An open letter to the #NursesUnite movement

I’ve had this on my mind for quite some time, but am now able to put it into words. Since Joy Behar opened her mouth and let her ignorance towards the nursing profession spill out, my timeline has been flooded with Nursing Stethoscope Selfies and personal outrages against those comments. Nurses General Nursing Article

An open letter in response to #NursesUnite:

It is amazing that you have finally found a cause to unite over (#nursesunite), however, I find it hard to jump on board this superficial bandwagon that actually serves the nursing profession no purpose whatsoever.

I have pondered over the last week why it is that so many nurses take such offense to the few words of an ignorant television host, being that Ms. Behar has zero impact or influence on the healthcare profession or the role of nursing, yet they do nothing to end the many real issues plaguing the nursing profession.

The only conclusion that I can come up with is that nurses feel that they can't do much to change the real problems in nursing, so they unite and attack over something that really makes no difference at all to us as a whole.

There are so many other REAL aspects of the nursing profession to unite over to influence change that will actually make a difference to nursing. There are many "dirty secrets" of nursing that go unspoken and ignored, many of which are cultivated by nurses themselves.

Bullying, horizontal violence, inadequate training, nurses "eating their young", 12+ hour shifts, no breaks, high acuities, too many patients per nurse, etc.

I went into nursing because I like to help people. I am empathetic. I am a quick thinker. I am smart. But that isn't actually what makes a nurse successful in this profession, as I have come to find out. As I have come to find out, nursing has less to do with how competent or compassionate you are, and more to do with how much you can, or are willing to, put up with. The nursing culture is full of "suck it ups" and "oh well, it is how it is."

What seems to make a nurse successful is the ability to withstand bullying, intimidation, being talked down to by supervisors, patients, family members, and doctors. The ability to get over inadequate training and support provided by management and your peers and to be okay with unsafe patio to nurse ratios. You'll feel more confident in time, it's just a part of nursing.

To be successful in nursing, you have to be okay with having zero time to take a break (even a bathroom break) and most times, taking your lunch sometimes 8 hours past your start time, or sometimes not even getting a lunch. You have to be okay with being dehydrated while hanging patient's IV bags and shaking from not being able to take a break and eat while you are checking diabetic's blood sugars and teaching the importance of proper urinary hygiene to avoid UTIs while you've been holding your own urine for the past 5 hours. Nurses are expected to just be okay with it. It's just a part of nursing, right?

You have to be okay with coming in early to "get familiar" with your patient load and not getting paid for that time. You have to be okay with staying well past your shift to give report on a regular basis, taking your total time on the clock (and off) well into 14-15 hours, which means that you are so tired driving home that you hope you make it there without crashing because your brain is tired mush. But long shifts are just a part of nursing.

You have to be okay with having to do more with less, even if it affects patient safety and outcomes. You have to be okay with doctors yelling at you and treating you like you're an incompetent idiot rather than a professional colleague in health care. You know that if you call a doctor to clarify orders or to update on your mutual patient, you may be met with disdain and sarcasm. But that's okay too, because it's just a part of nursing.

Nurses know this to be true. Nurses know these are the dirty secrets of nursing. Nurses know that bullying is rampant. Yet, the answer to this problem is "grow a thicker skin" or "you'll just get used to it".

Nurses know that understaffing is a given and that high acuity and high patient loads per nurse is more common than not. Nurses know this isn't safe, they know the care being given isn't what it should or could be, but they do not unite together against it and demand change.

Nurses know that there is often a lack of adequate training and preceptorship for new grads and new employees entering new specialty areas and that too many times nurses get thrown to the wolves and it's a sink or swim mentality. But, this is just a part of nursing we accept.

Nurses know this. They live it. They experience it. It is the culture of nursing. Yet, there is no call to end it. No hash tag. No selfies. No viral campaign on social media. No standing up to it. Just the continued mentality that these things are just a part of nursing that you have to accept or leave.

So, instead of uniting together against something or someone that has no impact on nursing, why not stand up and unite against the things that are killing the nursing profession and demand they change?

Sincerely,

A disillusioned nurse

Specializes in Peds/Neo CCT,Flight, ER, Hem/Onc.
Also, am I the only one that thinks Miss Colorado's monologue sounded like a complete fabrication? Maybe there was a bit of truth to it (who hasn't taken care of a sweet man with Alzheimer's?), but it sounded way too much like a conversation that nursing students imagine they will have with their future patients.

No, you aren't the only one. I found it maudlin, self-aggrandizing and frankly, not really believable. Nor did I think it was very well executed. But I'm not fond of dramatic monologues to begin with so I might be biased. I clicked on the link on FB because it described it as "amazing" but for me it was meh.

Did anyone watch the clip from The View? I'm only watching it because nurses are posting it on FB. I just thought it was funny that Raven had such a sour look in her face throughout the whole segment. C'mon, at least try.

I really hope that this is the start of change for nursing. I don't know if anyone is part of the "Show me your stethoscope" group, but there is a girl who posted that she is making an appearance on Fox and Friends tomorrow and has 4 minutes on air. She hoped to discuss Senate Bill 864 to establish nationwide ratios.

My point of writing this open letter is to say that nurses are standing up in unity against something that really does not matter to us in the end. It's going to trend for a while, and then it will pass and the negative aspects of nursing culture and nursing workplace issues will still be there, unchanged by #nursesunite. It's a superficial movement that will not enact change. So what if advertisers pulled out, what exactly does that do for anyone except the sense of a win in a fight that does not matter at all.

All this "standing up in unity" does is broadcast loudly and clearly to anyone who will listen that there are nurses who are immature and foolish enough to waste their time taking a stand against matters that are of no real importance or consequence to the nursing profession, or to the quality of care patients receive.

Very well worded. I love your post. However, my explanation for this talk show issue getting under my skin is this:

The comments on the View are part of a larger picture going on where society views us as servants. Press Ganey anyone? We're medical professionals with TALENT. The View and the general public don't view us as talented medical professionals who NEED proper staffing, safe ratios, proper equipment... The general public has no clue the knowledge base we nurses have nor the difference we make in the world. We have to kiss butt and take orders for Diet Coke (view article) to get good....grrrr I hate this word, let me choke it out....customer service ratings.

In summary the comments on The View are part of a much bigger picture/problem going on which is serving as a platform to finally speak out about what we REALLY do as nurses. Or really SHOULD be doing anyway instead of being servants to patients and family.

Specializes in Hospice.
Did anyone watch the clip from The View? I'm only watching it because nurses are posting it on FB. I just thought it was funny that Raven had such a sour look in her face throughout the whole segment. C'mon, at least try.

I really hope that this is the start of change for nursing. I don't know if anyone is part of the "Show me your stethoscope" group, but there is a girl who posted that she is making an appearance on Fox and Friends tomorrow and has 4 minutes on air. She hoped to discuss Senate Bill 864 to establish nationwide ratios.

I think Raven's problem is that she has a natural resting b**** face. She had the same look when she was 4 and doing the Cosby show.

I think Raven's problem is that she has a natural resting b**** face. She had the same look when she was 4 and doing the Cosby show.

Hahhahahahahaha!!!

Specializes in Registered Nurse.
Did anyone watch the clip from The View? I'm only watching it because nurses are posting it on FB. I just thought it was funny that Raven had such a sour look in her face throughout the whole segment. C'mon, at least try.

I really hope that this is the start of change for nursing. I don't know if anyone is part of the "Show me your stethoscope" group, but there is a girl who posted that she is making an appearance on Fox and Friends tomorrow and has 4 minutes on air. She hoped to discuss Senate Bill 864 to establish nationwide ratios.

It would be great to get national ratios! I'm not sure they'd pick the right numbers...but it's a start. I actually like acuity based staffing.

Specializes in Labor and Delivery.
I think Raven's problem is that she has a natural resting b**** face. She had the same look when she was 4 and doing the Cosby show.

Lol. Some of the sweetest people I have ever met have "Resting b**ch face."

It would be great to get national ratios! I'm not sure they'd pick the right numbers...but it's a start. I actually like acuity based staffing.

At least it's a step in the right direction.

Specializes in Family Nurse Practitioner.
Um, I don't "unite" with anyone over the injustices of nursing because I have bills to pay. Let's not forget that nurses are quite replaceable these days and employers can fire anyone without reason in an at-will state.

Everyone has bills to pay but if we continue to act as martyrs because we fear losing our crappy jobs nothing will ever improve and it sure seems to me as if things are actually getting worse. Its like when we were lobbying in Maryland for NP independent practice a few did the actual heavy lifting and everyone else just reaped the rewards. Its annoying.

Specializes in OB.
Everyone has bills to pay but if we continue to act as martyrs because we fear losing our crappy jobs nothing will ever improve and it sure seems to me as if things are actually getting worse. Its like when we were lobbying in Maryland for NP independent practice a few did the actual heavy lifting and everyone else just reaped the rewards. Its annoying.

Exactly. How do people think change is effected? Magic? "I don't even believe in unions" but then in the same paragraph stating "I'm not sure what it would take to solve these issues" is baffling to me. To make changes in the workplace you have to lobby for laws protecting workers. This is hard but necessary work, but it's no mystery.

Specializes in Hospital medicine; NP precepting; staff education.
This is the way I feel...the fact that SO many people have lost their minds over a flippant comment that some d-list celebrity made on a daytime talk show makes nurses look like the have an enormous inferiority complex.

Also, am I the only one that thinks Miss Colorado's monologue sounded like a complete fabrication? Maybe there was a bit of truth to it (who hasn't taken care of a sweet man with Alzheimer's?), but it sounded way too much like a conversation that nursing students imagine they will have with their future patients.

I dont' think if was a fabrication, but I swear I read that same thing here before the Miss America pageant.