Be A Nurse They Said...

Is there really a nursing shortage or is there a tolerance for abuse shortage? Nurses General Nursing Article

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Be A Nurse They Said...

Have you heard; there’s a nursing shortage? I would beg to differ and say there are plenty of nurses, many who would like to remain in practice even if it meant long hours at the bedside, if they were given the respect they earned with their degree. However, the mindset at large is that nursing is a job, not a profession. The tolerance for accepting low wages, unsafe staffing ratios, working long hours, and constant abuse, has decreased, which is a good thing.

Why are they leaving the bedside?

Nurses want to leave because it has become overwhelming. Arriving to work and never knowing if you will remain on your unit vs. being sent to an unfamiliar unit, the patient: nurse ratio (4:1 vs. 8:1), and the availability of ancillary staff. These variables lead to anxiety before a shift even begins. Add to that the question of the new nurse: "Am I going to be forced to be charge nurse with only six months of experience?" These are genuine issues that are seen at the bedside every day.

What are nurses to do? Until state boards of nursing mandate flexible work schedules, mentorship programs for new nurses, increased autonomy, and safe staffing ratios, this will continue to be an issue.

Are 12 hour shifts safe?

Mercer (2021), recommended nurses work four days per week, 10-hour shifts. The nurse would provide 8 hours of direct patient care and two hours of thorough patient handoffs and quality improvement projects. This would reduce the stress and exhaustion the 12-hour shift places on the nurse, which in reality is a 14-hour shift. Other research has demonstrated a correlation between medication errors, near misses, and fatigue.

Why do nurses eat their young?

Mentoring new graduate nurses has been lacking for far too long. The old adage, nurses eat their young, is real. The nurse residency craze has been active for several years now but has failed to provide the mentorship so many new graduates crave. Originally designed to provide support and mentorship for all new graduates for their first year in the profession, it has instead become a continuation of nursing school. Nursing staff turnover of new graduates would likely decrease, and job satisfaction scores would likely increase if they were given the tools and support necessary for success. Most nurse residency programs have turned into one day a month of lectures and projects with very little mentoring.

How many are too many?

The Conversation at every hospital across the country is “Safe RN-to-Patient staffing ratios”. According to McHugh et al. (2016), in four states with a better work environment and low patient-to-nurse ratios on medical-surgical units, there was an increased survival rate if the patient had a cardiac arrest.

It is common sense that fewer patients per nurse will result in more care provided for each patient and less stress on the nurse, increasing job satisfaction. But as we know, common sense isn’t always common. By reducing the amount of stress per nurse, job turnover rates would decrease which in turn would decrease the need for contract and PRN nurses, ultimately saving valuable dollars. Nursing organizations such as the American Nurses Association (ANA) encourage nurses to participate in national, state, and local nursing organizations that focus on policy that impacts nursing practice. Something as simple as writing to members of Congress to encourage them to support safe staffing ratios in all hospitals does not require much time or effort on our part. It is only through these mechanisms that we will see change.  

Me, myself, and I

There are very few hospitals that allow nurses to practice with any degree of autonomy. Nurses are educated and licensed professionals who spend 12 hours a day with patients, yet we are not trusted to hold blood pressure medications on patients with low blood pressures without calling the healthcare provider for approval. We take years of pharmacology but are forced to have a dual sign-off when administering anticoagulants and insulin. We cannot make our patients NPO without a doctor’s order even when we clearly see our patients struggling to swallow without coughing. When nurses are given the freedom to make decisions in non-life-threatening situations, the physician, nurse, and patient are all satisfied, and the delay in care is removed from the equation.

Increasing enrollment…Who is going to teach them?

Unfortunately for nurse educators, the answer to the nursing shortages throughout history seems to be increasing the number of students admitted to nursing programs. This is not always the best solution due to the shortage of nursing faculty. Much like bedside nurses, nurse faculty are overworked, understaffed, and underpaid. Universities must understand that while their institutions need students, it should not be at the expense of their faculty. The demographic of nursing faculty is an ever-aging group. Young nurses do not have the experience or desire to be educators at the beginning of their careers when looking for top dollar to pay back student loans and raise families. The vast majority of nurse faculty are over the age of 50 and looking towards retirement. According to the International Council of Nurses, it is estimated that by 2030 a million more faculty members will retire, adding more strain to the system.

In addition to the issue of decreasing faculty, add a pandemic, which prevented students from entering the hospitals to perform necessary skills training. Instead, training was done via simulation, which is not as effective as live patient care. This reduces scores on the National Council Licensure Examination (NCLEX) and further exacerbates the nursing shortage. It is a vicious cycle.

Just keep swimming.

So, nurses, what do we do? We put on our Dori pants and just keep swimming. We face adverse situations head on, we advocate for our patients, and – most importantly - we show up. It is what we do. We make jokes and eat our pizza party wins and our 3:00 candy bar delivery from the Chief Nursing Officer, and just keep swimming. But we do not have to like it. Wouldn’t it be amazing if nurses were cared for the way football players are after a hard game? Facedown on a massage table, aromatherapy and peaceful music playing in the background, hot tea, and a nice, healthy meal. Aah, one can dream.

Be a Nurse They Said.docx


References

American Nurses Association 

International Council of Nurses: Nursing workforce crisis looms as expected six-million shortfall will be increased by more than four million nurses retiring by 2030   

Krupnick, M., “When nurses are needed most, nursing programs aren’t keeping up with demand.”, The Hechinger Report, Dec. 2020

McHugh, M. D., American Heart Association’s Get With The Guidelines-Resuscitation, I. (2016). Better Nurse Staffing and Nurse Work Environments Associated with Increased Survival of In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Patients. Med Care, 54(1), (pp. 74-80) 

Mercer, M., “It’s time to rethink the 12-hour nursing shift.” Nov. 2021

Sloan, D., Barnes, H., Cimiotti, J., Jarrin, O., “Patient safety in hospitals still a concern.” Health Affairs, Nov. 2021

Venant, K., “Nurse mentorships: A two-way street.”, Oct. 2018

National Nurses United: Safe Staffing Ratios

Western Governors University: What is autonomy in nursing?

5 Votes

BETH PRATHER, MSN, SCRN, RN Beth is an instructor of Nursing, Level 2, at Delgado Community College’s Charity School of Nursing in New Orleans, Louisiana. She received her BSN at the age of 40 from Louisiana State University and her MSN at the age of 52 from Grantham University. She has had a vast 17-year career in nursing, working in many different areas due to her lust for knowledge in all things nursing. During the pandemic an adjunct position at the college opened and she excitedly accepted this new challenge. After only 6 weeks as an adjunct clinical instructor she was offered a full-time faculty position, which she gladly accepted.

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?Nice article., Excellent points brought out!?

 

6 hours ago, Beth Higgins said:

It is common sense that fewer patients per nurse will result in more care provided for each patient and less stress on the nurse, increasing job satisfaction.

This is true but acuity plays a huge part.  It doesn't help to have fewer patients if they're all 4s or 5s, while the other nurses have easier patients 1s and 2s (walkie/talkies).  This happens a lot.

Also your football reference towards nurses, YES, YES, and YES?

 

2 Votes

We keep advocating for increased enrollment as it helps keep the lights on at nursing schools. Everyone knows that is not the solution.

The solution is to plug the sinkhole that keeps sucking nurses out at the rate we keep churning them out.

One reason is unwillingness of employers to invest in training those trying to make a lateral move.

3 Votes
Specializes in Med nurse in med-surg., float, HH, and PDN.

"Until state boards of nursing mandate flexible work schedules, mentorship programs for new nurses, increased autonomy and safe staffing ratios, this will continue to be an issue ..."

AHahahahahahahahahahahaha! That really is FUNNY!

State-BON's are not there to 'help nurses', they are there to help protect the public FROM nurses. 

7 Votes
Specializes in Med-Surg, Trauma, Ortho, Neuro, Cardiac.

"low wages"...not so sure about that, many people leave other professions and want to become a nurse for the adequate middle income it provides, so I guess it's perspective.

"constant abuse"...guess I've been lucky.

"Nurses Eat Their Young"....not true.  I get triggered by this vile phrase that we use to describe ourselves.  Tell me how you eating your young was manifested by you at the bedside?   I want everyone that reads this that is a a nurse to raise their hands if they eat their young.  The overwhelming majority of us are hard working, dealing with tough conditions, while precepting people and don't eat our young.  Yes, many people will come up with stories of how they have been mistreated by older nurses, I get it and we can do better.  Obviously there are nurses that for whatever reason don't like newbies but really is that the standard?  Am I a freak and a minority because I don't eat my young?    When orientation is over, it's over and nurses are thrown to the wolves and often drown with the rest us of but that doesn't mean we are eating them up, it just means we are busy and stressed too. 

But yes, bedside nursing is a tough, demoralizing sometimes, depending and anxiety inducing place and there's only so long someone can put up with it.

 

6 Votes
Specializes in OR, Nursing Professional Development.
On 5/24/2022 at 7:10 AM, Beth Prather said:

Until state boards of nursing mandate flexible work schedules, mentorship programs for new nurses, increased autonomy, and safe staffing ratios, this will continue to be an issue.

The state BON exists to protect patients by ensuring nurses pass a test of minimum competency and taking action on the licenses of those who are unsafe.

Unions are what will take care of nurses, not the BON.

2 Votes

I was a new nurse just as the pandemic started. Mix that in with a not so positive orientation experience, 6 different preceptors. The main one who because she was an Epic super user was considered an excellent preceptor, was really a condenscending bully who thought very highly of herself. My residency due to pandemic, consisted of looking at powerpoint slides. I got the worst of the worst patients my first year and a half. My mentors or nurses I could count to have my back have mostly left. Im 2 1/2 yrs in and have been asked if I wanted to learn to be charge or precept. I said no to both. Much to their dismay. The extra dollar for charge, not worth it. They sucked the life out of me and I have nothing to give. I will help new nurses as much as I can when they ask, but I won't train. I feel I cannot do it and be positive about it. Also because bedside will not be my career. I have no desire to move up in the ranks. My supervisors response to this was, you cant just punch in, work, and leave. Why not? I give 100% to my patient when im there. I make sure my tasks are completed and charting is done. I help my coworkers as much as I can. Thats not enough apparently. This is what the pandemic, cycle of abuse, and low pay has done to me and management will never get it. 

6 Votes
On 5/24/2022 at 7:10 AM, Beth Prather said:

The nurse residency craze has been active for several years now but has failed to provide the mentorship so many new graduates crave. Originally designed to provide support and mentorship for all new graduates for their first year in the profession, it has instead become a continuation of nursing school.

I will concede that there are some out there within the nursing world who wanted it to be that and thought it would be. I think business people very quickly saw an opportunity to rope new nurses into contracts, saying they were necessary in return for the "training." Yet from day 1 I have not heard any nurse resident report any spectacular aspect of their residency that was not part of my plain old orientation years ago. I am pretty sure that my orientation was far better than what I've seen most nurse residents report in recent years. Specifically, we attended many classes taught by our specialty educator and basically worked our way through the specialty manual/exam prep; this was all part of our scheduled hours. I had *one* expert-level nurse preceptor on days and a different *one* expert-level nurse preceptor when I moved to nights, the shift I would be working.

There is a problem overall, because businesses don't give a single crap about *ANY* of this. They do not care. They have figured out that they can scream about nursing shortages and their whining just so happens to help universities and schools of nursing, who have also now taken the same low road as hospitals (they want something, they just don't want to provide anything in return).

2 Votes
Specializes in Med nurse in med-surg., float, HH, and PDN.

JKL33, EXACTLY! I used to feel sorry for the new RN's who they would fling onto the floor (this was before anything like an internship was thought of) and there would be some procedure they had to do that they had learned about in class, but had never got to practice even once while doing clinical. That's not right and that is often why some poor newbies get scared; they were not prepared at all! And that leads to a lack of confidence.

I was trained at a nursing school that was attached to a hospital. If there was a procedure to be done and we hadn't got to do it yet, the clinical instructor would  come in the classroom and point to someone and say, "C'mon, it's time for you to do___________(whatever)."  We used to be afraid of HER because she could be a little scary, but after a few times, it was all good, because she made SURE we passed a procedure and practiced it more than once. So, once we went out into the 'real' world, we knew what and how to do things. 

1 Votes
Specializes in Psych.

My nurse residency was silly. I enjoyed meeting with my newly graduated peers each week, but I never left residency feeling more prepared for my job. I only ever learned how to really be a nurse on the floor. I feel that nursing education would improve significantly if our profession stopped placing such a large emphasis on doctorates and finally admitted that graduate degrees offer little value to a newly minted floor nurse. My best preceptor had an ADN.

1 Votes
Specializes in Peds, PICU, Peds Onc, Nursing Leadership.

HI Beth, I wanted to give you some feedback on your professional credentials... you have achieved your MSN, that's awesome, but you do not need to list your BSN in your credentials now... that is a given. You list your hightest degree only; I.e., MSN, RN. You can't get your MSN without earning your BSN. Leave that behind. ? Kindest regards, Deb 

Specializes in Mental Health, Gerontology, Palliative.
8 minutes ago, Deb_Aston said:

HI Beth, I wanted to give you some feedback on your professional credentials... you have achieved your MSN, that's awesome, but you do not need to list your BSN in your credentials now... that is a given. You list your hightest degree only; I.e., MSN, RN. You can't get your MSN without earning your BSN. Leave that behind. ? Kindest regards, Deb 

There are some accelerated courses here student graduates with a Master in Nursing. While students have another degree in a different area their primary nursing qualification is the Masters in nursing

If people want to have an alphabet soup after their names, how is it impacting you?