Hospitals Firing Seasoned Nurses: Nurses FIGHT Back!

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.

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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.

An Open Letter to Hospital Administrators

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

I feel your pain. Really I do. Some nurses do care and some don't.

caliotter3 said:
When I am unemployed, I do not think other nurses care about me, per se, because at least one of them got the job I just left, so someone benefitted from my misfortune, as I have, at times. It is a dog eat dog environment, no matter what.

I feel your pain. I really do. There are nurses that do care and then there are one that well don't

FedUpinTX said:
I think the hospitals around here are sneakier than that. Instead of firing you, they don't give you raises anymore. They have invented this career ladder/step program which is basically a way to get nurses to do the manager's jobs for them AND give them an excuse for not raising your pay. It is no longer good enough to show up to work on time and do a good job. Nope. Now, you are supposed to complete a whole list of tasks in order to "qualify" for an insignificant raise. You have to join a committee, attend at least 75% of meetings, maybe "chair" a committee, oh and there are unit-based and hospital-based committees, you must join both ! You will also need to do x number of volunteer hours, get an advanced certification or go back to school, not call in sick for a whole year, become a preceptor, maybe a couple more things. For ALL of this you will get, MEH 3 % raise....OH , and the BEST part...If you DON'T do it all again the next year...they will not only NOT give you a raise, they will TAKE BACK the increase they already gave you ! Yep, I kid you not !

Who has time to go to a meeting when you don't have the staff to cover you HUH? Nursing sets goals for their patients which are supposedly REALISTIC LOL!!:laugh: They are the ones that are not realistic. Never were.

I would clean houses and do private hire caregiving (or at the same time) before I would work for low wages in an understaffed LTC that was risking my license, making no one happy and doing nothing to further my career.

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Join the NNU, get information, reach out to them.

I forgot there was an article out on the Internet and it was in a thread when the Ebola outbreak happened-it said nurses will be the next organized union.

No truer words spoken. :yes:

Hi LadyFree28,

I am from your neck of the woods. I like your NNU suggestion. Also we should encourage nurses to stop paying dues to the state nurse's association and the ANA until they start making a visible effort to stand for ALL nurses, not just those with higher degrees.

As I previously said, the only thing these people understand is being hit in their purse-strings. If facilities that practice this garbage start seeing a steady decline in their patient censuses and revenues because word got out that conditions are unsafe, they will have no choice but to start bending. Right now, they are not afraid because they don't believe nurses will speak out.

We make up the largest number of healthcare professionals. We have the numbers people, let's take advantage of it.

I couldn't agree more

chicagotoots said:
Quit a job, with proper notice, this week due to limited help, pushing to do things faster, check all the boxes to document care (generate revenue), seeing shortcuts taken by staff to save time, they offer nurses big incentives to work more shifts (but also ways to justify not paying them), they are willing to burn their staff rather then hire more help. No time for the patients..just pass meds, computer chart, crank them thru the system. This is assembly line healthcare. It is not nursing. The young nurses will do it for the money/experience, as a senior nurse, I chose to walk instead of risk my license. Administration does not care. We older experienced RNs have seen our jobs change and not for the better.

Everything is hurry hurry and hurry. Haste makes waste. Time is money...Time Management is a joke.

sistrmoon said:
I worked in Texas at a non-profit Magnet hospital. It had horrible ratios, nearly zero support staff, and was dreadfully unsafe. I knew about Safe Harbor but nearly none of my coworkers did. I know of no one who ever utilized it. It triggers a mandatory JCHAO visit. We were already receiving those as well as Magnet stamped! I have great doubt safe harbor does much of anything except maybe target you for retaliation. It sounds great in theory. I now work in NY at a for-profit non-Magnet hospital. Nothing like Safe Harbor exists here. Never have more than 6 patients, and way more support staff. Things still suck, but it's a spa compared to my previous hospital.

How ironic the hospital is called Safe Harbor!!

Dear Lemondrop:

Another area that would benefit from this are lawyers who deal with wrongful termination cases. Not to mention unemployment benefits that are denied to the unemployed. They feel if you were terminated you don't deserve unemployment. Hogwash

Rose_Queen said:
My facility will be seeing a sudden decrease in experienced nurses come December 31, 2019. As of January 1, 2020, no BSN, no job. There are many older nurses that I work with who have zero desire to take on more debt when they are as close to retirement as they are. Instead, they will find jobs in less desirable (to them) areas/specialties where the BSN isn't going to be required or simply retire early. What I find extremely reprehensible is the fact that about 90% of these nurses went through the facility's own nursing program, either when it was a diploma program or when it transitioned to an ADN program. Even now, the program grants an ADN with automatic enrollment into a BSN completion program. So, either the presumed 20% of nurses without a BSN are going to be new grads or the facility won't even be hiring those who complete its own program. Sad.

Who the hell would have faith in a hospital that would change policy based on one study that was never replicated and carried out, funded and backed by the very people and organizations that stand to benefit by forcing nurses to run back to school and write APA format papers on topics such as Foundations of Nursing, Nursing Theory, Multiculturalism of Nursing and my all time favorite; Sociology of Nursing.

I did some research a couple of years ago on the people and organizations trying to drive and perpetuate the BSN push. I can tell you for a fact they are not doing it to advance the profession, they are doing it for self-serving reasons. First they tried to do it legislatively. When that failed they tried to convince hospitals that having more BSN nurses would lead to better patient outcomes. Well here in my area, the patient satisfaction scores told a very different story. I can think of one institution that has the name of a rock band in its name that after going to a BSN only hiring policy in 2011 found themselves at the very bottom of the 2013 patient satisfaction score list of about 50 area hospitals. They also told their most experienced nurses to earn BSNs within a matter of a few years or risk termination. The ones that scored the top two spots did not have a BSN only hiring policy.

Specializes in CCM, PHN.

I'm really tired of every thread, even fairly worthwhile and interesting ones here, get hijacked and driven off topic by the BSN haters. This is EXACTLY the asinine garbage that keeps nurses divided and bickering amongst ourselves like good little stereotypes rather than united by our common strengths. Can't anyone see the forest for the trees? Can anyone here see past their own personal insecurities.....and look at what's NEEDED for ALL of us....CNAs, LPNs, LVNs, ADNs, BSNs, RNs, NPs, CNSs, APNs, all of us!

Seriously!

Sorry Donngould that they did that to you. That figures, you are about to retire and finally enjoy living. Something you worked so hard for and then they pull the rug right from under you. It's no wonder people are unemployed and homeless. You can't get money from the government because you made too much money and saved it. They want you to use it up before they will help you. So therefore you are being punished for leading a good life. It's their way of controlling you.