Facilities are firing seasoned, higher paid nurses and utilizing younger less experienced nurses. This cost-cutting measure is putting patients at risk, working nursing and support staff to the point of exhaustion, and causing staff to leave the profession.
Updated:
This article was written by a member on allnurses. Due to the controversial and emotionally charged nature of the article, the member wanted the topic out in the open so nurses could discuss it. Because she is afraid of retribution if any of her hospital administrative staff should read this article and link it back to her, we offered to publish it for her anonymously. Please add your comments regarding this issue negatively impacting nurses and the healthcare system.
I am an experienced nurse that has watched many of my very talented colleagues leave the bedside due to the changes that have taken place in healthcare as of late. I have seen staff cut to the minimum, while patient acuity and nurse to patient ratios increase. I have seen support staff break down in tears because they have not been able to do their jobs properly. I have seen staff pushed to their breaking point, all the while administration stays in their offices, or in the meetings, determining yet more ways they can cut our resources. I see your salaries raised to ridiculous amounts, while we are denied cost of living increases, housekeeping is cut at night, and our benefits cost more, while the services are decreased.
I see our retirement cut while at the same time, the amount matched continues to be diminished or non-existent.
I see ways in which we are constantly blamed for declining patient satisfaction, increased patient falls, late medication administration, all the while we are asked to do more with less. I have seen you fire experienced staff and hire less experienced, cheaper, staff. I have seen that new staff break down because they have no resources, no experience to draw from and I have seen patients suffer from that inexperience. I have seen codes increase, inappropriate admissions to floors, transfers to higher levels of care, all because no one was there initially to advocate for a higher level of care for the patient, to begin with.
I still see you in your office. I do not see you on the floor. I see you with your graphs, your pie charts, your questions about readmission rates when I had already advocated for that patient to stay longer but was simply laughed off by doctors and not supported by you. Yet, somehow, I need to be on a committee to fix the problem.
I am now required to work extra shifts, because staff are getting sick due to stress, or leaving completely because they are tired of dealing with things. I see you develop a culture of fear, where our jobs are at stake and threatened at every turn. Yet, you still look to me for solutions.
"How can we do more with what we have?" I am asked.
My answer: There is no way to do more. We are at our limit. You are losing nurses as fast as you are gaining them, at a time when we need to be building up our profession when the baby boomers are just starting to become a factor in our healthcare environment.
My answer to this is simple. It is time to get real and start valuing your employees. If you want to be reimbursed for patient satisfaction, increase your services. Staff departments with what they need - enough nurses, enough aids, monitor techs, secretaries, ED techs, whatever. Then you will see positive results. Falls will decrease. Medication errors will decrease and medications will be given on time. Patients will get the treatment they deserve and patient satisfaction scores will improve. Your reimbursement will improve and you will stop losing money. Everyone wins: most importantly, the patients.
We need to stop the assembly-line mentality of medicine and return to the service mentality.
Yes, we are a business. But any business that has ever done well has not done well by decreasing the services to people or by mistreating its staff. Otherwise, healthcare facilities are going to see more of the same and suffer more financial penalties, less high-quality staff, and patients will suffer.
I was talking with several of my colleagues just the other day. All of us had many years of experience. Many had been at the bedside for over 20+ years. Many are leaving the bedside due to the unsafe conditions they are seeing. They just don't want to be a part of it. Perhaps this does not scare you, but it should. You must not be a patient yet.
For a follow-up article, please go to Nurses Fight Back! Why Some Hospitals are Despicable
Hospitals Firing Seasoned Nurses_ Nurses FIGHT Back! _ allnurses.pdf
EwaAnn said:Republicans despise anything that is good especially for the public but yet they expect the best of care when it comes to them. Us regular people don't count.
Blanket accusations much? I am a conservative Republican, and a union delegate at my hospital.
I'm also one of those "over educated" nurses, but somehow I still seem to be at the bedside.
EwaAnn said:I would live to have these greedy little *** in a hospital bed and see what they have to say then. They will be at our mercy
Other than abusing a patient, you would only be confirming the way that they value nurses.
I will give you the benefit of the doubt and assume that this is emotional venting....
You can blame the hospital administrators--and ultimately, they're making the decision----but the real problem is the insurance companies not paying what they should for medical services. Granted, the administrators will do whatever they have to do in order to ensure that they do not see a decrease in their salaries or bonuses, but the dramatic reduction in staffing in facilities across the country is because of the state of healthcare as a whole. The Affordable Care Act has decimated our health care system. Mandating that all Americans have insurance but still allowing illegal immigrants to use the emergency department as a clinic for everything from a sore throat to pink eye to a baby that is spitting up & not paying the bills is running our health care system into bankruptcy. The amount of money that the insurance companies are making from the premiums of its members is very clear at the end of the 4th fiscal quarter when we see how much of a bonus the CEO of the insurance company took home. If those dollars were being put toward reimbursing hospitals, doctors, etc. instead of into the CEO's pockets, perhaps nurses wouldn't be on the firing line. For Medicare/Medicaid & insurance companies to institute all of the "quality measures" that are necessary in light of a failing health care system is ridiculous. I have been a nurse for over 25 years. I remember the days when I actually cared for my patients. I don't work in a hospital anymore, but I was recently a patient in a hospital, as was my mother shortly thereafter. While I know that the nurses do care, due to the short staffing all they do is run from room to room, throwing pills at the patients & making sure that their charting covers their behinds. I have done my fair share of legal consulting & seen many cases of negligence & malpractice due to the severe understaffing. However, when the hospitals & administrators are approached about it, they'll fudge the staffing sheets, mysteriously "lose" the staffing sheets or something similar. The truth is that once someone moves into a high level administrative position, they couldn't care less about the "lowly" staff nurses. They are so far removed from the bedside & what is really going on in the hospital that they have no concept of how hard the nurses are being worked & the dangerous conditions it creates. You couldn't pay me enough to work in a hospital again. The thing is, most of the doctors I know are miserable too, so it's not just nurses. The health care system is hanging on by a thread. The administration that really needs to know about the unsafe staffing, dissatisfied patients, crappy care, unsanitary conditions, etc. is the one sitting in Washington. Those jokers are so far removed from ANYTHING going on in the healthcare system, it's ridiculous. Health care just isn't the thing to do anymore. If I had to do it all over again, I would have done something very different, like learn how to do hair. I remember in college, one of my professors saying "A nurse will never have a problem finding a job. People come to the hospital for nursing care." My, how things have changed in 25 years.
I have taken your response to my comments a little personal.
It appears you took my comments a tad personal too huh? Interesting how everything in your responses are about you and everyone else is to blame for your outcomes. Please understand no one can assume they know what hardships you have faced, but its a little bit selfish to think you are alone in having a difficult time. If in fact everything you state is true then you have an amazing case for EEOC.
Perhaps the most offensive thing you bring up is your disabled spouse, as if to tug at the heart strings of us idiot nurses who just don't know how hard it is. I am having a hard time controlling my language right now ma'am, how dare you, you think you are alone with a disabled family member? You think that your career and life somehow trumps the career and life of another!! Enough!!
Do not feel the need to patronize me by stating you "forgive me" for a general statement, of which you cut and pasted only one part of what you took offense to.
Philosophical ha.... pretentious much? Repeat this twice and enjoy your time off: I will not sit in the corner and treat my colleagues like **** new or old, I will not be unbending, and I will embrace things that make me, my patients, and my profession better.
NFuser,
Thank you for your many valuablecontributions and hard work! I also pray for strength and wisdom, and for all who face this kind of inhumane treatment (testimony after testimony). Yours sounded familiar and also sounds like how this entire area operates.
I too am grateful for this discussion! Hope it will positively impact many Nursing Careers--soon, and patient safety. It's been a long time coming.
Secretperson said:First time I have posted here so not sure if I am doing this right. This is a comment for the "Hospitals Firing Seasoned Nurses: Nurses FIGHT Back!" article.First the formalities I am a nurse, now that that's out of the way here you go:
There are two side to every story, for some the reasoning behind the elimination of seasoned nurses is act of malice, yet for other it is a Necessary Evil of human resources. Let me explain, based on recommendations from organizations like Baldrige, Magnet, and the Institute of medicine, nursing has been steered to toward a mandatory higher expectation of education with no expectation of higher compensation. This has little to do with individual hospitals, clinics, or LTC facilities, for the true culprit is the established 20 year nurse. For years nurses have chased the illusive respect they felt they needed to be coined a "profession" nurses have allowed their compensation, practice, educational, and certification requirements to be dictated by people who have either never worked in the shoes of a nurse or are many years disconnected from the actual human to human interaction the majority of our nursing staff work.
So many of our established aging nurse population chose to complain and take it on the chin as the workload increased and the healthcare delivery model changed, they neglected to demand higher rates of compensation as nurses became much more than an expense to their facilities. "Progression was just for the master's prepared nurse not the workers" they said....Boom All of a sudden people act like they are blindsided by the recent 22 year-old nurse with an MSN being precepted by 30 year ADN who is bitter and underpaid. Get real nurses the rumors of increased educational requirements started in the 70's. Changes always occur in nursing in a liberal manner where those who make the recommendations and rules benefit the most. I challenge every nurse to research the "real" reason you work 12's and every other weekend, now look at the niche areas of nursing with consistent hours and see which area flows better and has nurses that love showing up. Education is important and increased education expectation is superb, but not when nurses are so top heavy that there are 20 different MSN's. There will be no more good nurses if we disincentivize nursing education. The old 20+ year ideologues who are behind the scenes pulling the strings in nursing leadership are establishment nurses who did well and are self-serving career motived people, they do not understand business and cannot find a better way for nurses to give efficient, cost effective care that is still focused on patient safety.
My only hope is that the new breed of uber educated nurse will use their smarts to undo the mess that is being left.
What planet do you live on?
SubSippi said:You'd think all these people with business degrees would be able to appreciate the benefits of implementing long term solutions to financial issues. Spreading health care workers too thin and getting rid of the people with bigger paychecks might save money right now, but I just don't see how it isn't costing more.This isn't a new concept...
I think we need to put them on a nursing unit and work the floor with minimal staff, long hours on their feet without a break and make them work for peanuts. Also make them chase after dementia patients who are not suppose to get out of their chairs and try to do 5 things all at the same time.
EwaAnn
282 Posts
I would live to have these greedy little *** in a hospital bed and see what they have to say then. They will be at our mercy