Young, Thin, and Cute New Hires

The management at my place of employment recently hired a group of nurses who are all youngish, slim, and physically attractive as a response to declining patient satisfaction scores. Is the solution working? We can only wait and see. Nurses Relations Article

My workplace, a freestanding specialty hospital owned by a for-profit corporation that operates multiple facilities across the United States, has been having recent troubles with low Press Ganey patient satisfaction scores. This does not bode well in an era where patient satisfaction scores are tied to Medicare reimbursement rates.

Patients typically complain on the survey forms about random issues such as the food, the semiprivate rooms, their loud roommates, and the aloof manner of some of the physicians. Some mention that nursing staff failed to keep them informed. Once in a blue moon a patient comments that the hospital employs too many 'foreign nurses' or has staff who cannot 'speak English.' Whatever.

To combat the chronically low patient satisfaction scores, the managerial staff implemented a mix of interventions which they believed would make patients and families feel more 'cared for.' Hourly rounds, bedside rounding at the change of shift, more scripting, and more smiles have been put into action without much positive effect on the Press Ganey scores.

"What was management's next solution?" you're probably wondering. Administration announced they were hiring good people who were more friendly, skilled, positive, and indicated during their interviews that they actually wanted to care for patients. Well, the latest new hires have initiated more questions than answers.

Where do I start? They are all youngish, ranging from early 20s to early 30s. They are all fairly slim, nicely shaped, and physically attractive. The most experienced new hire has about six years of nursing experience, while the remaining nurses have anywhere from one to three years under their belts. The majority have no acute care experience and are learning certain procedural skills for the very first time: starting peripheral IV access, administering blood, performing wound care, operating feeding tube pumps, and so forth.

Don't get me wrong. I'm not an 'old nurse' who is 'eating the young.' I am 32 years old with seven years of experience, and I had no acute care experience prior to taking a job at this facility several years ago. The new hires all have good personalities and are seemingly pleasant to work with. In addition, we all must start somewhere.

However, they are not necessarily more skilled or more eager to care for patients like management said they would be. Several of these nurses remain seated at the nurses station while staring into a smart phone as call lights are ringing. A few walk into patient rooms without employing basic relational skills such as knocking, introducing themselves, or explaining what they are planning to do. I'm not complaining; I'm merely observing.

Here are my thoughts on this issue. Rather than hire a mix of highly experienced and relatively inexperienced nurses, the managerial staff opted to save on labor costs by hiring younger nurses with a certain attractive look that patients and families might find appealing. They hired no new grads because, I assume, they did not want to spend the staggering amount of money on 3-month orientation periods. They hired no one with 15, 20, 25, or 30+ years of experience because human resources would be forced to offer highly experienced nurses a significantly higher rate of pay per the wage grid. They hired no nurses who were badly overweight, gray-haired, or outwardly appeared to have health problems that would drive up insurance costs. To presumably get the most bang for their buck, most of the new hires have between one and three years of experience.

How is this experiment turning out? We shall wait and see.

young-thin-and-cute-new-hires.pdf

Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.
Why are there so many negative theads by certain individuals on this board, aimed at lecturing new grads? It's always the same theme, the same people posting it.

Contrary to most of the sheepish comments here, I applaud the facility in the OP for being one of the few who are so willing to hire large numbers of new grads.

Are people afraid of their unit's power structure being threatened or something? Drop the complex already, guys. New grads are the future. The new graduate nurse's role today is more skilled, more technical, relies on a larger body of knowledge, and it is quite honestly way more difficult now than it ever has been. Here's for a change of pace: I applaud all the new graduate nurses who are starting fresh on their orientations. All of them rock, and the more young faces we have, the better off the profession will be, regardless of whether they are thin or not. I know some people resent hearing this, but the young, new nurses are the ones who bring about change to the profession and they are truly the heart of nursing. New grads shouldn't change to the stale culture of their workplace. Instead, they should be actively encouraged to make the workplace change more to their liking.

It is my belief that their young, vibrant personalities and skill with technology will make them far superior nurses than their predecessors have ever been, and I applaud them for that. To all the new grads out there: Holla. Rock on, and continue to show your confidence. You're doing great, and you are fine the way you are.

This attitude will only cause friction and the development of factions in the workplace because it's full of generalizations and sets up an adversarial relationship right out of the gate. It is annoying when people lump a group together based on an arbitrary characteristic, whether it is a positive trait or a negative trait. This thread doesn't anger me in the least, and I'm not being defensive. Just that you will be working with nurses of a wide variety of ages and levels of experience. Not all new grads are young. Rising numbers are second-career students. Anyway, I don't think Commuter's facility was hiring new grads, just young, thin, cute nurses.

Yeah, I can see that. I think that nursing as a whole is a professional carreer, but some fields are more professional than others. Psych nursing, for example is pretty lax. I am an easy going person but even I look around sometimes and think "what corner did they these people come from?" But the birthing center I had a rotation in was very much a buttoned up type of place.

Specializes in geriatrics.

Something to mention that many new grads (with the exception of second career nurses) have not developed is life skills. Not ALL, but many....before I get flamed....because this comes with living on your own for a while, working various jobs, and developing a solid sense of yourself. This occurs through time and experience. You just don't know at 23 what you know at 40. However, new grads bring an energy to the unit and they've learned the latest in EBP. We learn from each other, and if a unit hopes to thrive, a mix of new grads and seasoned nurses is beneficial. Quite honestly, all the infighting does nothing positive for the profession.

Specializes in RN, BSN, CHDN.

Commuter, this is a great article and has provoked a great debate, thank you!

When I started nursing back in the late 80's all nurses were young, most of us started at 18 and became an RN at 21-22 years old it was the norm. I was a little older at 26 but still young.

You didn't see many older nurses back then so everybody got looked after by the young and glamorous

Nobody ate us, the difference between today and yesteryear is the way new nurses have been trained period. Less hands on half their life in college a couple of days here and there in clinical.

We spent 8 weeks every 10 weeks working on the floor side by side the nurses, learning hands on care.

I remember talking to an RN who said she had been an RN for 12 years it shocked me LOL I thought gosh I can barely get through the training let alone think I will be in the job 12 years.

So here I am one of those 50 plus year old nurses, who believe it or not has really good computer skills and keep myself abreast of all current situations. 24 years as a nurse! Loved nearly every min of it.

I love the young nurses, I do believe there is room for them however I do believe like life there has to be a great mix of ages and experience.

some people are dramatic 'offendonistas' who purposely seek to become offended when no offense was intended.

My new favorite word!!

Specializes in Critical Care, ED, Cath lab, CTPAC,Trauma.

Here is another thread that is experiencing the mass removal of experience from the bedside, https://allnurses.com/nurse-colleague-patient/mass-exodus-staff-818823.html#post7200313.

With the economy the way it is...and the plethora of nurses looking or jobs...this treatment of the profession as a whole will continue until the winds change and the economy recovers

Specializes in RN-BC, ONC, CEN... I've been around.
OK, honestly, do you usually write all that alphabet soup after your name? Seriously. . .?

LOL, yes.

Specializes in Critical Care, Float Pool Nursing.
I am the OP. My facility hired no new grads.

None of the new hires are new grads, as my workplace would loathe having to spend staggering amounts of money on 3-month new grad orientations. They all have anywhere from one to six years of experience.

I also notice that my workplace hired no 45-year-old newer nurses, even though plenty of 'older' second-career new nurses are looking for work in the metro area where I live.

In that case, your OP is even worse than I imagined. No new grads? Sounds like a terrible, anti-education, anti-teaching facility to me. Is this in the boonies of Wyoming or something?

At any rate, it sounds like your facility is going for the next best thing to new grads: young people with little experience and very open minds. Congratulations to them on doing something right. :dead:

It can be a sad thing when nursing becomes more commercialized when they have to hire these types of people.

Specializes in burn ICU, SICU, ER, Trauma Rapid Response.
How about the fact i graduated with a 3.7GPA and made the deans list 4 years running.

(shrug) That is an impressive ACADEMIC acomplishment and may well benifit you when you get around to applying to grad school. However since we are talking about floor nursing and we all know nursing school has little in common with NURSING, and there is no inducation that good grades in nursing school = sucess in nursing.

Specializes in OR.

Some people seem to have missed my point, which is that units need a healthy mix of experience and inexperience. Then again, some people are dramatic 'offendonistas' who purposely seek to become offended when no offense was intended.

But if a new, cute nurse writes a post about how she disagrees with her nursing unit hiring a bunch of older, ugly nurses, she would be crucified.

Its rather immature to write a long post obviously biased against new nurses and then state afterward you weren't meaning to be offensive.

Every nurse can bring something to the table that is new and exciting. Even 24 year olds.

Specializes in Home Health.

LOL, the comparison is too funny!