Nurse Sick and FIRED: Exploring Nursing Absenteeism

You work long hours, rotating shifts, and holidays. The schedule alone is enough to leave you feeling run down, tired, and needing a day off. But, what happens when you are in fact sick? Does your facility’s call-off policy protect you from discipline or termination? Nurses General Nursing Video Interview

Updated:   Published

Meet Theresa Puckett

If you do a Google search for "nurse fired for being sick" you will be inundated with articles about Theresa Puckett, PhD, RN, CRCP, CNE, a nurse from Northeast Ohio who found herself terminated after a legitimate bout of the Flu during one of the worst Flu seasons our country has seen.

According to an article in Becker's Hospital Review, Theresa worked as a PRN Nurse at University Hospitals, based in Cleveland. She called in sick one day at the end of December 2017 with flu symptoms. Theresa visited a physician and tested positive for the flu virus. She was treated with Tamiflu and ended up missing two days of work. Her physician provided a note excusing her from work for these days. She returned to work a few days later and was instructed by a supervisor to leave early due to continued illness.

The next day, she saw a Nurse Practitioner who diagnosed her with a sinus infection and provided her with another note stating she should not return to work for a few more days. However, returning to work was never an option for Nurse Puckett because she was terminated.

You may be thinking - How does that happen?

According to the University Hospitals statement to Becker's Hospital Review, they allow six unscheduled absences for full and part-time staff within a 12 month period, and nine absences may result in termination. For "as needed" or PRN staff, two occurrences of unscheduled absences within a 60-day period may result in termination. Because Theresa returned to work for one shift in between her two absences, this counted as two occurrences and qualified her for termination.

Presentism versus Absenteeism

If you have ever gone to work sick, raise your hand. As hands of nurses around the world are raised high, let's discuss the reasons we've all done it. To really understand both sides of the issue, you need to understand the difference between absenteeism and presenteeism.

Absenteeism is the practice of staying home from work or school when you are ill. Of course, there are other reasons people call off, but for this article, we are only exploring this issue concerning illness. So, what's the opposite of absenteeism? Presenteeism - the act of going to work when you are ill.

Nurses have high standards for themselves and the care they provide to patients, even when they are ill. A 2000 study by Aronsson, et al. reported that rates of presenteeism were highest among nurses and teachers. But, we know that presenteeism may result in adverse patient outcomes, poor nurse health, and cost consequences. So, why is it so difficult to take a sick day?

Let's consider a few of the most important factors when deciding which side of the issue you support.

The Team Needs You

Your throat is on fire, your head feels like a giant elephant is jumping on it and crawling back into bed sounds like the best possible plan - but, you know your teammates need you. You don't want to let others down. Staffing on many units is kept to a minimum so even one call off could cause your co-workers to take on larger assignments, be in unsafe situations, or be upset with you for calling off.

A February 2018 article by News 5 Cleveland quoted one nurse as saying "Nurses are often commended for coming into work sick, so they don't put their comrades at a disservice for being understaffed." It seems the issues of teamwork, loyalty, and service is a double-edged sword on nursing units.

Patients Need You

Nurses spend more time with patients than any other healthcare professional. You recognize minor changes in assessments and notify physicians. Yes, the doctors diagnose and order new treatments, but it's the nurses who carry out these orders that are often life-saving treatments.

A 2015 study published in JAMA Pediatrics explored the reasons physicians and advanced practice nurses work while ill. While 95% of the respondents believed working while sick put patients at risk, 83% reported working at least one time in the prior year while sick, and 9% reported working while ill at least 5 times. Symptoms reported in this study included fever, diarrhea and acute onset of respiratory symptoms. 92.5% of these clinicians cited not wanting to let patients down as one of the reasons they headed to work with these signs of illness.

So, as you lie in bed contemplating calling in - that's what runs through your mind, right? Without you - who will care for your patients? And, what if you are not the only one with this dreaded illness? So, off to work you go.

Sick Time Policies

Are sick time policies created to protect or punish you? This is a hard question to answer. And, it often leaves nurses faced with difficult decisions that end in absenteeism or presenteeism.

Let's explore a few sick time policy practices.

Forfeiting Pay

Some call-off policies will withhold pay from nurses if you call off at specific times. This might mean that calling off the day before a holiday will result in forfeiture of holiday pay. Or, if you call off on your last scheduled day before a planned vacation or on your first scheduled day after a planned vacation - you forfeit vacation pay.

In a world where many people live paycheck to paycheck, this policy might result in nurses putting themselves and their patients at risk to keep pay that many would argue is rightfully yours. You can't plan illness, so if you are sick around these specific time points, what are you to do?

Unexcused Absences

Most policies give a number of 'unexcused" absences allowed over a period of time, such as 12 months. Typically after missing this number of days, you will be reprimanded. You may also be given a specific amount of time, such as the remainder of the year or 90 days, in which you must not miss any more work.

Of course, if you end up legitimately ill during this time, you are probably going to go to work or risk disciplinary action.

No Sick Pay

Nurses who work a limited number of hours per week or PRN often have no sick time. This leaves you making financial decisions in the face of illness.

Or, your policy may require you to use vacation time before using sick pay. This may seem counterintuitive given the fact that nurse burnout and fatigue runs rampant on many nursing units and days off are necessary.

Physician Notes

Some sick policies require a physician's note for any unplanned absences. Others might state that no MD note is necessary because all unscheduled absences are unapproved. Or, you may also find policies that require a doctor's note after a certain number of days, which may be due to the Family Medical Leave Act.

No matter what your policy reads in regards to doctors notes, you need to understand it before you need to use it. Be sure to get notes when they are required to remain compliant with your facilities policies.

Termination

Almost all sick policies will lead to termination as an end result. And, when such procedures are executed the same across the board, most nurses find these policies to be acceptable. However, when these policies are not carried out consistently, you may feel that they are being used against you or other staff on your unit to force your hand at finding a new job.

Some of the allnurses team met Theresa at the NursesTakeDC rally earlier this year. Nurse Beth was able to interview Theresa and learn more about her ordeal. Thank you for sharing with us, Theresa.

What are Your Thoughts?

So, where does all of this leave you? Do you stay home when ill or head to work in an attempt to avoid discipline, even when you know it is not best for you or your patients? Now it's time for you to decide.

Tell us your thoughts and experiences with nurse absenteeism, presenteeism, and termination.

Specializes in Emergency Department.
Nursing is a rough profession. ...Nursing is not for wimps.

Sorry, I know I have already answered part of the post but... Seriously?

If this is your attitude then management will always walk all over you. They will blame you for everything. What you will sometimes see is management saying to young nurses, "can't you cope?" when something goes wrong and they don't want to get involved. It is bullying and should not be tolerated. Statements such as you wrote only make the problem worse.

Here's what happened to me. I went to work and began experiencing symptoms of a medical emergency of my own. I called the on-call supervisor and told her I believed I was getting a detached retina and needed to go to the ER. She yelled at me that she couldn't cover for me because of xyz. She offered no solution for me, just basically it wasn't her problem. When I called I had vision but by the end of the shift I didn't. Completely detached torn retina, requiring intensive interventions, doctor appointments, surgeries, which continue many months and to this day. This has altered my life significantly. When I was in thd ER received texts telling me that because I had called off that weekend i would have to work the following weekend. I was actually scheduled anyway, the week end I had the emergency I had picked up to help out. That was my last shift as a nurse and not sure I'll ever work again.

I was fairly new at that facility (SNF) and had never called out before. Picked up shifts when asked.

Specializes in NICU/Mother-Baby/Peds/Mgmt.

Please tell me you consulted a lawyer about this...

I can't believe what I'm reading here. I feel for you, really, this should have never happened. Agree with pp, you should get a laywer.

I wish you well in your ongoing treatment and recovery.

Warning to others: No job is worth ruining your health. If your supervisor is unreasonable, take it to the next higher level and so on.

When I was a fairly new, naive nurse, I was told by my clinical director that it didn't matter that I was having a miscarriage, I was expected to be at work. The house super, who just passed the state bar exam sent me home when she found out for liability reasons. I was also told I was expected to be on time when I was in the closet for a tornado sighted within a mile of my house. They made me feel so bad a drove to work in a near tornado to be on time. While I would not risk my life to go to work now, twice I have been so sick at work that when I finished my shift and went home, I was back at the hospital within 3 hours being admitted for five days both times. I have worked with my O2 sat dropping in the mid eighties from bad asthma flairs, doing breathing tx at work every 3 hours with my own set up. (No I don't smoke) They will say "stay home if you are sick" but every nurse knows, especially weekend nurses, if we did we would fired pronto. It's a right to work state. They can fire you without any reason at all. Nursing is the only profession I know of that is expected to work 13 hours without a lunch or pee break if need be. I have been a nurse 24 yrs and I still like helping people but if I had it to do over I would not have been a nurse. I literally have legitimate trauma from some of the hateful things done and said over 24 yrs. it's ridiculous.

This stuff is really heartbreaking. Some of the reasons why I left "nursing" to become an NP, where the pressure is much less intense.

While I understand why these types of policies exist, I wish that more organizations would keep people with chronic illnesses in mind when creating them. I have hemiplegic migraines that are fairly well controlled, but can still flare up from time to time. It's not safe for me to get behind the wheel, let alone care for patients when I am nearly blind in one eye, numb/weak on one side, and vomiting like the girl in The Exorcist. It's unbelievably frustrating to be penalized for something that is 100% out of my control.

I was on intermittent FMLA during my pregnancy due to hyperemesis gravidarum and recurrent hospitalizations/ER visits/home health services. I was on a zofran subcu pump 24/7 for a month and had home health services for IV home hydration. I still have the IV pole in my closet. I missed a few days here and there and three out of four weeks in one month. I didn't get fired, thanks to the FMLA, but I did get a bad review by being given a 2 in the dependability and attendance category. Once the HG subsided I was back at work full time, even wearing my pump for the first couple of weeks back, and hadn't even been late in 2 months, and was still dinged for it. I was so mad that my FMLA-protected health condition was considered the same as a chronically-late employee who's 10 minutes late every day due to the long line at Starbucks. And no, the manager who gave me that review doesn't have kids or a spouse and doesn't want either one.

Specializes in NICU/Mother-Baby/Peds/Mgmt.

I'm not sure this is legal, I would definitely check into it.

That's why I go to work sock. The state survey is going on,so I'm here,even though I'm vomiting.

On 7/27/2018 at 10:16 AM, allnurses said:
Nurse Sick and FIRED: Exploring Nursing Absenteeism

Meet Theresa Puckett

If you do a Google search for "nurse fired for being sick" you will be inundated with articles about Theresa Puckett, PhD, RN, CRCP, CNE, a nurse from Northeast Ohio who found herself terminated after a legitimate bout of the Flu during one of the worst Flu seasons our country has seen.

According to an article in Becker's Hospital Review, Theresa worked as a PRN Nurse at University Hospitals, based in Cleveland. She called in sick one day at the end of December 2017 with flu symptoms. Theresa visited a physician and tested positive for the flu virus. She was treated with Tamiflu and ended up missing two days of work. Her physician provided a note excusing her from work for these days. She returned to work a few days later and was instructed by a supervisor to leave early due to continued illness.

The next day, she saw a Nurse Practitioner who diagnosed her with a sinus infection and provided her with another note stating she should not return to work for a few more days. However, returning to work was never an option for Nurse Puckett because she was terminated.

You may be thinking - How does that happen?

According to the University Hospitals statement to Becker's Hospital Review, they allow six unscheduled absences for full and part-time staff within a 12 month period, and nine absences may result in termination. For "as needed" or PRN staff, two occurrences of unscheduled absences within a 60-day period may result in termination. Because Theresa returned to work for one shift in between her two absences, this counted as two occurrences and qualified her for termination.

Presentism versus Absenteeism

If you have ever gone to work sick, raise your hand. As hands of nurses around the world are raised high, let's discuss the reasons we've all done it. To really understand both sides of the issue, you need to understand the difference between absenteeism and presenteeism.

Absenteeism is the practice of staying home from work or school when you are ill. Of course, there are other reasons people call off, but for this article, we are only exploring this issue concerning illness. So, what's the opposite of absenteeism? Presenteeism - the act of going to work when you are ill.

Nurses have high standards for themselves and the care they provide to patients, even when they are ill. A 2000 study by Aronsson, et al. reported that rates of presenteeism were highest among nurses and teachers. But, we know that presenteeism may result in adverse patient outcomes, poor nurse health, and cost consequences. So, why is it so difficult to take a sick day?

Let's consider a few of the most important factors when deciding which side of the issue you support.

The Team Needs You

Your throat is on fire, your head feels like a giant elephant is jumping on it and crawling back into bed sounds like the best possible plan - but, you know your teammates need you. You don't want to let others down. Staffing on many units is kept to a minimum so even one call off could cause your co-workers to take on larger assignments, be in unsafe situations, or be upset with you for calling off.

A February 2018 article by News 5 Cleveland quoted one nurse as saying "Nurses are often commended for coming into work sick, so they don't put their comrades at a disservice for being understaffed." It seems the issues of teamwork, loyalty, and service is a double-edged sword on nursing units.

Patients Need You

Nurses spend more time with patients than any other healthcare professional. You recognize minor changes in assessments and notify physicians. Yes, the doctors diagnose and order new treatments, but it's the nurses who carry out these orders that are often life-saving treatments.

A 2015 study published in JAMA Pediatrics explored the reasons physicians and advanced practice nurses work while ill. While 95% of the respondents believed working while sick put patients at risk, 83% reported working at least one time in the prior year while sick, and 9% reported working while ill at least 5 times. Symptoms reported in this study included fever, diarrhea and acute onset of respiratory symptoms. 92.5% of these clinicians cited not wanting to let patients down as one of the reasons they headed to work with these signs of illness.

So, as you lie in bed contemplating calling in - that's what runs through your mind, right? Without you - who will care for your patients? And, what if you are not the only one with this dreaded illness? So, off to work you go.

Sick Time Policies

Are sick time policies created to protect or punish you? This is a hard question to answer. And, it often leaves nurses faced with difficult decisions that end in absenteeism or presenteeism.

Let's explore a few sick time policy practices.

Forfeiting Pay

Some call-off policies will withhold pay from nurses if you call off at specific times. This might mean that calling off the day before a holiday will result in forfeiture of holiday pay. Or, if you call off on your last scheduled day before a planned vacation or on your first scheduled day after a planned vacation - you forfeit vacation pay.

In a world where many people live paycheck to paycheck, this policy might result in nurses putting themselves and their patients at risk to keep pay that many would argue is rightfully yours. You can't plan illness, so if you are sick around these specific time points, what are you to do?

Unexcused Absences

Most policies give a number of 'unexcused" absences allowed over a period of time, such as 12 months. Typically after missing this number of days, you will be reprimanded. You may also be given a specific amount of time, such as the remainder of the year or 90 days, in which you must not miss any more work.

Of course, if you end up legitimately ill during this time, you are probably going to go to work or risk disciplinary action.

No Sick Pay

Nurses who work a limited number of hours per week or prn often have no sick time. This leaves you making financial decisions in the face of illness.

Or, your policy may require you to use vacation time before using sick pay. This may seem counterintuitive given the fact that nurse burnout and fatigue runs rampant on many nursing units and days off are necessary.

Physician Notes

Some sick policies require a physician's note for any unplanned absences. Others might state that no MD note is necessary because all unscheduled absences are unapproved. Or, you may also find policies that require a doctor's note after a certain number of days, which may be due to the Family Medical Leave Act.

No matter what your policy reads in regards to doctors notes, you need to understand it before you need to use it. Be sure to get notes when they are required to remain compliant with your facilities policies.

Termination

Almost all sick policies will lead to termination as an end result. And, when such procedures are executed the same across the board, most nurses find these policies to be acceptable. However, when these policies are not carried out consistently, you may feel that they are being used against you or other staff on your unit to force your hand at finding a new job.

Some of the allnurses team met Theresa at the NursesTakeDC rally earlier this year. Nurse Beth was able to interview Theresa and learn more about her ordeal. Thank you for sharing with us, Theresa.

What are Your Thoughts?

So, where does all of this leave you? Do you stay home when ill or head to work in an attempt to avoid discipline, even when you know it is not best for you or your patients? Now it's time for you to decide.

Tell us your thoughts and experiences with nurse absenteeism, presenteeism, and termination.

no wonder so many GOOD nurses are leaving the field, recently had experience with hospitalized relative and as a retired R.N. was not shocked to hear all the negativity from really wonderful nurses if the public thinks there is a shortage now, jut wait for another few years, I've already arranged for private duty nursing from my nursing friends here in Fl. if I get sick and need hospitalization. they are not allowed to get sick work ridiculous hours and get very little in return not even a thank you. I blame it on hospitals being run by CEO's who could care less about patient care but only on the bottom line MONEY. Our hospital CEO's make more than any other CEO's in this city WHY???

Specializes in LTC & Teaching.

I'm sure that most Nurses could write a book on this subject alone, myself included.

Several years ago I was in an attendance management meeting as I had missed sereral shifts. The reason being is that several different facilities across the city were in different outbreaks of either respiratory or gastrointestinal infections. Our facility wasn't, but the Nurse managers had posted notes through out the facility encouraging staff that if they exhibited any of the symptoms on the list to stay home as they were trying to prevent a similar outbreak where I worked.

I and a few other staff did experience different symptoms and listened to what these managers were instructing us to. A few months later we were each called in with regards to our various sick days. The union had a field day with this as staff were following the direction of their managers. In addition I indicated that as Nurses, we had an ethical responsibility that if we are sick, to stay home and not bring the infection to work and get others sick. I remember one union official in particular indicated, "Good point, why are we here?" He was not impressed at all with these different managers.

What's also interesting about this is that when ever there's various flu out breaks in a community, you will often hear various health officials comment on the radio about the importance of staying home in order to reduce the potential of spreading the infection. Yet, as well know, when ever Nurses follow that common sense advice, they are often disciplined in some fashion.

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