Published
How long have you been a nurse? When I first started out I used to work doubles all the time. I would go three and four weeks without a single day off and I was exhausted. After about two years I stopped working myself into the ground and started saying no. After that I never again felt one ounce of guilt for saying no. It is crucial for you to enjoy your time off and just unwind. If you never say no you will burn out pretty quickly.
a year and a half now. I love being the voice of the sick but I need to find the voice for me. I am the youngest and newest nurse on the unit and the generation gap can be intimidating.
You're still in the honeymoon phase then. I know how you feel saying no, but you have got to take care of yourself so you can take care of your patients. If you don't take your scheduled days off you will grow to resent your job and your profession.
What they said. ^^^ You don't need a good reason to say "no," you don't have to make excuses, you don't have to FEEL like your "no" is an excuse. If you don't want the hours, just give a confident, unapologetic "No." The only time I've done a double as an RN was when the oncoming shift was snowed out--truly, the ones who tried to come in got stuck. Otherwise, I won't do them. I don't need the money and I REALLY don't need to risk my pts' safety.
For anyone that says that a double is unsafe, consider that others might have the stamina to pull it off.
I won't confirm or deny it, but I may or may not have worked 24 hours straight in the form of 3 hour 8 hour shifts. And I may or may not know a handful of nurses that have done so. Doing a double by comparison is cake.
nursedanny614
46 Posts
The word gets to me sometimes. There are times where I am expecting it and I have an answer but sometimes I get caught off guard and feel stupid. Even if I don't end up doing it I have this sense of guilt about it. is it just me or is it normal. mind you that it frequently is asked of me.'