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.
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
sistrmoon said:It seems like California is in the forefront of positive nursing change. What have they done that hasn't been done elsewhere?
We left the ANA because we were paying them dues and they were wanting us to accept unsafe staffing. We continue to struggle. It truly took thousands of us, union and no union, working together for many years.
QuoteCNA's 12 Year Campaign for Safe RN Staffing Ratios:http://www.nationalnursesunited.org/page/-/files/pdf/ratios/12yr-fight-0104.pdf
QuoteGuide to joining the RN movement:
CNA has grown from 17,000 RNs in 1995, located primarily in Northern California, to more than 70,000 RNs in 200 facilities across the state, along with 16,000 RNs in hospitals throughout Texas, Nevada, Maine, Florida, Kansas, Missouri, and Illinois through the formation of our national arm the National Nurses Organizing Committee (NNOC) founded in 2004.
CNA and NNOC were the motivating force to bring state nursing associations across the nation together in 2009 to form National Nurses United, which stands today at 160,000 RNs from every state in the nation. NNU pools the collective experiences and might of the most successful RN organizations in the U.S., the California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee, United American Nurses, and the Massachusetts Nurses Association.
From coast to coast, we have won the best contracts for RNs in the nation
Thirty years ago, RNs were among the lowest-paid professionals, had no retirement, and worked every weekend. Today, through the collective action of our members, nurses at CNA/NNU facilities have safer staffing conditions, a more secure retirement, and salaries commensurate with experience. Our agreements are noted for enhancing the collective voice of RNs in patient care decisions through our Professional Practice Committees and Assignment Despite Objection documentation system.
We believe that a strong professional RN union empowers us to take our patient advocacy from the bedside to the statehouse and beyond...
Our Program
Administration turns on CEO after secretly recording meetings
Prosecutors: At Sacred Heart Hospital, 'the most sacred thing was money'
Defense: 'Here's a news flash—hospitals are businesses'
9:52 AM - February 2, 2015
The federal fraud trial against three former Sacred Heart Hospital executives began Wednesday, with the prosecutor alleging "that the most sacred thing [there] was money," the Chicago Tribune's Steve Schmadeke reports.
The prosecution argues the Chicago-area hospital, which closed in summer 2013, ran a kickback scheme through its lease agreements, staffing perks, and teaching contracts. Two doctors' kickbacks alone totaled about $350,000.
(Schmadeke, Chicago Tribune, 1/28).
Alpha M, This does not surprise me. It disgusts me, but does not come as a surprise. I hope that these charlatans are prosecuted to the full extent of the law. While all these "perks" were being paid to CEOs and doctors, I wonder how many nurses were on staff? Was staffing at dangerously low levels as it is in so many hospitals, both for profit and the so called non profit hospitals.
On a further note, when did those doctors forego their oath to "do no harm?"
embarrassment on social media, but be careful. YOU can be fired. Our nurses did a demonstration blocking traffic, but did it nicely. Cops came in, and sectioned part of the lanes off, so people could still drive. If you have a demo, on your break, hand out fliers, especially when the light turn red. Get creative! Its money, no patients. Have them call the congressman or Member of Parliament. They WILL get hte message. Its CApitalism at its best...but turning more dictatorship. get the drift?
It is a sad situation for older nurses who have worked hard their whole career and now it doesn't take much for administration to get rid of older nurses and hire in all new grads and want to give them as little orientation as they can and then put them on their own. Or else you have nurses leaving right and left for other jobs so you do work short staffed or have bigger patient assignments to take care of. So patient care suffers very much and most of the time families are unhappy also because they feel their family member is not getting good care.
I'm sure that The Powers That Be love it when nurses blame the dismal state of nursing jobs, wages, and pt care on whomever is in the oval office, and/or turn it into an ADN VS BSN VS MSN, and/or union vs. non-union etc. argument, because that keeps us fighting among ourselves and never actually able to do anything about the situation.
When the manufacturing sector of corporate America decided they'd had it with the American Labor Force and their pesky demands for good wages, bennies, etc, they thought "How can we get rid of these costly pain-in-the-butt American employees. and doubly line our own pockets??"
Easy! Close all the factories and move all the jobs to China! Problem solved!
But... when it came to to Corporate American Healthcare, wanting to get rid of those pesky nursing demands of higher wages, better working conditions, reasonable nurse to pt ratios, and other such ridiculousness... Well, that was a tougher nut to crack..... When jobs were plentiful and wages high in the early 90s- if you didn't like your job, you could get another in a day or two, remember that, nurses? I do, those were the days!
Well, Corporate American Healthcare started getting nervous. They knew they couldn't outsource the pts, so they came up with a plan....
Highly over-exaggerate the coming nursing shortage- make a shortage-mountain myth out of a molehill- put the scare into America!
And make nursing appear to be the great paying, recession-proof, glamorous, "It" job of the future!
Schools will double their enrollments, new nursing schools will pop up out of nowhere, laws restricting legal immigration will be relaxed for foreign nurses-
We'll create a nursing glut- We won't be competing for nurses anymore- they'll be competing for our jobs! Nurses will lose the little bit of power they've gained. They'll be lucky just to have jobs- there won't be any more sign-on bonuses, or hospitals competing for nurses, forcing the poor hospitals to have to improve working conditions and pay in order retain staff!
"But...What if the nurses get together and challenge us, what if they unite?
"Hey, have you seen the way nurses bicker about ADN vs. BSN, Union vs. Non-union, LPN vs. RN Democrat vs. Republican, young vs. old, new vs. seasoned, etc? All of that just works to our advantage, muddies up the waters, and keeps them divided...they'll never get together and fight us!
So, we were wrong about California, but that's only one state out of 50! We're winning!
Those Corporate American Healthcare guys are geniuses! Their plan succeeded perfectly!
MAYSE said:It is a sad situation for older nurses who have worked hard their whole career and now it doesn't take much for administration to get rid of older nurses and hire in all new grads and want to give them as little orientation as they can and then put them on their own. Or else you have nurses leaving right and left for other jobs so you do work short staffed or have bigger patient assignments to take care of. So patient care suffers very much and most of the time families are unhappy also because they feel their family member is not getting good care.
What gets me the most is that they are talking about "patient safety" yet they are the ones jeopardizing patient safety.
Lev, MSN, RN, NP
4 Articles; 2,805 Posts
It's nice, but most US states have a long way to go. CA got safe ratios passed, then they got this. Most states can't even get safe staffing.