Help with "Bait & Switch" tactics at new job

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I am in dire need of some perspective here, y'all. This may get wordy, so I apologize in advance. Please bear with me.

Three months ago I interviewed for a wonderful-sounding job. The staff was friendly and seemed very professional, the manager spends lots of time on the floor and is involved with her staff, and the full-time requirements were 3 days one week, four days the next. I was promised 12 weeks of preceptorship (it's a new area of practice for me) and quoted a rate of pay that's competitve for my area. During my staff interview, one person mentioned that "most" of the nurses list one day per pay period that "we're available if they need us, in which case they call us in". HR said there was a dress code, but when I asked the manager about it, she shrugged it off and said that we shouldn't wear sleeveless shirts, opened-toed shoes, the usual stuff, not to worry about it.

Surprise #1: My second week there, my preceptor mentioned to me that my manager had told her to tell me not to wear my denim scrubs again- I might "get in trouble" since denim is not allowed. I'd worn these scrubs to general hospital orientation twice and had no reason to think they weren't allowed on the floor. I wasn't concerned, just said, thanks, I didn't know, I won't wear them again. "NO DENIM!" was specified in a note on my 30-day-evaluation. I would have commented, had the paper not been shoved under my nose as I was going into a patient's room and my manager said hurriedly, "Here, sign this quick, Joint Commision is coming, and I need to have these all done." I thought the mark-down was unfair, since she hadn't seen fit to say anything to me herself, and I didn't have any way at the time of knowing I'd done anything wrong.

Surprise #2: My manger announced that my preceptorship would be ending after 6 weeks since she needed the staff, and as an orientee, I "didn't count" as staff.

Surprise #3: Orientation was over, and I was making about $1.50/hour less than what I'd been quoted.

Surprise #4: Those days we "needed to be available" were actually mandatory overtime. I'd asked for Mondays off for a previous commitment to volunteer work, and was immediately granted the schedule I'd "asked for": Tuesday-Friday, 12-hour days, every week. The reason only "most" of us are required to do this is that the part-time staff is not required to. The following month I requested Wednesdays off for church. I got one Wednesday off; otherwise, my schedule remained the same.

Surprise #5: Our unit secretary began treating me rudely, not finishing orders on my charts, ignoring me when I asked for charts I needed immediately for emergent situations. Charts she's worked on are put back in the rack with the metal rings open, and when I pick them up, everything falls out. She'll say she paged me when she hadn't, then tell my manger I'd left the floor and no one could find me. She'll also page me 5 or 6 times over 2 minutes and tell my manager how many times she "had" to page me before I responded. Patient care is constantly interrupted, and my patients have noticed and commented on how often I'm called out of the room. Small tasks then take forever to finish, which she will announce to everyone present in the main nurse's station. When I've attempted to discuss this with her, she turns her head and refuses to speak to me, which is blown off by my manager. "She just needs time to sort of work through conflicts", I was told. She is acting like a two-year-old, I think, and my patients are paying for it. Several other employees have noticed her behavior also.

Surprise #6: 60-day evuluation, I was marked down for calling in sick twice. I'd never called in sick, although once I was sent home by the charge nurse in the middle of the day for constant vomiting and diarrhea.

Surprise #7: I was assigned a patient in critical condition with which I had no experience. I'd stated in my interview that I was interested in training for this type of patient, but none was received before I was assigned this patient alone. When I protested, and cited my shortened orientation period, my manager disagreed, stating that I had started work ONE MONTH BEFORE I ACTUALLY HAD. It took me several minutes to convince her that I'd started when I did.

Surprise #8: 90-day evalutation, I was written up for two separate incidents. One, a patient I'd started IVF on had gotten too much NS, because it hadn't been stopped at the appropriate time. The time at which it was to be stopped was at 2130- two hours after I'd reported off and left. Secondly, I was told that I'd left at night before report was over. I didn't think I had, so I asked when this supposedly happened. Neither supervisor at this meeting could specify a date or person who'd made the accusation. After I questioned it several times, the story changed to "a few charge nurses" who'd complained of this. Still, no dates were fresh in anyone's memory. I was offered "another chance", a prolonged probation, with the threat of termination if things did not improve. I wrote a long comment stating my position, and when I expressed concern that the actions and/or words of others, over which I have no control, seem to have a heavy impact on my job security, my senior supervisor looked me in the eye and said, "I never take any action based on hearsay". :eek: Well......

I am totally at a loss as to how best to deal with this. Even if I knew who else to go to, I'm always at work and don't want to ask permission from my manager for time off the floor to go complain about her and her boss. Three other people who started the same time I did have had similar experiences, and one told me, "My interview was a complete fabrication." I've learned (surprise, surprise) that this floor has long had an extremely high turnover rate. While I'd ideally like to honor my contract (anything else will cost me my bonus), certainly no statements made to me have been honored. I started out liking this job, and feel more miserable, exhausted, stressed, frustrated, and paranoid every day. I realize I've been lucky to have previously worked with honest and fair employers, and I have no reference for this kind of treatment. I enjoy working with most of my co-workers. My patients have filled out several comment cards on the excellent care they've gotten from me, and when I'm allowed to take care of them the way I learned to, I'm happy.

I ask all battle-wise nurses present for your input.

Specializes in ER!.

Thought y'all would like to know that I finally had enough and handed in my resignation this morning. Whoever described this as a nest of spiders clearly has spent at least 5 minutes on this floor!

Part of me is disappointed that this didn't work out, plus I know better than to use this awful manager as a reference, but at the same time I am relieved. I was dreading staying there till August. I left a number of unhappy nurses behind me, and I know it's just a matter of time before that whole staff turns over again. What a nightmare!!

Specializes in ER!.

Thought y'all would like to know that I finally had enough and handed in my resignation this morning. Whoever described this as a nest of spiders clearly has spent at least 5 minutes on this floor!

Part of me is disappointed that this didn't work out, plus I know better than to use this awful manager as a reference, but at the same time I am relieved. I was dreading staying there till August. I left a number of unhappy nurses behind me, and I know it's just a matter of time before that whole staff turns over again. What a nightmare!!

Thought y'all would like to know that I finally had enough and handed in my resignation this morning. Whoever described this as a nest of spiders clearly has spent at least 5 minutes on this floor!

Part of me is disappointed that this didn't work out, plus I know better than to use this awful manager as a reference, but at the same time I am relieved. I was dreading staying there till August. I left a number of unhappy nurses behind me, and I know it's just a matter of time before that whole staff turns over again. What a nightmare!!

Good for you, girl. I don't blame you one bit. Places like that will cause you to lose your license. It's not worth it.

Thought y'all would like to know that I finally had enough and handed in my resignation this morning. Whoever described this as a nest of spiders clearly has spent at least 5 minutes on this floor!

Part of me is disappointed that this didn't work out, plus I know better than to use this awful manager as a reference, but at the same time I am relieved. I was dreading staying there till August. I left a number of unhappy nurses behind me, and I know it's just a matter of time before that whole staff turns over again. What a nightmare!!

Good for you, girl. I don't blame you one bit. Places like that will cause you to lose your license. It's not worth it.

So that is why they look as if they are going into arrest when I laugh and walk out.... into another job.

If you don't think you can get another "hospital job", then you just need a different approach. Go back to 'nursing home' and find an agency (Kimberly Nurse's et al). Work in hospitals through the agency for a while and let the hospitals see what you are capable of doing. Some corporate hospitals use agencies to find new employees. They get to evaluate the employee before hire.

I was lucky when I got out of the Army... there were seven hospitals in the area and; like it or not; KNEW that nursing home on a resume was a negative.

Another thing to consider is that most other facilities know about the situation at your hospital and the longer you stay the more likely it will be that they will see your current employment as a negative mark on your resume. We had those hospitals in EL Paso and Iowa. I always find NURSES in the areas I move to and ask 2 questions; which doctors they use and which hospital is the best to work for in the area.

Well, at least former management!

I am relatively new to Allnurses.com, and the nursing field in general. I was an accountant for 20 years prior to going back to school to become a nurse (much happier - and much poorer, lol).

I just wanted to make sure that before you actually leave the facility, that you exit interview with a member of administration - not your manager.

When a department has a heavy turnover, it costs the hospital an extraordinary amount of money in training, and re-training... even when they cut preceptorships short. Management in those areas also tends to have a heavy turnover, costing them even more money. When patients notice the difference in patient care, they choose to have their elective surgeries and procedures done elsewhere, despite the fact that your hospital is the closest one.

I remember your post earlier saying that your parents have a friend who's the CFO of this hospital. Meet with him. Take 5 minutes of his time, and bring your complaints in writing. Be professional, as you have been in your posts here. Carry yourself with utmost confidence, as they can't beat you down and take away what you have earned by your professionalism in this situation.

Save other nurses from this situation, TennNurse. Even if the CFO can't change things for you now (maybe by transferring you to another department where you will be happy), it can change things for other nurses.

BTW... taking this to the labor board and the BRN is a GREAT idea. Employers sit up and take notice when a complaint is filed... but try upper management first; They are human, and have a heavy stake in the success of the hospital at the ground level. Your manager obviously needs some classes in communication skills, personnel management, time management, and organizational skills.

Good luck... God bless.. and Merry Christmas.

So that is why they look as if they are going into arrest when I laugh and walk out.... into another job.

If you don't think you can get another "hospital job", then you just need a different approach. Go back to 'nursing home' and find an agency (Kimberly Nurse's et al). Work in hospitals through the agency for a while and let the hospitals see what you are capable of doing. Some corporate hospitals use agencies to find new employees. They get to evaluate the employee before hire.

I was lucky when I got out of the Army... there were seven hospitals in the area and; like it or not; KNEW that nursing home on a resume was a negative.

Another thing to consider is that most other facilities know about the situation at your hospital and the longer you stay the more likely it will be that they will see your current employment as a negative mark on your resume. We had those hospitals in EL Paso and Iowa. I always find NURSES in the areas I move to and ask 2 questions; which doctors they use and which hospital is the best to work for in the area.

Keep in mind, tho, that if you're scouting for a permanent job thru a registry, that sometimes these registries make you sign a contract that you will not go to work for any place they have sent you to for a certain period of time afterwards, maybe 3 months or so.

Specializes in Operating Room.

I have to agree with the RUN part of the above posts. Call and attorney, labor board, and your state's nursing board, whatever you need to do to save your license!! You never know what that manager will blame you for if you give a two-week notice...Rough situation!

As for the bonus, I doubt you get it anyway...seems to me they will probably fire you or something before your bonus paytime is up.

Good luck in whatever you decide!

Specializes in Med/Surg.

Good for you Tenn nurse! I seriously doubt you will ever regret the decision to leave that awful place. Good luck!

Kacy

P.S.. Helllooo nurse....that joke is a riot!!!!!! :chuckle :chuckle :chuckle

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