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.

Nurses aren't just fleeing the hospital, they are fleeing most direct care positions

4 Votes
Specializes in Customer service.

I can't blame them. I used to work up to 80hrs a week. I resigned and returned to work from full time to PRN. I reiterated to my superiors  I felt bad, but I will not work extra hours. If they want to not give me hours, it's even better for me. Right now, I'm here pleasurably taking my time slowly. All I have to worry about is my nursing school. 

 

2 Votes
Specializes in ER.

If you look at the Covid and vaccination threads, nurses are attacking each other for the slightest difference in opinion. I'm willing to bet that carries through to the work sites. We had bizarre directives for PPE when COVID started, and no consistent messaging from the CDC and hospitals. Now we've got mandated vaccines before even the FDA will say the vaccines is safe for anything other than emergency use. 

People are going to do their own research and come up with their own opinions when federal agencies aren't consistent. Jumping down each other's throat when we don't all agree is destructive to the profession. I've had enough shaming, and I GOT the vaccines. I still maintain everyone's right to make their own decision, at least until the FDA gives unrestricted approval. 

We are eating each other up, and our employers (predictably) will hire travellers and unlicensed staff, then moan about how nurses "don't care anymore" while exnurses move on.

5 Votes
Specializes in Med Surg.

Why isn't joint commission addressing short staffing? Maybe there would be a big reduction in all the infection rates if staffing was adequate.

6 Votes
Specializes in Med Surg.

Forgot to type the rest of my post (I work nite shift?) adequate staffing would help prevent nurses from leaving. Tired of 7 patients and someone trying to give me an 8th! I refused.

1 Votes
Specializes in Progressive care, cardiac surgery, telemetry.
27 minutes ago, gypsy at heart said:

Why isn't joint commission addressing short staffing? Maybe there would be a big reduction in all the infection rates if staffing was adequate.

I think you bring up a great point. If hospitals were not accredited by JCAHO, or if CMS had some requirements related to staffing for reimbursement I think we would see a lot more progress.

5 Votes

Because every time TJC or Magnet is in the house the hospitals somehow manage to fully staff every single unit plus resource nurses. 

4 Votes
Specializes in Customer service.
1 hour ago, Wuzzie said:

Because every time TJC or Magnet is in the house the hospitals somehow manage to fully staff every single unit plus resource nurses. 

Why they don't audit the payroll that shows attendance of staff?

Sometimes, I think TJC doesn't want any more work to do. Should show up by surprise. ? 

2 Votes
9 minutes ago, Honyebee said:

Why they don't audit the payroll that shows attendance of staff?

Sometimes, I think TJC doesn't want any more work to do. Should show up by surprise. ? 

They're more interested in making sure every piece of paper is encased in plastic.

5 Votes
Specializes in Neurosciences, stepdown, acute rehab, LTC.
46 minutes ago, Honyebee said:

Why they don't audit the payroll that shows attendance of staff?

Sometimes, I think TJC doesn't want any more work to do. Should show up by surprise. ? 

Honestly, you barely need to walk out of your office at all really to find out if a place has adequate staffing levels or are meeting outcome measures. Now, I believe TJC does look at a lot of factors behind the scenes, but many organizations use it as a fear tactic to get staff to comply without fixing underlying issues. 

1 Votes
Specializes in school nurse.
3 hours ago, Wuzzie said:

Because every time TJC or Magnet is in the house the hospitals somehow manage to fully staff every single unit plus resource nurses. 

TJC might be useless, but they're not stupid. They know that they see artificially enhanced staffing when they visit.

They just don't care.

4 Votes

TJC could care less...they're not going to heavily buck a payment/revenue source.  Follow the money.  Accreditations or magnet status simply means someone wrote a check.  Some of the worst hospitals have "magnet" status.  Means nothing to the nursing slaves.