Nurses are Fleeing the Hospital

Nurses have simply had enough and are walking out of acute care. How far will it go? Have we seen the peak yet? Nurses General Nursing Article

Updated:  

Here are some conversations that are taking place at hospitals everywhere across the country. Do they sound familiar?

"Did you hear Kim is leaving?”

"Kim !?? Kim in Step down?? Nooo! You don't mean Kim! She's been here forever!”

"Ya! and I hear 2 more step down nurses turned in their notice.”

Nurses left behind while their colleagues and friends grieve the loss. Years, decades, even, of experience walk out the door, leaving those behind to pick up the slack and cope with working with an inexperienced workforce.

Later on at the same hospital, at the evening command center safety huddle, it's reported that 28 nurses are out on leave.

The educators in Staff Development are informed that 26 travelers are coming on Tuesday of this week, and must be onboarded. 

Where are all the nurses going? 

My sister works in a hospital across the country from me and nurses are running out of her hospital as well. "Where are they going?", I ask. "Anywhere", she says. "Just out of here.”

Tipping Point

It's one thing to work hard and pull together for a national emergency. It's another to work hard with no end in sight and to not feel valued. 

COVID was the tipping point. COVID took a stressed-out, unappreciated workforce and pushed it over the edge. Exhaustion coupled with unappreciation equals nurses talking with their feet.

Conversations continue.

"I saw the MedSurg manager taking care of patients this morning!.”

"Seriously, did she even have Pyxis access? She hasn't worked bedside in 8 years! How come the charge nurse isn't taking patients instead?"

"She is! She's charge and has a full load.”

Anger

The boilerpot situation breeds deep frustration and anger...and anger wants a target. Staff who have worked at their hospital day in and day out, month after month, year after year, are orienting travelers making twice as much pay. Meanwhile, staff nurses' phones are blowing up with requests begging them to stay later, come in earlier, and work on their days off.

Nurses are angry at managers and Directors who are seen as out of touch and insensitive. Administration blames managers if their staff leave. "We all know employees leave or stay because of their managers.” Ironically administration rarely asks nurses themselves what it would take for them to stay. 

Brenda, an NP who loves ED medicine, is quitting and going to work in a plastics office because she can no longer tolerate the chaos.

When COVID resurged with the Delta Variant, and the ED staff was stocking tents erected in the parking lot in 108 degree weather, she texted her manager to see about getting some flats of chilled bottled water for the staff.  Her manager texted back she was out getting body work done on her car. 

Nurses are angry when work gets shifted to them from other departments. An out-of-ratio ICU RN caring for 3 ICU level patients with one patient alone on 4 different antibiotics went to the Pyxis only to discover that suddenly this morning, she has to mix and label her own antibiotics. She calls Pharmacy and is told, "It's because we're short-staffed".

Nurses are angry at patients who brought this on themselves. Nurses put their lives on the line once for over a year, but many aren't willing to do it again for people who could have been vaccinated but chose not to.

Lack of Trust

Signs on patient doors say PAPR required for aerosol inducing procedures...what..? We aren't routinely given PAPRs, just N95s! Is the sign wrong? Or is the practice wrong? Are we at risk? Why can't we trust the information we're given?

Nurses are practicing in chaos with conflicting directions and changing guidelines. Discovering that they weren't protected after all. There's distrust in government agencies and hospital administrations. 

Leaving Begets Leaving

"I heard 3 nurses turned in their notice on 7SE.”

"Wow. Maybe I'll quit, too.”Leaving is contagious. It starts as a trickle and ends up a flood. I'm not at all sure it's possible to stop it midstream, but could it have been prevented?

What do you think? Why are nurses quitting?

Specializes in Dialysis.
5 hours ago, Honyebee said:

I wonder why they don't tell their staff upfront about auto insurance that it requires. 

Because they only care about getting staff. Your insurance is your business in their eyes

Specializes in Customer service.
Just now, Hoosier_RN said:

Because they only care about getting staff. Your insurance is your business in their eyes

I understand, but there are people who have no clue about this. My auto insurance knows  my work address and school address. I was paying about 1500usd annually with sparkling good driving records and credit scores. Now, it's decreased to 800usd. I live closer to my college and work.

On 8/23/2021 at 6:52 PM, Wuzzie said:

14 nurses on one floor just gave their 2 weeks notice on the same day!  Rumor has it that our hospital is not hiring any regular staff and is planning on only hiring travelers in an attempt to bust our union. We have no code or RRT teams at the moment. Ambulatory floats have been pulled in-patient. They’d pull us too but we are already at least 10 nurses short on the daily. The CNO recently told us that if we don’t like how things are,  “Amazon is hiring”. Our manager massively threw us under the bus then immediately went on vacation leaving us to try to clean up the mess. Her last message to us…”Peace Out”. Since she’s been back all she’s done is hide in her office with the door closed and a “do not disturb” sign on it. Our annual reviews are due…I can only imagine how those are going to turn out, they don’t want to pay us. Morale is the worst I’ve ever seen it in over 30 decades of nursing. The lack of respect from the top down is stunning. I’d run too if I could but I can’t take the massive financial risk. 

Have you reported her to Admin?  Have you anonymously made her remarks known to the media?  She needs a nurse - for her head.  She is whacko!  And she needs to go - maybe to Amazon.

On 9/3/2021 at 11:38 AM, Runsoncoffee99 said:

It’s not just hospitals. It’s happening in LTC and home health too. Nurses are fleeing every setting.
 

With my past employer, a home care company, I found out that the client service managers( schedulers) were getting better, cheaper health benefits AND four weeks weeks vacation a year. Meanwhile,the field staff barely got a week’s vacation a year.

I also found out that my previous company is offering brand new Lpn’s $30/ hour. That’s cool and all but I am an RN and  had been with the company for 12 years. I started with $31/hour and left with…….$31/hour. After getting my BSN, I asked if the salary would change. Admin said it was a definite no. They blamed the federal government and stated it was due to low reimbursement rates. I’m like yeah right, if that’s the case then how come the workers in the office get better benefits that the nurses that are actually doing the work.
I felt so cheated because I use to work 70 to 80 hours a week for this company. Never got a bonus or recognition.

Same company is offering a sign on bonus of $10,000 to Rns. 

You might want to check with the state or federal Dept. of Labor re: overtime that I'll bet you were supposed to get but didn't.  Even if you no longer work there.

As far as your salary, that is on you for not talking about it before you were hired.  As for vacation and cost of insurance - again, on you.  Nothing says you can't change it now, though.  All of these things should be in writing, like a contract.

Best wishes.

On 9/2/2021 at 4:05 PM, Ohio NP said:

Right now, my employer has me filling my role ( the medical directors NP, I see almost all her patients) , the RN team manager role, and an RN case manager role. They give me the gaslighting hey the team needs you crap that they fall back on every time. When it’s something they need we’re all in it together but when it’s something we need, we are negative or not team players etc. Oh yeah and they sent me a lot of atta boy emails and gave me a recognition award. You want to know what my prize was? A stupid pin. A 25 cent garbage pin like I’m a freaking child looking for worthless trophies. Typical abuser behavior smack you across the face then lovebomb and gaslight with cheap grocery store flowers from the sale bin. Then on the team conference call they bragged about the extra money they are making from being so understaffed. If I was younger I would be out of this profession in a minute.

Cop out.  Don't give yourself this excuse to let things continue the way they are.

You need to gather the courage to speak up.

You need to slow down.  As long as you do all the work, as long as you don't call them on the cheap pin, the wilted flowers, the ridiculous emails, etc., they will continue.

I hope you find the courage and maybe a new job.  I know it's hard but you really need to think this through.  Best wishes.

22 minutes ago, Kooky Korky said:

Have you reported her to Admin?  Have you anonymously made her remarks known to the media?  She needs a nurse - for her head.  She is whacko!  And she needs to go - maybe to Amazon.

Well, she’s a he and he IS administration. He’s the CNO not too many people above him to report to and certainly no one who cares. 

Specializes in Geriatrics, Dialysis.
On 8/23/2021 at 6:52 PM, Wuzzie said:

14 nurses on one floor just gave their 2 weeks notice on the same day!  Rumor has it that our hospital is not hiring any regular staff and is planning on only hiring travelers in an attempt to bust our union. We have no code or RRT teams at the moment. Ambulatory floats have been pulled in-patient. They’d pull us too but we are already at least 10 nurses short on the daily. The CNO recently told us that if we don’t like how things are,  “Amazon is hiring”. Our manager massively threw us under the bus then immediately went on vacation leaving us to try to clean up the mess. Her last message to us…”Peace Out”. Since she’s been back all she’s done is hide in her office with the door closed and a “do not disturb” sign on it. Our annual reviews are due…I can only imagine how those are going to turn out, they don’t want to pay us. Morale is the worst I’ve ever seen it in over 30 decades of nursing. The lack of respect from the top down is stunning. I’d run too if I could but I can’t take the massive financial risk. 

Dang Wuzzie, I had no idea you were that old!, Retire already, LOL!!

2 minutes ago, kbrn2002 said:

Dang Wuzzie, I had no idea you were that old!, Retire already, LOL!!

Oh geez. I didn’t see that. Apparently I conflated 3 decades and 30 years. But I AM old. ?

14 hours ago, Kooky Korky said:

Have you reported her to Admin?  Have you anonymously made her remarks known to the media?  She needs a nurse - for her head.  She is whacko!  And she needs to go - maybe to Amazon.

Sounds like hospitals and facilities are playing major hardball and dirty. I see this only getting worse. And a PR move would be to spin it like it's the nurse's fault and thay we are putting money before patients. Articles don't have to directly write this but it can be implied/inferred by the reader as the logic of the article shows the conditions and then states nurses are leaving without further discussion. 

Specializes in "Wound care - geriatric care.

Hospitals fight the fight in order to keep their insane fat profits. Imagine if the police dept. was open for profit like hospitals and SNF are? And what about the fire dept.?

3 hours ago, Leonardo Del Toro said:

Hospitals fight the fight in order to keep their insane fat profits. Imagine if the police dept. was open for profit like hospitals and SNF are? And what about the fire dept.?

I see your point... but nurses also benefit from the competition.... look at the travel nurses leaving gigs for better gigs. Or the full time hires that are leaving for travel contracts. 

Specializes in Dialysis.
23 hours ago, Honyebee said:

I understand, but there are people who have no clue about this

I agree and I think it's crappy, but as an adult, everyone should educate themselves about this. I use the "good neighbor" insurance company. My agent knows that I'm a nurse and about every 6 months or so, asks if I'm doing any home health/hospice and even travel work, and reminds me to let him know if it changes. Yes, I found out the hard way in the 90s...