I Work For A Broken Hospital

A little vent about watching a hospital break. I'm still hoping for improvement because I love most of the people I work with.... Nurses Announcements Archive Article

  1. Is your hospital broken too?

    • Yes, completely
    • We have major issues but function
    • It's pretty solid
    • No, I work somewhere awesome
    • All of heathcare is broken right now

67 members have participated

I work for a broken hospital. Last year after 50+ years of operation we had a situation that, while not harming any patients, was sensationalized to the point of community leaders calling for us to close. That event was the final straw in a long chain cracks that finally broke a once strong and award winning institution.

Long story short: we used to be known for cutting edge surgical robots use, award winning cardiac care and our stroke center. Fast forward through a decade of corporate mergers, for profit accounting, staffing being cut to the bone, upper level management refusing to make capital improvements while taking yearly bonuses for cost saving and the current healthcare climate and we started to fracture.

Nursing staff was pushed past any reasonable limits, ancillary staff was cut to the bone and we were expected to do the job of two with antiquated equipment and little training. As the decline became pronounced I was a CNA, often being assigned as the only assistant personnel to a full 40 bed unit. A 40 bed unit full of confused, total assist elderly patients. I was in nursing school at the time and watched as the nurses on my unit were run ragged and left in droves. I received my nursing license in the middle of a hiring freeze. A hiring freeze that was blamed for my nurses taking 7 telemetry patients with one CNA per unit but that meant I could not be hired to assist. When I finally got hired as an RN I received 6 weeks of so called orientation as a new grad and 6 months later I was in charge because I had been there the longest.

As experienced nurses left for fear of their licenses and for substantial raises, conditions continued to worsen. At this point infection rates and falls were at an all time high, patient satisfaction was at an all time low and we experienced around 200% turn over in a yearlong period. Our entire hospital was an insane mix of travelers, new grads and a very few seasoned nurses. It was not unusual for travelers to leave after one day. Management response was to berate us for not using AIDET and hourly rounding which would magically fix these issues. The facade was cracking and our patients could tell. The family members knew and asked if we were "short" but we were ordered to lie to hide our abysmal staff ratios. The night that sticks in my mind involved having 6 patients, being charge and "secretary" with 14 admissions to the unit. Pumping multiple units of blood into an active GI bleed with a hgb of 6., starting a heparin drip on a confused patient that kept pulling her IV out, another demented patient that had an order for an NG tube and a gallon of bowel prep that had to be given and the supervisor trying to give me a fresh admit that had critical care orders but ICU was already tripled due to no staff. I gave up that night and started looking for a transfer off that unit.

Around this time the powers that be decided to sell out to another corporation. The "incident" happened and was widely publicized. What was multiple small break in the hospital system was now an open compound fracture with hemorrhage. The media crucified us in spite of state regulatory clearance. The then CEO was given a "no confidence" vote by our board members and left with a whopping one day notice and a fat check. The new owners have been patching up the existing infrastructure as best they can but the logistics of modernizing an ancient structure is daunting.

Even more daunting is the task of rebuilding a nursing team. The reputation for killer workloads and unsafe staffing has made it difficult to get applications from anyone other than new grads, nurses fired elsewhere or people who are relocating. I now work in the ED and hear first hand every day how tarnished our name is in the community. Quality improvement measures and staff training have supposedly cut infection rates and falls substantially but it could be argued that the decrease in census after the news coverage may have improved staffing ratios with the same effect.

Everywhere I turn in allnurses, professional journals, nursing articles I hear "be the change you want to see"or something to that effect. What I don't know is how how this situations changes after this, for better or for worse. Right now I just know it is broken.

Specializes in Family Nurse Practitioner.

Thank you for this article.

I have worked for a broken hospital.

My current hospital has major issues but functions. The issues are primarily related to organization, inpatient flow, and communication. We have decent ratios (or are supposed to) from what I have seen on this site, however we do have gaps in staffing, people are leaving en mass, and ICU does have to triple at times. Our ER is huge but the hospital lacks enough beds and/or doctors do not dispo patients early enough in the day. It is a mess. There is a disconnect between upper management/corporate and the bedside nurse. We feel and know that THEY do not care. There is catering to the "big donors" and VIPs and the whole customer service thing. At least my ER is dilaudid free.

I just left a hospital system that is on the brink of collapse. Patients are telling me that they will not go to this hospital for acuite care and would rather drive 2 hours away to see the system I now work for to be hospitalized. The draw back the previous company is the only hospital in our area and employs a lot of people. They have tried to sell out but no one will buy because none of the vice presidents want to leave after the new company takes over. They are so oblivious as to why the company is going down the tubes. They are the cause.

Specializes in acute care, case management.

Do we work for the same hospital? Seriously... I too have come into these exact situations. In a world of chaos, in a very small community hospital, how can we be going thru World War III just in our little hallways and rampaged patient rooms. I feel you!!! I want to hug you and tell you, You are not ALONE! It's frustrating.

Should I stay, or should I go? It seems like every time a new consultant comes in, or a new company takes over to "save" the hospital, it makes things worse. Or not better at all. It's some kind of trickling effect. Does it ever get better? How can you, the floor nurse, make a difference? Management? Fight for the top to be heard? I don't know what the answer is. I'm stuck in a rut there with ya.

I work for a broken but (barely) functioning hospital and TPTB are working hard to break it like the OP's is. I guess they'll be happy then???

We are union and it's a BIG joke. I just became a unit rep to try to make some positive changes but not too sure it can happen.

I can't take much more and need to look seriously for something else but the higher union-negotiated wage and being in school for the BSN make me feel like I need to stay just to pay my bills for now anyway. The money itself cannot pay for a clear conscience and good emotional/mental health in the long run.

Specializes in acute care, case management.

Get your BSN first. And then, outta there! To greener pastures. Good luck to you!

These events are not specific to any facility. It is now the way it is.

This is caused by corporate America greed. The peons cannot be the change. The voters must elect leadership that does not support corporate greed.

Excuse me while I Bern up

I think I officially love you. Or at less I'm in strong like territory. I'll go stand in the sun and Bern in the light. I'll rather go down that option. :)

Are you by any chance in downtown Houston? Because that is happening in the hospital I work for. I love my job and the people I work with and my patients but there were a few bad patient related events throughout the hospital that they were on the verge of losing CMS funds and closing down.

Specializes in Orthopedics, Med-Surg.
Do not name the hospital here; they could come after you. I know that we post anonymously, but that is not enough protection.

I used to think this of Piedmont Medical Center in Rock Hill, SC, where I worked until I retired. What are they going to do to me? Fire me? Sue me for thinking those thoughts? Sue me for sharing that I once had those thoughts? I have no reason to no longer have those thoughts other than to say I haven't been there in six years and things might have changed. Anything's possible.

We need to stand together and start writing letters to the White House if not this will not change. I been in healthcare for 14 years and it's getting worse not better. We need to have a voice

...but we were ordered to lie to hide our abysmal staff ratios."

You NEVER lie!!!

If there was an investigation into something like Medicare/Medicaid fraud and one lied about something like staff levels to patients and families, you could be complicit in the fraud by covering it up. (Read up about RICO.)

What you say is:

"Management has said that staffing levels are adequate."

Specializes in Critical Care, Float Pool Nursing.

OP there's nothing terribly special about what is happening to your hospital. If your want to change things, go back to school for healthcare administration.

Specializes in Dialysis.
They have tried to sell out but no one will buy because none of the vice presidents want to leave after the new company takes over. They are so oblivious as to why the company is going down the tubes. They are the cause.

They new company can get rid of veeps. I've seen it happen!