I miss floor nursing...I think?

Nurses General Nursing

Published

Hi,

I started as a new grad on a CVICU step down unit and stayed there about 2 years. The floor went through a lot of changes while I was there as many floors do. Our manager left and after that many people started to leave. We had an interim manager but they ended up not taking the job. So we as the staff felt like no one wanted us. We ultimately had to "fend for ourselves". There were days where we had 5 patients with no techs, most of the patients with multiple drains (chest tubes, NG tubes, abdominal drains, etc.) with cardiac drips, insulin drips. With no support from a manager we had to support and help each other.

After working in that environment about 6 months, I got burnt out. I decided to take a job as an oncology clinical research nurse M-F no weekends or holidays. I thought I would love it! Well that ended up not being the case. After being here about 4 months, I am pretty bored! It is pretty much all paper work and rarely patient interaction.

I think back to the floor and I miss it. I never thought I would say that, but I do. I miss the rush, I miss the patient interaction and feeling like you made a difference in that patient's life. I often think back to working on the floor and wish I never left. Should I go back or should I hang in here and see what happens? I don't like the idea of working weekends and holidays again but I would rather do that than not make a difference in a patient's life.

Wow! I am going through the exact same thing. I went into Case Management thinking I was done from the floor for good...but I was wrong. I am extremely bored and miss patient care terribly. I called my old manager to ask for my job back.

I did the same thing. Literally begged my manager to take me back. I was very bored and missed using my clinical skills.

Specializes in LTC, med/surg, hospice.

I am also that left bedside for a Mon-Fri job with no patient interaction - not even on the phone! I miss patient care but it doesn't have to be bedside/acute care. I wish you well whatever you decide.

Honestly, I get thinking you miss the floor. There were times I thought I might feel the same, then I remember that I'm far from 25 years old now, my back can't take it and way too many people drove me crazy.

I am perfectly content in my role as a school nurse. Day shift, no holidays/weekends, summers off, no physicians to deal with and we are fully autonomous. Wouldn't give it up for anything. Yes, to many it seems we are paid less but considering we've four weeks off through the school year and all summer off as well (perfect times to work per diem at the bedside if you'd like!), the pay works out to be pretty good, actually.

I hope that you can find what you enjoy. Makes all the difference in the world.

Hi I feel the same way! I worked med-surg/oncology for 2.5 years, and have been in MH case management for 4 months now. The hours are great (M-F 9-5) and we get autonomy, but the hang up is I work with ALL social workers who do not understand nursing. So far it has been a rough transition. Everyone at my old job says I need to come back because they miss me, but floor nursing requires 3-4 12 hour shifts/week, and I can't do that with a young baby. I am considering sticking with my current job for 6 months and then I'll reevaluate. I may consider transferring to clinical nursing like PACU, or an outpatient clinic.

It's like being stuck between a rock and a hard place trying to find your niche!

I really miss it too. I've been out of the hospital setting for 9 months and I want to go back. My husband thinks I'm crazy because he remembers how miserable I was due to the stress of my unit constantly being understaffed yet having such high acuity patients. That part, I don't miss.. nor do I miss the constant call lights, bed alarms, phone calls, interruptions, etc... but I miss taking care of people. I miss the structure and teamwork aspect. How hard is it to get back into a hospital setting after being out of it for 9 months and only having one previous year of hospital experience?

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