Do you miss patient care?

Specialties Informatics

Published

I'm interested in transitioning into NI, so I've interviewed a few nurses working in similar roles, and they often express disappointment that they don't get the satisfaction of working directly with patients. I'm feeling a bit burned out on patient care right now, so I guess I didn't give much thought to missing it, but it seems to be a common theme, so I want to investigate it further.

If you're a nurse working in an informatics role, do you miss working directly with patients? Do you think you could go back to patient care if you wanted to? Do you get enough satisfaction from your job that you are helping care providers provide better care to patients, or do you miss having that hands-on impact on patients?

Thanks!

I do miss it to a degree, I miss the instant gratification of feeling fulfilled after you help a patient come back from the brink of death (PICU nurse adrenaline talking) and now it's like it's after a long project to get that same sense of yes I did it! I think it takes a lot of soul searching to come off the floor, but I think if your truly want this as a future you could do it.

I am still debating if a return to the floor is in the cards for me, but I would do my NP, if I return, but I am continuing to try new things in this informatics role and it's going to keep on expanding as years go on. I say grab hold now, it's not going anywhere.

Thanks for your response! It sounds like 100% of the informatics nurses I've asked about this are considering a return to the floor. But then again, 100% of the floor nurses I talk to are trying to get off the floor, so maybe it's a "grass is greener" phenomenon! Therefore, it seems like no matter how much thought I put into it, I might never be truly "ready" to give up patient care forever.

I like your comparison of the satisfaction of completing a project with the satisfaction (and adrenaline rush!) of helping a patient. It's good to know there are similar experiences. Thanks!

Specializes in informatics for 10 years.

This is interesting, we were just having this conversation yesterday before a meeting. How many of us miss patient care or working on the floors? There were 6 nurses in the room and out of the 6 nurses we all said, HELL NO, we don't miss patient care, nor do we want to go back to floor work. I know 6 nurses is not many, but my experience has been that it is rare to meet a nurse in the informatics field who wants to go back to the clinical floor. Yes, many will tell you they keep their licenses up to date just in case, but I rarely ever meet one that tells me, "I miss patient care, Ï'm dying to get back to floor nursing." I personally don't miss patient care and I would never ever get back to floor nursing. :cool:

I would say that if they miss patient care THAT much, then maybe informatics isn't for them. I know there are some that like to have their cake and eat it too by working part time on the floor, but most informatics positions do require a full time committment. Yes, I do miss the patients, but I do NOT miss floor nursing and everything that comes with it. I think that's the distinction. I loved making that personal connection with the patients, but dealing with the supervisors, catty and gossipy nurses and hospital politics and having every decision you make over-analysed I do NOT miss! I also really don't miss shiftwork, working nights, weekends and holidays!

Yes, I do miss the patients, but I do NOT miss floor nursing and everything that comes with it. I think that's the distinction. I loved making that personal connection with the patients, but dealing with the supervisors, catty and gossipy nurses and hospital politics and having every decision you make over-analysed I do NOT miss! I also really don't miss shiftwork, working nights, weekends and holidays!

Good distinction, I guess that's probably true. If only there were a way to have it all!

Well, there are always volunteer opportunites or part-time weekend work if you have the time. Another good way to go is to join the Army or Air Force Reserves. You get to be a "real nurse" one weekend a month and two weeks every year. And no, I'm not a military recruiter ;).

I know without a doubt that I will not miss floor nursing at all. I will miss my prn home nursing job and if I ever went back to patient care it will be in that capacity.

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