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.

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.

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

LynnHaney said:
As an old school nurse with 17 years experience I am way to familiar with this. As a new nurse and even today I looked at every situation as a learning experience and strived to learn More and more I see younger new graduates put in positions they simply do not have the experience for and sadly many refuse to ask for help because older nurses are known for eating their young. This only jeopardizes our patients because I remember when nursing was about the patient now it seems to be about budgets. I miss those days when my patient got what they needed. Cost was not the issue

It's true that older nurses eat their young not to mention backstabbing. But there are nurses that like to mentor who are also older. I had a nursing supervisor who took me under her wing because I wanted to do this job so bad. I wanted to do things the right way. I too would like to help a new grad to learn to do things the right way so when I am a patient in the hospital, I will have one of those new grads taking care of me. What goes around, comes around. Treat others like the way you want to be treated/. There are too many nurses out there with an EGO PROBLEM!!

mclennan said:
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!

Seriously, No one hates BSNs. If you've read any of my other posts, you'll read that I say all nurses have a lot to give and we can all learn from each other. But when I hear of a new diploma applicant being told by some nurse manager twit that their diploma makes them more like a tech and not a nurse, there will be response. It is self-serving elitist wannabes that used junk science and venal propaganda that I despise. They are the ones driving nurses apart. And many unfortunately fell for it. Seriously.

Wingding

Thank You for your support!!!

raceteam91 said:
I am one of those nurses who am 60 years old have been at the same hosp for more than 30 years and do not wish to take on the debt so near retirement to get my BSN, because of this my hospital will no longer let me stay in my current position which I helped to start more than 7 years ago and are going to place me back to a Clin 2 ont he clinical ladder (I was a 5 before this position) and cut my pay by about 7.00/hr. We are a magnet hospital and we are also told that there are no outstanding evaluations. Does this not make you want to discourage anyone from going into nursing ???

ABSOLUTELY

kbrn2002 said:
you are right. It seems the only interest administration has in patient satisfaction is how those numbers translate to dollars through reimbursements. Such a ridiculous system.

you mean the $$$ that go into their pockets??

Specializes in Geriatrics, Dialysis.
she57 said:
That is what happened to my daughter - in - law's father. He was dumped out of ICU to a Long Term Care Facility which was told he was there for Rehab. Straight from ICU with a Trach, Rectal Tube, Central Line, 3 Drainage tubes, Feeding Tube. He almost died. None of the Nursing Staff were experienced to care for him.

This is why I changed positions and now work on the strictly LTC side of my facility. I used to love the rehab side with the changing population, the interesting treatments, the ability and need to use nursing skills for more acute patients. Lack of experience wasn't the issue, it was lack of time to provide adequate care. Our so called rehab patients are getting more and more complex and in many cases not even remotely stable enough to be properly cared for when there were 20+ other patients, many equally complex. When it got to the point that all I felt I could effectively do was try to reduce the chance of complications and throw them pain meds before therapy I left that unit. I just didn't feel like I was contributing much to their recovery anymore.

I used to work on an extremely busy 48 bed zoo of a med/surg unit. 4 days out of 7 none of the nurses on day shift have more than 1.2 years of nursing experience because they are ALL new graduates. All the experienced nurses have quit, transferred or been phased out. One night shift probably half of the nurses have a few years experience with the rest being new graduates. I would hate to be really sick and on that unit.

SusanKay1962 said:
"Who works like this?". I had one nurse tell me that when she was working on the floor, she often went 12 hours without going to the bathroom. How many lawyers or other "professionals" would do that?

Nobody!!

Specializes in geriatrics.

"There's always a move into management"

Unfortunately, unless you're the CEO, management isn't easier. In some ways it's worse because we are told how things are going to be with very little power to change things. It's always about the budget and managers are told there's no money.

Susie2310 said:
The reality is that some employers are able to intimidate their employees into passivity through implicit/explicit threats of termination or other retribution. Employers often seek out employees who are not in a strong position to confront or challenge them, and often seek employees who cannot just follow their principles and quit or easily find another job if the work conditions constitute a hostile work environment or are otherwise unacceptable to them. Who might these employees be, in the 21st century, who might be less powerful and have to accept BS because they are afraid of losing their jobs?: How about single mothers and people with significant financial obligations/families to support, and people without other sources of income/support systems?

It is one thing to risk the consequences of your actions when you do not have other people depending on you for their food, shelter, medical care, etc., or when you have a financial support system. It is another thing entirely to do this when other people are relying on you to provide for them, or when you have no other financial support, cannot easily find another job, and are providing your own housing, food, clothing, medical care, etc.

Do you have a greater understanding now of why some people "sit and take that BS?"

Well said

NFuser said:
Respectfully and in good faith, if subjecting myself to abject poverty to obtain an MSN causes me to consider those who don't "victims", I have no desire to do so. I happen to love bedside nursing, and I am danged good at it. A career as anything else (and yes, I have tried other areas of nursing) holds no appeal for me, and therefore, no satisfaction.

Secretperson, I forgive you your perception that our mentality is responsible for our lot. I have forgiven those responsible for my journey away from the hospital, and will, with my last breath, respect and honor those nurses in the trenches. That said, I joined this discussion to express my solidarity with those experiencing this, and ALL bedside nurses; not to engage in a philosophical discussion of victimization, nurses eating their young, and resistance to change.

You go girl!! Could not have said it better myself.

JBudd said:
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.

Good we need you there.