Stop the (Deskilling) Merry-Go-Round, I Want to Get OFF!

de-skill [dee-skil] verb (used with object) to remove any need of skill, judgment, or initiative in: jobs being deskilled by automation. Health care experiments in deskilling the work force seem to crop up about once a decade. How does it happen and what can we do? Nurses Announcements Archive Article

Alternative title (courtesy of Brian Booth): How much is that cheap thing you bought going to cost you in the long run?

Once upon a time, the Powers-That-Be, residing in the ivory towers of academe, decided that nurses should be considered professional providers of health care. The main flaw in the situation at the time was the definition of professional, which implied university preparation with perhaps some advanced education on top... and too many of the "professionals" in the nursing field had been educated through hospitals or community colleges so were therefore not entitled to call themselves professionals. These lesser souls had been trained in the necessary skills to provide excellent care to their patients, but lacked the liberal arts education deemed essential to professionalism. And so the baby was thrown out with the bath water, a university education was declared the minimum for entry to practice as a professional nurse and much money changed hands.

The further from its roots nursing moved, the less it seemed the skills of patient care mattered. After all, professionals command professional remuneration, and no one wants to pay any more than they have to for things like washing bottoms. Besides, professional nurses have the documentation that indicates they have the education to supervise and manage bottom-washing.

So again the Powers-That-Be got together, determined to uncover methods of economy for the care they were required to provide. Their solution was to put the professionals in charge and hire others willing to wash bottoms for a smaller wage. They were shocked to discover, right about the time they were expecting to reap the benefits of this new regime, their costs actually started rising!

Unable to comprehend this unexpected outcome, they began to examine what was really happening. Imagine their surprise when they discovered that their patients were staying in hospital longer, for reasons such as serious ulcerations of the areas the bottom-washers were responsible for, new illnesses they had not arrived with, becoming ill with another patients' sickness and falling out of bed. After much deliberation it was determined that having untrained personnel responsible for multiple fragments of the care provided to patients, without any connecting-of-the-dots, was the cause. And so professional nurses were added back into the workplace. Only they were no longer being taught to wash bottoms and needed a lengthy orientation to patient care when they arrived.

It's too bad this isn't a fairy tale. Not in the UK, not in Canada, not in the US... it's real life. Today's nurses are not really being taught to care for patients during their 4 years of university. All of that comes later, once they've been hired into a direct care position where they find they lack the psychometric skills to perform the work. Hence the ever-expanding orientation period.

What used to require a few weeks at most, for the new nurse to become familiar with the ward layout, routines, paperwork and patient population has morphed into an unwieldy period of months. New hires require education not only related to specific patient populations but also a variety of basic nursing skills in order to function independently. The cost of this extended orientation period is exorbitant but must be borne in order to staff our health care facilities.

At the same time, the cost of providing direct care has continued to increase, causing health care systems to look for ways to economise. Because health care is a human-resources dependent endeavour, salaries comprise the lion's share of the budget. So how can a system save money on salaries? Introduce lesser-trained and often unregulated task-oriented personnel who are not responsible for critical decision-making, only to accomplishing their list of tasks... who will be paid considerably less than the nurses formerly providing the care.

Once the thin edge of the wedge has been inserted, the scope of duties these new personnel are performing can be stealthily and deliberately expanded until the nurse becomes little more than a supervisor, but still retains the responsibility and accountability of the profession toward all patients receiving care. Simple, effective implementation of this model of care brings the bottom line down. At least initially.

What leads to the failure of this model is the increase in morbidity and mortality seen once the whole train gets rolling at full speed. Readmissions, health-care related infections, pressure-related injuries, increased lengths of stay, unexpected deaths and other deleterious effects begin to compound on each other and the bottom line eventually suffers. Then the highly-paid and only mildly accountable upper management team rejigs the model, hiring more nurses and utilizing fewer auxiliary staff until the merry-go-round has gone full circle. All of this takes about a decade to complete its orbit, and a new one begins. Over the last two decades this model has been called "staff mix", "team nursing", "alternate models of care", "care delivery model redesign" and "workforce transformation" among others. The name is changed but the model remains the same. And on and on we go. We all know the definition of insanity...

Do we, as nurses, have a professional and ethical duty to combat this deliberate and insidious delegation of our core roles to lesser-skilled, lesser-educated, cheaper personnel? And what do we make the focus of our arguments? Of course we, as nurses, have both professional and ethical duties to our patients and the public at large. We can't make the "protecting our turf" aspect the basis for our debate; this tactic is universally viewed as distasteful and self-serving. However, keeping the patient at the center of our efforts, we are much more likely to capture the attention of the public, who represent our strongest, most effective allies.

The best, most effective method of getting our point across remains education of not only the Powers-That-Be but also the public and each other regarding the depth and breadth of our nursing practice. Over the years I've been told by numerous patients' parents (I have always worked in pediatrics) they had no idea how much nurses do in the day-to-day provision of health care, but their eyes had been opened. They commented on how rarely they spoke to - or even SAW - the most responsible physician, but they were always able to have their concerns addressed and their questions answered by their nurse. They commented on how much responsibility we carry and how our observations and actions have been integral to the patient's recovery.

Until and unless we nurses are able to clearly articulate exactly what we do and how we do it, the merry-go-round will continue its inexorable revolutions. It's very difficult to describe our role in health care and how we actually save lives and money but we have to find a way. Consumers of our services may eventually come to understand that we are not simply angels of mercy, physicians' handmaidens, task-driven routinized cogs in the wheel or bumwipers. We're actually the eyes, ears and hands of the physician, the voice of the patient and the backbone of the system. That's where we start.

Specializes in Med-Surg, NICU.
My question is: how do we assess our patients if we're not even touching them? If an aide is doing the bottom washing, tube feed hanging, med passing and ambulating am I - the RN responsible for assessing the patient - going to know that Mrs Smith in 321B is unable to turn herself at all, or that Mr Jones in 325A has new onset difficulty swallowing his meds, or that the young person with cancer in 318 has a skin tear between her buttocks? When I'm the one doing the bottom washing, I'm assessing the patient's skin integrity and motor strength, making note of quantity, colour and consistency of stool, and even assessing mental status by engaging the patient in conversation. The aide knows how to wash bottoms. Or hand over a med cup with a handful of tablets in it. Or how to set a rate on a feeding pump. Their focus is the task. For the RN or LPN, the focus is the patient; the task itself is secondary.

You kind of made my point that nursing isn't task-focused...

And I wasn't saying that nurses shouldn't touch their patients because they have to in order to assess them (duh). When I am in there bathing the patients, the nurses always tell me to come get them in order to do a skin assessment. The nurse has to assess them in order to pass meds, but my instructors places more emphasis on WHY we were passing the meds/giving injections. Sure we actually were passing out meds and setting tube feeds, but the nurse first and foremost is hired for her/his thinking skills and as you said, the task itself is secondary.

Thanks.

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
You kind of made my point that nursing isn't task-focused...

And I wasn't saying that nurses shouldn't touch their patients because they have to in order to assess them (duh). When I am in there bathing the patients, the nurses always tell me to come get them in order to do a skin assessment. The nurse has to assess them in order to pass meds, but my instructors places more emphasis on WHY we were passing the meds/giving injections. Sure we actually were passing out meds and setting tube feeds, but the nurse first and foremost is hired for her/his thinking skills and as you said, the task itself is secondary.

Thanks.

I got what you were saying. :)

Specializes in Behavioral health.
Yeah, but why the change? We did hundreds..hundreds of questions and it was rare to have an easy question. You HAD to study to pass the old NCLEX. I still don't buy that you can assess competency in 75 questions. As I said before, even my certification was a 150 with no shut off.

IMO the newer NCLEX dumbs down nursing. Does an MD have a computer shut off at 75?

Money! With a CAT exam you don't need to write as many questions and it takes less time to grade.

Specializes in Oncology; medical specialty website.
Yeah, but why the change? We did hundreds..hundreds of questions and it was rare to have an easy question. You HAD to study to pass the old NCLEX. I still don't buy that you can assess competency in 75 questions. As I said before, even my certification was a 150 with no shut off.

IMO the newer NCLEX dumbs down nursing. Does an MD have a computer shut off at 75?

I totally agree with you, and I too think it's ironic that a specialty certification requires 150 questions, but a licensing exam, the test that gets your foot in the door to the profession to begin with, can be completed in 75 questions.

Specializes in Behavioral health.
I totally agree with you, and I too think it's ironic that a specialty certification requires 150 questions, but a licensing exam, the test that gets your foot in the door to the profession to begin with, can be completed in 75 questions.

Not everyone gets 75 questions. That is the minimum if you are answering the hardest questions correctly. You can get as many as 200 questions.

https://www.ncsbn.org/1216.htm

Specializes in Parkinson's, stroke. elderly care rehab.

'Basic nursing care' is the most skilled kind of nursing there is, and needs years of experience before anyone is halfway competent in delivering it. Sitting around looking at monitors and acting on what they tell you. or scrutinising arterial gas results might be, in my opinion, more easily learned.

Specializes in Parkinson's, stroke. elderly care rehab.

My above comment seems to become detached from the post it was intended to answer. Hey-ho.

It fills me with hope, having carefully read all the responses so far, that nurses are aware of the problems within the system, and haven't given up on trying to solve them.

If I had my way, this article would be transcribed by monks onto vellum, using illuminated script, and a copy presented to each RN on qualifying, who would then take a solemn oath to re-read it every year and do everything in their power to stop their unique skills being sold off for use in a diluted form

My above comment seems to become detached from the post it was intended to answer. Hey-ho.

It fills me with hope, having carefully read all the responses so far, that nurses are aware of the problems within the system, and haven't given up on trying to solve them.

If I had my way, this article would be transcribed by monks onto vellum, using illuminated script, and a copy presented to each RN on qualifying, who would then take a solemn oath to re-read it every year and do everything in their power to stop their unique skills being sold off for use in a

diluted form

I would love to see this article widely published too, and not just for nurses, but for the general public.

Specializes in Parkinson's, stroke. elderly care rehab.

Whenever I feel the need to explain to a student what it is we actually do, I usually quote Virginia Henderson from 1966 (and I may well have become less than word-perfect over the years)

'The unique function of the nurse is to assist the individual, sick or well, in the performance of those activities contributing to health or its recovery (or to peaceful death) that he would otherwise perform unaided'

That does it for me; feel free to tell me if I've misquoted

Specializes in Just starting out in a Nursing Home..

hmm..I have been a c.n.a in homecare for about 2 years, one and half years exact. I am a nursing student or aspiring nursing student. I don't think I oriented for more than a month. To "wipe bottoms" or A.D.L's. The reason being, they put you on every wing and train you until you have "wiped bottoms" on every wing. Long term, Acute, etc..I don't know in my little travels of switching from homecare to facility care..and orientations. It depends on who is training you and I suppose what you have to offer is what you have to offer until you have the years of experience and hopefully pride in your work. There are alot of crappy agencies I have come across and well..I kind try not to let my bad experiences shape the kind of nurse I will be in the future. I don't think a 2 year or a 4 year degree necessarily dictates your scope. To a point but who trains you really has a stronger bearing on what you have to offer. I try to be humble and learn and do without it being a pi*^%&ing contest. After all, it is the patients that matter at they end of the day.

Ahhh nursing... while many things have changed over the 10 years that I have been a nurse, one thing that has not is how we treat each other... somehow an article about the deskilling of nursing practise being forced upon us from the outside results in comments undermining one group of nurses by another based on something that the undermined group have no control over. And we wonder why our work environment frequently changes but never gets better.

Specializes in Cath Lab, ICU's, Pediatric Critical Care.

Excellent article and responses!

tokmom, you got that right!! I can't believe all they have to get is 75 questions right. I graduated with an ADN in 1971. Two full days of tests: Medical, Surgical, Psych, Pediatrics, Obstetrics. The end of the 2nd day was a 2 hour test with possible 'test questions' they wanted to add to next years tests. My extra 2 hr test was all Pediatrics! And you needed to score a minimum from each area to obtain your RN. Had a roommate that failed the Peds test by 10 points...so no license.

How can someone who's not provided, and practiced, giving bedside care in school know they would like it, or become proficient in it?