A Plea to Nurses Everywhere

A plea for nurses everywhere that arose after a drive home reflection. Conflict is as much a part of our work environment as medication administration. Does it really have to be? We can choose our attitudes and begin to treat our coworkers like we treat our patients. With respect. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

I don't seem to process everything that I see, hear and do at work until I am home. My lack of reflection until later might have something to do with running around like a Looney Tunes character for eight or more hours caring for the sick. It is difficult to be reflective when life has to be lived so much in the moment.

But after the last IV has been hung, the last lab value dealt with, the last medication given and the last note written, as I drive home, fragments of my day begin to surface as I try to unwind.

I have different "topics", I guess you could call it, that I mull over as I drive depending on the week or the day.

Some days as I drive home I am reflecting on my assessment skills. Other days I am reflecting on my patient education skills. Sometimes I think about a new disease I learned about, or a new drug.

There is always room for improvement and I often wonder if I would go back and approach a certain situation differently.

I don't always reflect about nursing: there are some shifts where I drive home listening to the radio and trying NOT to think about anything that I did that day.

I have noticed lately, however, that a lot of my reflections on the drive home have to do with communication. Not nurse to patient communication, but staff communication.

Nurse to nurse communication.

Nurse to provider communication.

And quite often, what I am reflecting on is the negative communication that I see.

I know that this topic is not a new one. It has been discussed from many angles by many people more qualified than I. But I would like to show you, if I could, some things that I have seen in over a few weeks time. I imagine that you have seen similar situations.

I have seen and heard:

  • Staff nurses raising their voices (ok, screaming) at a charge nurse at the beginning of a shift because they didn't like their assignment (which, by the way, was not an unfair assignment). And no, I am not the charge nurse.
  • A student calling a health care provider, who spoke sharply at the student after a suggestion was made. The student was tearful as she got off the phone. When the healthcare provider came to the floor, she was incredulous that the student had been upset, because she thought she was just explaining to the student why she would not do what was suggested.
  • A nurse yelling at someone calling to give her report that "I will call you back when I am ready" and slamming the phone down.
  • Another nurse yelling at a pharmacy tech over the phone when an order wasn't right and again slamming the phone down.
  • A doctor trying to explain a unique diagnosis he felt a patient had to a nurse who then replied "So? Am I supposed to be impressed?"
  • Nurses rolling their eyes at dietary techs, housekeepers, etc. who didn't do something they needed help with the minute they needed it.
  • A doctor speaking curtly to a pharmacist about a lab value and then hanging up.

And I couldn't tell you about all of the little jabs that I have seen oncoming nurses give to off coming nurses during report. Quite often between 'older' nurses and 'younger' nurses over nitpicking things that don't amount to a hill of beans.

I understand that we work in stressful environments. We have to get things done. We can't always be worried about the other person being offended, and yes, some people are a little bit too sensitive.

But when this behavior is discussed, we seem to shrug our shoulders and say "Oh well, nurses eat their young. That is just the way it is. People shouldn't get offended so easily."

When I first graduated from nursing school and started in the workplace, I couldn't believe how vicious some nurses were to other nurses.

Trying to figure it out, I mentioned the phrase "Nurses eat their young" to my mother, who has no healthcare background at all. I had heard that phrase many times and it was just a matter of fact to me. "Well you know what they say, nurses eat their young" I mentioned to her offhandedly.

And she was shocked. I mean really shocked. As in stopped what she was doing shocked.

"What a horrible thing to say!" she said aghast. "That is just awful!"

She was incredulous that such a concept existed.

And so we should be.

I have whole chapters in some of my nursing books dedicated to conflict management. There are many great tips in those chapters. But isn't it sad that those chapters have to exist?

There is truth to horizontal violence in the workplace. But interestingly enough, I see a lot of lateral violence. Perhaps more that horizontal.

It's not just Doctors screaming at nurses I see. I see nurses screaming at Doctors. I see nurses screaming at nurses.

I see everything.

And usually I feel like just standing up and saying to my co-workers what my mother would say to me and my siblings when I was young: "Just be nice!"

I know that this topic has so much more involved than just 'being nice.' I know that sometimes, if you are too nice, you will get walked on and the job might not get done.

But theories and sayings like horizontal violence, nurses eating their young, stressful work environments aside, why can't we just be nice?

We DON'T have to disrespect other departments when they are giving us report. We DON'T have to get frustrated at the pharmacy tech because of a system error. We CAN check our tone of voice when we speak to other members of the team, including students.

We can THINK before we speak and we can CONTROL our emotions, and set the phone down gently.

We CAN respect a physician who wants to explain something interesting.

We CAN enjoy the challenge of a different assignment for the shift, and we DON'T have to yell to get what we want.

We are adults. And we are nurses. We need to care enough for the other person to check our stressed out, negative, horrible side at the door and care for those we work with as much as we care for our patients.

I am not telling you to be a doormat. When you need to stand up for yourself, stand up for yourself! But think before you act.

We should be just as shocked at the statement "Nurses eat their young" as my non-healthcare mother was.

Nurses don't just eat their young. They eat each other and everyone around them.

Let's stop.

Think about all of the conflict that you see on your next drive home like I have.

Are you part of it? Do you have to be?

How does it make you feel? Can you change?

Is there something that you need to do to change?

Maybe you are burned out.

I don't know. I just see the behavior.

But since I have not stood up on the desk at the nurses' station and shouted this as loud as I could, I will just say it here.

Please, just be nice.

I have also seen people being accused of being mean or rude for bogus reasons. like not smiling enough, not caring about someones bany shower, not doing other people's work because they are slow or incompetent. if you have the wrong fluids hanging and someone points it out, did not give stat meds in a timely fashion or did not report

K of 6.9 to md or hgb 7 and someone in report says it should have been done. get over it . i have seen nurses so fed up with being accused of being mean by defensive, often incompetent nurses, that many seem to let them just go on and do things incorrectly. i try to do that but will not allow a pt to suffer due to hurt feelings . so

i say things in a "by the way " manner. most appreciate it .some get too defensive Nd go crying to the manager. well ok from now on sink, and i will be emailing management every little error instead

Your post sounds like you might be the over-aggressive one

I have also seen people being accused of being mean or rude for bogus reasons. like not smiling enough, not caring about someones bany shower, not doing other people's work because they are slow or incompetent. if you have the wrong fluids hanging and someone points it out, did not give stat meds in a timely fashion or did not report

K of 6.9 to md or hgb 7 and someone in report says it should have been done. get over it . i have seen nurses so fed up with being accused of being mean by defensive, often incompetent nurses, that many seem to let them just go on and do things incorrectly. i try to do that but will not allow a pt to suffer due to hurt feelings . so

i say things in a "by the way " manner. most appreciate it .some get too defensive Nd go crying to the manager. well ok from now on sink, and i will be emailing management every little error instead

Your post sounds exactly like the negative attitude at my work and YOU might be the problem. I translate "not doing other peoples work because they are too slow or incompetent" as you not willing to help your fellow team members when they are in the dumps. If incompetence is truly a concern it should be brought up to a manager if patient safety is a concern, if a nurse is too "slow" maybe she has a tough assignment, maybe you cant appreciate what she DOES do correctly and only focus on the negative. The OP is completely right and from reading alot of these posts it seems that the ones who disagree are also the ones with a chip on their shoulder.

Specializes in Oncology, Med-Surg.
Two reasons I have seen. One is administration allows this to occur. They know which physicians yell, yet do nothing. They see the nurses who 'eat their young' and turn a blind eye. I don't know why their leadership is weak, but they are the wrong choices for their positions
When I was a charge nurse and a nurse manager, I was very clear that I would not tolerate this type of behavior on my unit. This is what needs to happen for this type of behavior to stop. Stop tolerating it!! Report people who have repeated outbursts, bully others, etc.