Why In The Heck Should I Be A Loyal Nurse?

Companies were loyal to employees as recently as a couple of generations ago, but the good old days are gone forever. Why in the heck should I be loyal to my workplace when I know that the people in upper management would never show any loyalty to me? Nurses Announcements Archive Article

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As a nurse, is it really worth it to show loyalty to your place of employment? Perhaps there truly are benefits to being a loyal employee. Maybe not.

Your thoughts on workplace loyalty are probably dependent upon the generation in which you came of age. As recently as a couple of generations ago, it was common practice for companies to strive toward providing lifetime employment for all workers who performed at an acceptable level. In exchange for this implied promise of long term employment, most workers remained at the same workplace for 25, 30, 40+ years, or until retirement. In the distant past, corporations were fiercely loyal to employees, and employees gave back by being loyal to these corporations. The loyalty was mutual.

I am 31 years old and was born in 1981, so I was born at the very end of Generation X or the very beginning of Generation Y depending on the source I use to define the cutoff points for the generational cohorts. I was 20 years old when the Enron scandal unfolded in 2001 and watched as legions of loyal employees lost their jobs, retirement savings, and overall sense of security. The story behind the Enron collapse is complicated and way outside the scope of this article, but I will say one thing: the big wigs at the very top of that corporation did not show any loyalty to anyone but themselves.

My views on workplace loyalty are also shaped by the Great Recession of 2008 to 2009. During the last recession, companies laid off masses of employees without taking length of service, tenure, or loyalty into consideration. Benefits for workers have been eroding for years; however, this erosion has accelerated within the past few years. For example, many major healthcare systems are transferring a greater share of health care costs onto their employees. Also, defined benefit pension plans are largely a relic of the past, having been replaced with 401k plans and IRAs. In addition, many hospitals are hiring part-time and/or PRN employees only, as these jobs are cheaper to the corporation's bottom line than full-time benefited positions.

I also live and learn by ensuring that I do not repeat the mistakes of my more seasoned coworkers. The nurses in my metropolitan area who remain employed with the same workplace for 20+ years are often the first ones to be unjustly fired. I suspect this is due to the fact that they've topped out on the wage grid. I've seen the most loyal nurses get chewed up, spit out, discarded by healthcare corporations, and soon forgotten. When (or if) they find another job, it often comes with a substantial cut in pay and a zap to the soul. By the way, I live in an at-will employment state and unionized hospitals do not exist in the large metropolitan area where I work.

In summary, I am loyal to myself. I am loyal to my patients while I am on the clock and providing care to them. However, I will never be loyal to any entity that employs me. As soon as the people in upper management get tired of me, I know they'll terminate my employment without losing one minute of sleep over me. And as soon as my workplace no longer meets my needs, I will quit without feeling a morsel of guilt.

The feeling is mutual these days. It's nothing personal.

My Dad was a "company man" for most of my childhood until things at his company broke up in the late 1980s. I remember the company picnics and parties. His old coworkers and their families have remained lifelong friends with us.

Those days aren't coming back anytime soon.

Most of us have never experienced anything except the modern workplace.

I feel some loyalty towards my manager. There have been a couple times she's looked out for me. That's not being naive, as I was burned badly before I started working for her, so I've got my eyes wide open. She really is a good boss. (As far as bosses go! :) )

But the company? Not so much. I'm just as loyal towards them as they are towards the nursing staff. And that is NONE. They'll screw us over in a heartbeat. Little things here and there add up to big things. They talk a good game with their non-profit philanthropic spouting off about our mission and ideals. But they're just as full of corporate doublespeak as an HCA or Wal-Mart.

I was very loyal to the 4 or so units where I worked...until I got into CRNA school.... WOOOT! Always advocate for yourself when it comes to issues outside direct patient care. No one else will do it for you.

Specializes in SDU, Tele.
I feel some loyalty towards my manager. There have been a couple times she's looked out for me. That's not being naive, as I was burned badly before I started working for her, so I've got my eyes wide open. She really is a good boss. (As far as bosses go! :) )

But the company? Not so much. I'm just as loyal towards them as they are towards the nursing staff. And that is NONE. They'll screw us over in a heartbeat. Little things here and there add up to big things. They talk a good game with their non-profit philanthropic spouting off about our mission and ideals. But they're just as full of corporate doublespeak as an HCA or Wal-Mart.

i get you about the good boss. i love my boss. she has been good to me throughout nursing school. it makes all the difference...

but i wanna move on already. i needed to read this article. brings quite a few things into perspective!

Specializes in Med Surg.

I'm loyal to my employer without being naive. If I were to walk in tomorrow night only to find my boss ready with a pink slip, I wouldn't surprised. Not that I'm bad at my job, or that my boss, coworkers, and patients don't like me, but that's the nature of the business world. That being said, I am grateful to my boss for giving a new grad a chance. My coworkers have embraced me and I've had a wonderful environment to learn my new trade. If/when the time comes for me to leave, I'll give plenty of notice and leave professionally. A long as my boss and coworkers continue to show me loyalty, they'll get the same in return.

so true!

Specializes in Peds Medical Floor.

I worked at a place that worked to treat their employees right. We did company picnics, very fancy expensive dinners when you reached 5 years employment, 10 years, etc. The owner came and talked to the staff and actually gave a crap. In return the staff was great. Our LTC was so different than your "typical" nursing home. Then he decided to retire and sell his company. At the same time we got a new administrator for our particular branch who was all about the bottom dollar. She was sneaky and waited until the DON was out on maternity leave to screw me over. She tried to screw me over in a BIG way. I was out job hunting the next day and put in my notice as soon as I had a job. From what I heard the DON threw a wicked fit when she found out because I had been there 10 years. They paid for my schooling. I was a very good employee. "How can you do that? Now she's leaving. It's hard to find a great employee who sticks around!!" But the administrator didn't give a crap because they could bring in a new grad (in that terrible economy) and pay her way less than I was getting paid.

From what I hear, my old place of employment (a nursing home with easily over half of the staff having been there 5 years minimum) is going down the drain and becoming more of a "typical" nursing home with big staff turnover. People who have been there 20 years have left and when I talk to the ones who are still there they are pretty bitter and miserable and looking for a way out. Pretty sad.

I thank God for at-will employment because it works both ways.

When my time with an organization is done, I am free to part ways.

I get told "you're burning bridges" but it has yet to happen. In fact at two places that I have quit in the last 10 years both bosses that give references always state that they would hire me back in a heartbeat. Keeping and maintaining good relationships with a few that you work with is always a good idea.

Loyalty to my employer? No way in hell. Mainly, because it no longer works both ways.

At my employer up until about 2 years ago it was a company I felt pretty loyal to. Then it all changed. Now they are pushing out EVERYONE with any sort of decent experience or any major health issues. They hire complete idiots who will work for next to nothing. Recently the nurses have been referred to as peons and the bottom of the barrel per several doctors (which I find to be amusing consider the real winner doctors they have hired recently) The whole dynamic has changed. Guess what....patient care is no where near what it used to be. Our "satisfaction" scores are plummeting, which of course we get punished for. I am looking hardcore to get out of this toxic environment. There is no loyalty left on either side. I feel bad for those who are just 2-3 years away from retiring as they feel stuck. They have spent their whole working life at this one employer and now they feel too old to start over. They just pray they can last the next few years.

Specializes in ED, ICU, PSYCH, PP, CEN.

One place I was working at tried very hard to harass their older staff into quitting. Fortunately they only made it work on 2 nurses. The others are staying till they are fired. I have seen many nurses get thrown under the bus over the years. That said, my unit director is a very kind sweet lady who takes pts when we are short nurses. She is as close to perfect as one could ever be. I have been recruited by another unit and I always say no. I will never leave my current manager.

But if she goes, I may too. The place overall is just about money. We don't even get a decent holiday meal anymore.

Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.

I started my career in the late 70s, and in all of the years since, I have never seen what the OP describes as standard operating procedure. Executives, including nurse executives may wax and wane in favor, and I have seen entire departments eliminated or merged with other departments. In most of those cases, though, the displaced nurses and even nurse executives were offered other jobs within the network or at the very least, the first opportunity to bid on any open positions. The only nurses jobless at the end of the restructuring were those who chose to be. The only place I've ever "seen" the type of disloyalty to employees described by the OP is in the large California HMO where my sister, as nurse executive, purges her staff from time to time. I'd always assumed it was my sister's disloyalty to her employees, not the HMO's, although I could be wrong.

In my current job, working for a large healthcare system, what I've seen is that every employee we've had to let go as a poor fit is offered 2-4 weeks pay after their employment ends and all possible assistance in finding a new job within the system. Only the employees who are fired for cause (like the guy whose solution to a recalcitrant Pyxis was to kick in the screen or the guy who was found passed out in the employee bathroom surrounded by vials of Fentanyl with a needle in his arm) aren't offered the chance to find a new position in the system. That's the way it's been everywhere I've worked in the past 35 years.

1 Votes

Disloyalty comes in many forms. Ever have layoffs anywhere you've worked? That's a form of disloyalty. How about cutting of pensions? That's disloyalty. As an employee, I'm not entitled to one day work 25% less than I did the day before. Yet that's *exactly* the type of thing employers do when they cut benefits, they're suddenly giving us less compensation, yet expecting the exact same level of work. Those are all forms of disloyalty on the part of the employer.