Generation gap and attitudes towards work - hurting patients?

Nurses Safety

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I keep reading articles about the newer generation of workers, and how they just have a different attitude towards work. Well, I'm getting frustrated and disappointed by some of what I see in my workplace.

I know it's not all young people, and I'm pretty young myself.

But I'm seeing a decline in patient care and lack of interest in nursing excellence by the newer staff where I work.

Socializing with each other seems to be taking precedence over patient care. Goofing off and playing practical jokes is seen as okay. Those who disagree or try to point out when behaviour at work crosses the line of appropriate get rolled eyes, and they act like we are nagging or picking on them.

This past weekend, patients didn't get turned properly, and when we came on for nights, we found a patient who had been admitted seven hours previously still in the dirty sheets from the ED stretcher, with alcohol swabs and an empty muko lubricant packet stuck to his skin. The day shift staff had been playing jokes on each other, squirting with syringes. One of the nurses put muko lubricant on the phone receiver in the Stepdown unit for a joke, and one of the patients family members got a phone call, and was slimed. This was a family member of someone who was a seriously injured trauma patient. I was embarrassed, to be honest. Our patients deserve better.

I told the manager, and she'll talk to the nurses who were on duty at the time. But these are just examples of the behaviour I'm seeing every day at work. A trend to care more about break time and hanging out with co-workers than knuckling down and doing the work. Does anyone else see this happening?

I feel some of our staff really don't understand the concept of professionalism, and that you have to act differently at work than you do when you are out with your friends. Maybe part of it is that their friends essentially ARE their co-workers, so work is just another place they see their friends. But still, how do you explain to people where the line is or even teach that concept if it is new to them without sounding like an old hag?

I'm 22... none of my classmates acted this way, or they would have been asked to go home from clinical immediately, and would have failed that class (thus dropping them from the program). If they are smoking pot before the shift and doing these types of things.... I would absolutely not continue my education there.

Please don't group all of us younger nurses into the same group with the few that don't treat their patients well. There are stereotypes about older nurses as well... it isn't fair either way.

Where is management? Nursing shortage or not, this is never acceptable. They have a boss, and that boss should take action immediately before someone gets killed. I hope you are reporting each of these episodes. Don't worry about being popular, worry about what is best for your patients (it sounds like you already are) =)

I agree! When I was in school (even though it was a long time ago) this behavior would not have been tolerated! Where are your instructors?! I'd have serious concerns over the school you attend and the instructors and clinical instructors lack of attention!

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