Nurses Are Leaving the Bedside In Droves

We can all agree that in most areas of the nation, there is ample supply of nurses at the bedside, and in many areas, supply has well exceeded demand. Why they ask, are nurses always leaving the bedside? ANSWER: We didn't. The profession left us. Nurses General Nursing Article

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We can debate the why's, where's, how's, when's of the toxic culture in many hospitals and nursing homes.

More work, less support staff. More work, less pay. Too many patients. Higher acuity, more orders, fewer nurses being hired. My boss is dumb. My boss is toxic. Yes, its a BIG factor in a nurses decision to leave. We hate drama. We want to do our jobs in peace.

But those are just workplace semantics. There is drama in every workplace, wether in nursing, retail, law enforcement, food services, housekeeping, gaming, farming, hospitality, transportation, or basket weaving. Yes, its there now, and yes, it was there 50 years ago.

Truth be told, years ago, before corporate mergers/ takeovers/ acquisitions became as simple as buying pizza, we had hospitals and nursing homes. Today we have hospital systems and nursing home chains. With these corporate conglomerates at the helm, our profession was taken away. We lost our voices. We lost our sanity. We lost our zeal. Same thing happened to the banking system in the 1980s. Local stand alone banks were bought up, one by one, until we had 6 or 7 worldwide megabanks.

Corporate mentality stole the nursing profession and burned it at the stake. What used to be patient focus, is now billing focus. Today we do not have patients, we have inventory. Some generate substantial money, others are a drain. This is why, when and how "staffing to census" began rearing its ugly head. Back in the old days, there was no such thing as staffing to census. Nurses were hired on certain units, and that is where they stayed. Some days were super busy, others were not.

Staffing in hospitals and nursing homes today is soley based upon inventory (patients) and money (acuity). Not enough inventory in the burn unit? Float the nurse. Not enough inventory in L & D? Tell the nurse to stay home. Too many nurses on telemetry? Send 2 home, or let them work as techs on med-surg. And the list goes on.

What used to be paper documentation by exception, became EMR to generate maximum amounts of reimbursements from medicare, medicaid, and insurance. This is why we have box checkers (formerly known as nurses) spending 75% of their time at computer stations, and 25% of their time at the bedside. If you're lucky. So the next time your wife, husband, brother, sister, friend or companion starts mocking you for being a serial job hunter/ hopper, send them to this article.

Spread the word. Nurses didn't leave the bedside, the profession left us.

Specializes in sub-acute/rehab; acute psych.
On 5/26/2019 at 8:16 AM, panurse9999 said:

Should I go on? I could go on. My decision to go into nursing was the worst decision of my life. I wish I could hit the back button.

Does anyone have anything good to say about nursing??

Specializes in Cardiology.
3 hours ago, motherofcats said:

I do. Ive had mostly good experiences since becoming a RN. Ive had my share of horrible patients and family members but its not very often.

Specializes in ICU, trauma, neuro.

I have a few good things and I work for HCA in Florida no less. I like the fact I get to wear scrubs. Being a night person who enjoys video games I like the fact that I get to play games or read books while my wife and family sleep ( on my days off I stay on a night schedule). I like the fact that I get to “ sleep in” since my wife works from home until 8 pm. The nurses I work with are mostly good people. Working nights I don’t see very much administration. Not having time for a lunch break makes intermittent fasting easier. That’s a few good things.

22 hours ago, ThePrincessBride said:

You could have picked far worse than nursing.

But yeah, I think nursing is overrated as a profession. So much responsibility for so little pay in comparison. I know plumbers and electricians who are killing it without having to worry about killing people if they make a mistake.

Yep, My car repair guy gets 50 an hour and the furnace man 90. Can you believe it!!!!

Specializes in ICU.

Reading this as a 30 year who's hoping to start a 2nd career as a nurse. ?

Specializes in Cardiology.
16 minutes ago, Forest2 said:

Yep, My car repair guy gets 50 an hour and the furnace man 90. Can you believe it!!!!

I make $37/hr as a nurse with 4.5 years experience and no, its not a travel gig. Does the furnace guy make that much all the time? I know a plumber who does on call on weekends and if he gets a call the price jumps to $50/hr but that's not what he makes during the week (its still a good gig though).

Specializes in Cardiology.
6 minutes ago, Psychnursehopeful said:

Reading this as a 30 year who's hoping to start a 2nd career as a nurse. ?

Dont rely on what you read on the internet. Go and shadow a few nurses to get a feel for what it's really like.

Specializes in ICU, trauma, neuro.

My advice would be to go into ER or ICU for a few years and start your NP. Then go to an independent practice state and open your own shop. If you want to stay in bedside then consider travel nursing especially in California this works even better if you are willing to live in an R V.

On 5/29/2019 at 4:51 PM, OUxPhys said:

I make $37/hr as a nurse with 4.5 years experience and no, its not a travel gig. Does the furnace guy make that much all the time? I know a plumber who does on call on weekends and if he gets a call the price jumps to $50/hr but that's not what he makes during the week (its still a good gig though).

Yep, all the time. Hard to find good technical repair workers here. So, I guess they can charge what they want. I wonder if I should have gone to a technical school and started my own business. But, at the time, I had to start making money asap in order to survive. All my practical decisions have not helped me in the long run.

Specializes in ICU, trauma, neuro.

The grass isn’t always greener. When we used to own a mortgage company I met many electricians and plumbers who were on “waiting lists” that were sometimes years long because there was an actual or D.E. facto quota in their areas to obtain a license and or permit.

Specializes in Psych/Mental Health.
On 5/29/2019 at 4:51 PM, OUxPhys said:

Dont rely on what you read on the internet. Go and shadow a few nurses to get a feel for what it's really like.

That's pretty much impossible in today's world (HIPAA).

Specializes in Psych/Mental Health.
On 5/28/2019 at 5:45 PM, ThePrincessBride said:

As far as second-career nurses, I have been on allnurses and I cannot tell you how many posts I have read of people wishing they hadn't left their former, higher-paying, less stressful careers for nursing and wish they had done their research prior to sinking years and thousands of dollars into the career. A lot of it has to do with them hating their so-called soul-sucking corporate job and thinking that nursing is some sort of knight in shining armor...it isn't.

There's some truth to this. I did a ton of research before going into nursing and had realistic expectations, but there's simply no way to really know until you start working. Likewise, you wouldn't know how stifling it is to be in a soul-sucking corporate job for some people. One way or another, I had to get out of my corporate job and I don't regret leaving it and would never go back. Despite the negative realities of nursing, I actually find it highly rewarding.

There are less-acute bedside nursing jobs or non-bedside jobs where RNs can still interact with patients. The pay for RN isn't the best especially in some parts of the country, but it is flexible and there are opportunities to move up. Overall, I still would recommend it if someone has realistic expectations and has a plan.