I confess...I'm a nurse who doesn't want to work in a hospital again

Nurses General Nursing

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I've been struggling lately with being a nurse, what it means, doesn't mean and whether to accept a job offer to return to the hospital setting. I've read posts upon posts on here and elsewhere and the fact is, by and large, hospital nursing is negative and I don't want to go back into the hospital setting. It has been a huge relief for me personally to not be working in that type of healthcare. Maybe that makes me a "bad" nurse, or a "lazy" nurse or whatever else someone else may think..maybe I won't make as much money or have the option of further education credits at someone else's expense but I am being honest. I've worked in hospitals from age 16 to age 42 in one capacity or another and, as childish as this may sound, I just don't want to be in that type of environment anymore. The hospital, as a lot of healthcare has changed and I've changed and I feel badly for the nurses I know who are working the 12 hr shifts plus report time. Most are at the hospital 13-15 hrs on an uneventful shift because of the extra that is to be done and 15 or more if something unexpected happens. I am grateful for those on here and other boards who love the hospital and want to remain working in it, I admire those who still have a burning passion to get every certification there is and don't mind dedicating much of their time/life to an employer, but me..the times has come that I'm not going to feel guilty or "less than" about not being that type of nurse or not wanting to work in a hospital. I want to work and to a point enjoying helping people, but I want balanced job where work is work, home time is home time and one isn't adversely effecting the other to the point of depression/anxiety/illness. So, I'm going to call the hospital and politely decline the offer - they can move onto another candidate and I can stop feeling sick at thought of 12 hr shifts and all that goes along with it.

I totally agree with you! I am on the job hunt right now trying to get out of hospital nursing. Im really hoping to get an interview for a va outpatient clinic. Bankers hours, home every night ( I'm currently a 14 year night shifter). Perhaps have a life instead of my nights off still up at 0200 pondering life, and from what I'm told excellent benefits. So my question is when can i start? I have done the hospital nursing gig full time for way to long and need a change. I might stay prn but who knows. Trust me once I get settled i'm sure there wont be any looking back.

I have to say that I'm one of those nurses who would rather not work in a hospital either. I did my job well, my colleagues were great, and I don't have any (major) issues with management. But something is wrong when you DREAD going to work. I missed my family as I left them on nights, weekends and holidays. I started to understand when people said that nursing can be a thankless job sometimes. The sacrifice I was making was not worth the extra differential pay. Good for you to realize it and make a change. Don't buy in to the belief that the higher acuity, the better the nurse. Your own happiness may be defined another way and that is nothing to be ashamed of.

I'm currently going back to school and have never loved school like I do now... And I can't wait to finish! This never happened the first time! Good luck!

Specializes in Cardiac, ER, Pediatrics, Corrections.

The beauty of nursing is not necessarily being confined to a hospital or floor nursing. I have no desire to ever work on a hospital floor. You aren't lazy or wrong. You just have different preferences. I work in a Peds clinic and I get so tired of people saying I didn't "Pay my dues" by working on a Med/Surg floor. I don't think every nurse should have to work Med/Surg. Not sure where it got started, but we all take different paths.

Specializes in medicine, oncology, telemetry.

I am 1 year into med/surg and ONE MORE DAY on this floor is too much. People are saying I have to "pay my dues" by staying on the floor another year. Forget that! It's not for me. Nursing is such a bullying profession.

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
The beauty of nursing is not necessarily being confined to a hospital or floor nursing. I have no desire to ever work on a hospital floor. You aren't lazy or wrong. You just have different preferences. I work in a Peds clinic and I get so tired of people saying I didn't "Pay my dues" by working on a Med/Surg floor. I don't think every nurse should have to work Med/Surg. Not sure where it got started, but we all take different paths.

THIS.

Nursing is everywhere; I've learned that my nursing practice and judgement transcends my experience as a Rehab Nurse, Stepdown, CC, Home Health, School Nursing, Ambulatory Care, and even doing Nursing Informatics, and LTC.

My experiences have made me a marketable nurse and have made my nursing journey all the better. :yes:

Specializes in geriatrics.

Years ago the thinking was that new grads should start in med surg. That was prior to the endless forms we all complete and the high acuity that exists on the units. Sure, they had higher patient ratios back then on many of the floors but they weren't as ill.

More importantly, the service mentality that prevails today was not dictating care. You could not pay me enough to go to med surg. If the staffing wasn't so brutal, more people would stay on those units.

Specializes in medicine, oncology, telemetry.

Agreed, joanna. Another day in med/surg for me is another day too many. The good news is there are many nurses on my unit who love it and thrive there, so I don't feel so guilty. I started in med/surg because that's what "they" say new grads should do but I don't believe I am all "new grads". I thought not working in a hospital would make me less of a nurse, but I've come to the conclusion it's the exact opposite path I want to go towards.

Specializes in diabetic wound care/podiatry.
Self incrimination or guilt is a waste of energy.Let those one go.... eh ?I have been there and done that and learned it didn't serve me.

Possible considerations:-

Change shows a desire to grow.This is healthy. Change also requires work. I bet the chrysalis struggling out of its cocoon had no idea ,while in it's struggle, that it would emerge beautiful, free and more than it imagined.

Trust yourself. If it is escapism face it. If it is tiredness,nurture,replenish and the truth will surface. If complete change calls you, honor it and " leap and the net will appear "

Trust you yourself Know what is good for you.

!

THIS! Truth! Thank you. Ready to grow and learn. I know my worth and no one can keep you down from pursuing your dream. Takes work though in this economy and over saturation of nurses...

I started this thread in 2012..didn't go back into the hospital then..but made the mistake of going back earlier this year. Big mistake for me. I have accepted a M-F position that will require local/day traveling. Less money an hour but with the mileage it will even out, no weekends/holidays/call, no 13 plus hour shifts. While I realize there is benefit to having days off during the week, for me, if being stressed out,miserable and dreading going back to work before I've even left the parking lot after my last shift for the week..well..that says a lot. Hospital nursing has become about documentation and customer service gloss over more than about patient care..and patient education is 10 minutes before discharge with handing the patient prints outs about their medications etc. with no time to make sure they really understand. It's truly disheartening to see how this profession - at least in my neck of the woods - has changed. For anyone considering going back into the hospital after being out for a period of time, please go PRN if you can before you dive back in. I wish I had.

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