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 Acute Mental Health.

When you get floated all of the time, you're bound to leave sooner or later. Didn't sign up for a float pool and get nothing extra for having to float. All staff is getting very frustrated and when brought up to management, they tend to get angry. I think if they simply told us "We don't want to float anyone. If it were up to us, not one of you would float. We are working on training nurses on those short units so hang in there!" , it would help...

Specializes in Geriatrics, Dialysis.
On 8/25/2021 at 10:31 AM, AnLe said:

Our hospital system is offering contracts to work x days * x weeks for a bonus but it doesn't amount to what the travelers are making. Apparently travelers are meant to float first, but sometimes they complain and nurses have to be switched around. The new grad who was hired got a sign-on bonus and makes what I do. How is this fair? I'm trying to provide safe care for my patients and educate my orientee while helping our staff of floats and travelers. If it weren't for the core nursing staff and my fear of possibly working on a toxic environment, I'd go elsewhere. 

That is why I got out of my old job when I did. I worked LTC for a company that refused to use travelers, though I recently found out they now have now three in the building so they finally got desperate enough to cave on that. 

The big tipping point for me was after being there for 25 years I discovered the new nurse I was training was making $0.20/hr less than me.  Sorry but no way was I OK with that. That's when I started looking and found a better job, better pay, better benefits.  They can't even use COVID as the reason I left as I got out in February last year and COVID just started hitting the US about a month after I was done there.  I've cared for COVID patients in my current job but the dialysis clinic handled the situation way better than the SNF possibly could.

Specializes in Dialysis.
5 hours ago, jennifer larkin said:

All HR is allowed to give us hire date and termination or end date. Unless you have given written consent  for them to get more information.

Not true. They can give any information, it has to be factual. Many choose to only give hire and end dates to avoid trouble

On 8/24/2021 at 10:43 AM, Hoosier_RN said:

Possibly, possibly not. Some of the rich and powerful are using concierge medicine. I don't know how it will affect those folks. Only time will tell

It's going to affect their employees though. That's when it will hurt. I've been thinking alot over the last 4 months about leaving the field and coming back if the fed ratios law passes or another miracle presents itself. The damage to my physical and mental health over the last 10 yrs have aged me 20 yrs. It could have been prevented. I'm angry as .... for this, esp as I took out a student loan. But just the thought of working in nursing any longer .... my body is rejecting it. As I get older, it gets harder. I can't run like a 20 yr old but I'm expected to. 

Specializes in Critical Care.
1 hour ago, AtomicNurse said:

It's going to affect their employees though. That's when it will hurt. I've been thinking alot over the last 4 months about leaving the field and coming back if the fed ratios law passes or another miracle presents itself. The damage to my physical and mental health over the last 10 yrs have aged me 20 yrs. It could have been prevented. I'm angry as .... for this, esp as I took out a student loan. But just the thought of working in nursing any longer .... my body is rejecting it. As I get older, it gets harder. I can't run like a 20 yr old but I'm expected to. 

I totally understand how you feel.  Both my physical and mental health were suffering and I was angry all the time at the corporation and hospital management.  I was afraid of dying from a stroke, not covid.  The short staffing and absolute disrespect was the last straw and I finally gave my two weeks notice.  It was the best thing I did for myself!  I respected myself enough to walk away from a hostile work environment. 

I spent the last couple years feeling so much anger at Wrongway aka my pet nickname, Descension, and also shame as I wouldn't want anyone to know I worked at such a terrible, unsafe place nor would I want any of my family or friends to go there for care!  I'm in shock with what I witnessed in 2020 due to the lack of nurses and critical medical supplies.  Ironically while they can't staff their present hospitals, they are yet opening up new micro-hospitals as we speak.  I can't even fathom the insanity of that! 

T

2 hours ago, brandy1017 said:

I totally understand how you feel.  Both my physical and mental health were suffering and I was angry all the time at the corporation and hospital management.  I was afraid of dying from a stroke, not covid.  The short staffing and absolute disrespect was the last straw and I finally gave my two weeks notice.  It was the best thing I did for myself!  I respected myself enough to walk away from a hostile work environment. 

I spent the last couple years feeling so much anger at Wrongway aka my pet nickname, Descension, and also shame as I wouldn't want anyone to know I worked at such a terrible, unsafe place nor would I want any of my family or friends to go there for care!  I'm in shock with what I witnessed in 2020 due to the lack of nurses and critical medical supplies.  Ironically while they can't staff their present hospitals, they are yet opening up new micro-hospitals as we speak.  I can't even fathom the insanity of that! 

Yes, that anger is toxic. I'm happy you are in a better place in your life! ? I'm going to get there soon too. 

Specializes in Critical Care.
Specializes in Geriatrics, Dialysis.

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6 hours ago, AtomicNurse said:

I spent the last couple years feeling so much anger at Wrongway aka my pet nickname, Descension, and also shame as I wouldn't want anyone to know I worked at such a terrible, unsafe place nor would I want any of my family or friends to go there for care!  I'm in shock with what I witnessed in 2020 due to the lack of nurses and critical medical supplies.  Ironically while they can't staff their present hospitals, they are yet opening up new micro-hospitals as we speak.  I can't even fathom the insanity of that! 

I know what you mean. We have two healthcare conglomerates that own pretty much everything already. There's only one standalone clinic that I am aware of and that one is the based on income clinic that serves the uninsured and underinsured. 

Yet despite already owning everything both hospitals are hugely expanding their main campuses and opening new clinics.  COVID didn't even put a small dent in the pace of the construction. They first laid off a ton of staff including nurses when COVID hit and they stopped elective procedures. The hospital was half empty during that time.  Then they couldn't get enough staff or supplies when census picked up. Not having enough staff or supplies for the space they already have sure didn't stop them from building and opening more and more.

Specializes in Cardiology.

We've had nurses retire and other nurses leave for other positions in the hospital or traveling contracts not because of covid but because of hospital administrators. Some physicians in general medicine thought it was a perfect time to start a power grab and try to force the chief of cardiology out the door while saying general medicine can handle the cardiac pts and therefore cardiology can be consult only. Spoiler alert: they couldnt. Then they decided that we will be a mix of MS and cardiology pts on the same floor. It was said in meetings that "the nurses will just have to adjust". Spoiler alert: we didn't. Nurses continued to leave or retire. Even a cards NP that was really good took another job in the hospital. Finally they gave in and decided to make our new floor all cardiology. 

I worked this floor. It was PCU. We had a solid group of senior nurses. We all worked well with each other. Something I had never really seen anywhere else and now its almost all gone. I accepted an offer in the cath lab and never looked back. 

Specializes in Dialysis.
12 hours ago, AtomicNurse said:

It's going to affect their employees though. That's when it will hurt. 

Not necessarily. The wealthy at that level generally don't care until it affects them or a loved one. I totally get you about this career line draining you. If I were younger, I'd jump ship in a heartbeat

Specializes in Customer service.
23 hours ago, Wuzzie said:

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

? 

Covid is the beginning...just the beginning.  The guy who flew from Africa to the U.S. with monkey pox is just another disaster waiting to happen.  Everyone on his flight to Atlanta, then Atlanta to Dallas had to be tracked.  The newly-publicized fungal infection is another.  Our healthcare system was and is profoundly unprepared.  Few professions are treated the way nurses are with the guilt-tripping and unending tugs at the "patient comes first" benevolent strings...over the nurse's own family and oneself.  Will never forget one hospital administrator after the death of a healthcare worker from Covid stating..."well, we're not sure she got it here in our hospital"...to avoid a worker's comp death claim.  NO amount of money means much if you're dead.  NO amount of money can replace one's role as a spouse or parent.  NO amount of money buys respect.  Civility, decency, respect, and appreciation cost nothing yet we, as nurses, continue to be looked upon only as revenue generators.  The paradigm needs to change toutsuite!  There IS a way to ensure fiscal health AND maintain a healthy, rewarded staff:  balance.