any satisfaction in helping someone who is very ill recover...Have you ever just taken a couple of moments to talk to the grumpy, complaining patient to find out what they are thinking? We need caring compassionate nurses. We are dealing with patients who are sometimes at the worse possible place they have ever been in. I have heard so many young or new nurses say they want to be a nurse, but they don't want to touch patients, wipe bottoms...they want to be in "administration." None of us need this kind of a nurse taking care of us or our family members. You should probably move on...

Specializes in Acute Care, Rehab, Palliative.

I am in bedside nursing. I LOVE my job and I love being a nurse.Yes it is hard work but I get paid.I have great coworkers and my charge nurse is a gem.Yes the managers are generally idiots but they leave us alone most of the time.

I get all my breaks and I get out on time.

Specializes in Occupational Health; Adult ICU.

Nursing seems to have changed a lot over the past five years. Prior to 2008 I'd recommend nursing to just about anyone, toda, I no longer recommend nursing at all.

This being said, I love my job, and don't consider myself a slave, but I've been there, and seen it, and with schools pumping out grads at 2-4x the pace that they did prior to 2005, it's likely to only get worse.

There are exceptions and if you're diligent or lucky enough to find one, excellent.

I'm not sure how many of my class of '04 are still nurses--but a great deal of them aren't. The number one complaint is lateral violence--being bullied on the job (and forced reversing shifts and forced overtime, in my book fits into that category).

Find a niche, become excellent and highly credentialed in that niche.

...and I never thought I'd say this but I shall: "find a job in a place that has a union."

I have been an RN for over 8 years and I agree with everything you said. Your experience is not just true for new grads. Perhaps at one time nurses felt valued and respected; I have rarely been treated with either by administrators, doctors, patient family members or other nurses. I remember how proud my family was when I became a nurse. If I had had any idea what lay ahead of me in this profession I would definitely have chosen a different path.

You are VERY fortunate.

Specializes in OR Hearts 10.

I agree with the original poster, that's why after only 7 months back on the floor I'm headed back to the OR.

Except -- slavery NO....pure H E L L on most days YES.....

I agree with you on so many points. Hospital Nursing is draining. There are those who love it. My hats off to them. But it is a mentally and physically taxing profession. We are subjected to so much. Increasing responsibility, and tasks, no lunch breaks, bathroom breaks, increasing patient load. Down right rude patients, doctors, family members, and sometimes other nurses. You are not allowed to be sick, they call you on your day off, float you to other floors, send you home when they get ready and then tell you to be on call! I work in the south. Nursing here is unreal. Our medical floor was more like a psych ward for all the drug addicts who couldn't afford drugs at the end of the month. I actually had patients to tell me to wake them up so that they could meet other patients for a smoke! Unreal! Administration is run by people that never picked up a bedpan in their life. It is difficult, but I love being a nurse.

you may not be suited to being a nurse. The work is hard, it's more of a vocation than a "job."

Wow, I want your job!

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