bedside nursing, is it really that bad?

Nurses General Nursing

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So I have been reading a lot about nurses hating bedside nursing lately. I know that at some point in my career as a bedside nurse I really wanted to throw in the towel. That is why I went and got my FNP. I still have my bedside nurse job and let me tell you that I have focused so much energy in trying to leave the bedside, I figured out that it is not really that bad. I have done teaching, Clinic NP, and bedside nursing. Now I liked the teaching but my job never ended at the end of the day. It was not physical but it seemed to be less freeing. I had to teach students and grade their work and a lot of times I didn't get paid for any extra time I put into researching for the kids. Any extra time I did was not paid. I also dealt with students who where unappreciative Just like unappreciative patients, but the thing was, at least the patient was sick and demanding, the student was not sick and demanding. In my head that makes a difference at least. I still work as a clinic NP and floor nurse both part time, the clinic NP is a nice job yes, but it is like being a doctor you give prescriptions and do assessments. If there is an emergency you call 911 or an ambulance and that's it. As a clinic NP I it can be satisfying although we still have to deal with demanding people. Here too my work does not end at the end of the day. I have to do chart reviews and things of that nature when im not seeing patients.

My point is that as a floor nurse I have so much support from my other floor nurses. We see emergencies call doctors, we call the shots most of the time on the floor. We bath patients and make them feel good. We feed the old person who can't feed them selves. Dressing changes, wound vacs, Traumas, there is a lot of variety .

Sorry for the long rant but I have focused so much time and energy into getting all the way to the top of the nursing food chain, that in reality, I still feel more at home on the floor. I like ranting and grumbling about bad patients/doctors, I like to talk about how hard management is treating us. I like to make fun of the silly things that happen on the floor. I miss being part of a team. I love being the person that the new grad comes to to start an IV. Love spoon feeding that patient untill there food is all gone. Love shaving the long beard of the homeless man, who now looks 25 years younger.

I still work on the floor but not as often and sometimes I think that I wasted so much time looking for something better, when in reality it was in from of my face. (lets not mention all the days I can get off in between 12 hours shifts) I can literally take a vacation every month if I wanted to. I know it really depends on where you work, some floors are an absolute nightmare to work on, but if you find the right floor and the right staff, you will never regret being a floor nurse. If you heart is in it, floor nursing might be right for you. Please don't disregard floor nursing as the entry level, "that's the only job you could find" kind of job, its not that at all. I have a masters FNP and still love the floor.

And as for the question of whether bedside nursing is "that bad", no, I don't think it is.

Bedside nursing is more than just hospitals or nursing homes. There's so many places a nurse can work. Even as a LPN, I have a ton of options. RNs have even more. Nurses who feel burnt out might benefit from thinking outside the box.

Not a big fan of bed side nursing personally for many reasons. I have found most nursing aren't either.

In my opinion it is a hard hard road. You have to really really want to be a nurse, have really very good coping skills, and then maybe you will like your job longer than a year.

Hate to sound like that, I've always been a hard working, strong person. But nursing has a lot of problems that need fixing.

I think that as a nurse, there are really more pros and cons.

I've been around long enough and had enough different jobs to say that - on whole - my present bedside job is pretty dang good by comparison to many jobs I've had - inside and outside of nursing.

Specializes in family practice and school nursing.

I really didn't like bedside nursing. I admire those who do ...I found my niches 15 years in a doctor's office and now 11 yrs as a schoolnurse... much better and famly friendly...

OCRN3 - thanks for sharing your perspective. After seeing all the negative comments about floor nursing on this forum, I was starting to get worried. However, you put it all into perspective!

I became an LPN at age 20 and worked Med-Surg for like 10 years. I absolutely loved bedside nursing! If I hadn't ruined my back and knee in the process, I'd still be doing bedside nursing, but the 12 hour shifts that hospitals have adopted mean that I can't. I am now 43, and can't physically run up and down those long halls for 12 hours at a stretch. I miss it, badly. But now have to be content with less physically demanding nursing.

Specializes in Orthopedic, LTC, STR, Med-Surg, Tele.

OP: You hit every nail on the head for what I love about bedside nursing :yeah: I hate it when my coworkers tell me they're "just doing this before NP/CRNA school" like it's a prison sentence before all the bigger and better stuff.

Specializes in Critical Care, Education.

Kudos to the OP!!! Very positive and inspiring.

Just wanted to add - many hospitals (mine organization included) are beginning to create NP jobs in their acute care settings. NPs have a lot to add, but their primary value is in serving as a buffer between medical staff and nursing staff. They can easily move back and forth to ensure that nurses have the 'medical' support they need to provide timely and effective care at the same time that they can help translate nurse needs in a way that physicians will respond better.

Acute care NPs - a wonderful asset for everyone!

So I have been reading a lot about nurses hating bedside nursing lately. I know that at some point in my career as a bedside nurse I really wanted to throw in the towel. That is why I went and got my FNP. I still have my bedside nurse job and let me tell you that I have focused so much energy in trying to leave the bedside, I figured out that it is not really that bad. I have done teaching, Clinic NP, and bedside nursing. Now I liked the teaching but my job never ended at the end of the day. It was not physical but it seemed to be less freeing. I had to teach students and grade their work and a lot of times I didn't get paid for any extra time I put into researching for the kids. Any extra time I did was not paid. I also dealt with students who where unappreciative Just like unappreciative patients, but the thing was, at least the patient was sick and demanding, the student was not sick and demanding. In my head that makes a difference at least. I still work as a clinic NP and floor nurse both part time, the clinic NP is a nice job yes, but it is like being a doctor you give prescriptions and do assessments. If there is an emergency you call 911 or an ambulance and that's it. As a clinic NP I it can be satisfying although we still have to deal with demanding people. Here too my work does not end at the end of the day. I have to do chart reviews and things of that nature when im not seeing patients.

My point is that as a floor nurse I have so much support from my other floor nurses. We see emergencies call doctors, we call the shots most of the time on the floor. We bath patients and make them feel good. We feed the old person who can't feed them selves. Dressing changes, wound vacs, Traumas, there is a lot of variety .

Sorry for the long rant but I have focused so much time and energy into getting all the way to the top of the nursing food chain, that in reality, I still feel more at home on the floor. I like ranting and grumbling about bad patients/doctors, I like to talk about how hard management is treating us. I like to make fun of the silly things that happen on the floor. I miss being part of a team. I love being the person that the new grad comes to to start an IV. Love spoon feeding that patient untill there food is all gone. Love shaving the long beard of the homeless man, who now looks 25 years younger.

I still work on the floor but not as often and sometimes I think that I wasted so much time looking for something better, when in reality it was in from of my face. (lets not mention all the days I can get off in between 12 hours shifts) I can literally take a vacation every month if I wanted to. I know it really depends on where you work, some floors are an absolute nightmare to work on, but if you find the right floor and the right staff, you will never regret being a floor nurse. If you heart is in it, floor nursing might be right for you. Please don't disregard floor nursing as the entry level, "that's the only job you could find" kind of job, its not that at all. I have a masters FNP and still love the floor.

I like what you have to say but then again every personality is different. Everyone has to find their own niche. I know nurses who have moved through many many different depts, informatics, Dr. offices, etc before they found what they liked. In the end this life is a journey my friend not a destination.

I just started floor nursing about 6 weeks ago. I am into my 12 week orientation and I am having a bit of culture shock, and am conflicted myself. While I absolutely love the interaction I have with "my" patients, I abhor the management where I work. They consistently short staff our floor (which I now understand, many hospitals do), and the seasoned nurses are jumping ship because of the workload. At least, they say they are going to (and some have). This is my third career choice (I am 47) and want to be a well rounded, skilled nurse in a year or two. I don't hate floor nursing, but I can see why they told us in school that it is a serious adjustment to make after graduation. I am very fortunate to have a preceptor who really knows her stuff, but unfortunately, she is not happy either. Right now, I feel "protected" while working with her, as she picks up my slack. In fact, I see all of the nurses on my floor helping each other. But, when there is a consistent shortage on the floor, and the census is high, it is seriously scary to a new nurse who is just learning the ropes and wondering how on Earth I will be able to "do it all" when I am on my own. I can see why there is burn-out.

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