Nurses have simply had enough and are walking out of acute care. How far will it go? Have we seen the peak yet?
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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.”
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.”
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.
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.
"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?
14 minutes ago, Retriever5280 said:Civility, decency, respect, and appreciation cost nothing yet we, as nurses, continue to be looked upon only as revenue generators.
Nursing is not at all looked upon as revenue generators. We are looked at as an expense. If we were revenue generators (billed separately like every other healthcare provider) we would never be short. We are billed with the room. Like the furniture. Ponder that for awhile.
8 hours ago, brandy1017 said:This article speaks the truth of why nurses are fleeing the bedside. It is not covid!
This is so awesome!! To have NNU take a stand on these reasons for the nursing shortage is very powerful. It so refreshing to have an article from such a powerful group that isn't trying to gaslight the problem. I hope AN reposts this on Twitter and everywhere else. Thank you Brandy! You made my day. ?
3 hours ago, Hoosier_RN said: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
I was thinking that if their employees get sick and don't show up or have to leave because of the end of the moratorium or job hopping, it might make a dent. But your right... this will prob happen to the small businesses more so.
19 hours ago, Retriever5280 said:Time to unionize!
We have unions at our hospital. Having a union doesn't guarantee meal breaks, rest breaks, or staffing to grid. It does mean we file paperwork for the union every time it happens, which can be almost daily on some units.
The union has protected the staff in areas that have less work, like CVU, PACU, and OR when procedure/surgery numbers were down. Those nurses were all refusing to float to other units in the hospital due to lack of familiarity and competency for inpatient areas during the surges. And the union was trying to protect OR/PACU when between the Covid surges there were more surgeries, but not enough OR/PACU staff to cover the scheduled surgeries and the on call hours. Hospital was refusing and/or couldn't hire travelers. To put it in context, the last contract negotiation did not address all of the issues the OR/PACU nurses had with on call expectations and the attempts to seek a limit to the number of hours they would be expected to work in a 24 hour period or back to back 24 hour periods. That discussion was tabled for the next contract negotiations on the 2 year contract that was agreed upon between the hospital and the union.
Hospital administration does not accept any accountability for the lack of staff. We are being hit harder by Covid - Delta than we were by alpha. ICU almost full of Covid patients (11 of 12 beds). Other critical non-Covid patients transferred out of the area. Holding patients with admission orders in the Observation unit and ED. Finally, the hospital is offering bonuses for staff working extra (and coming to work for all scheduled shifts) since the travelers are mostly gone.
Some of the travelers have headed off for more lucrative contracts in states closer to home. Radiology travelers have left mid-contract because of the work load - they are not used to having to transport all their own patients... and many nurses didn't renew travel contracts before the latest surge because there were no NAs. All the NAs have been sitters for all the behavioral issue patients all over the hospital. It is nuts even with a union.
17 hours ago, chevyv said: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...
I have floated a ton in the last 18 months. We do get a small amount of money for those hours... but even so it is demoralizing.
Wow this speaks to me so hard and all the comments I’m just overwhelmed with how much anger welled up in me. I work in hospice, HOSPICE!, and our company runs us chronically short staffed in the clinical side. ( business and sales still living that charmed life). As our census declined during the assisted living facilities lockdowns I kept hearing from my GM that a program our size didn’t need a full time NP. He said it over 52 times over a four month span. Yet I was also covering two RN case manager assignments, encouraging the remaining staff and supporting and educating them and precepting the one team manager left (all the others left under mental health LOAs). Our DON? She would literally leave multiple thing’s unfinished at the end of the day that impacted the patients because quote “I’m over this day I’m going to go ride my horse”. I have four children and unlike past generations of nurses who encouraged their children to follow them into the profession I strongly encouraged them not to. My daughter just graduated law school and is starting out, at the age of 25 with zero years experience in her field at double my current salary. And I’m considered at the top of the pay scale for NPs in my region. Yeah mommas don’t let your babies grow up to be nurses.
Ohio NP: I never recommend this field to anyone I like--LOL. If I had all to do over again, I wouldn't touch this field. Happy for the knowledge from it, but think it has little pay for what's expected and much struggle and strife from horrendous managers. Like fields that have progressed and gotten out of the 1950s. This one is stuck with Theory X managers who pounce on the most minute issues and are petty, unhappy blobs. Tired of the idiots, as well as administrators who sit perched in their offices, dictating to the rest of us how much we should prize patient care as our life's mission. Glad to be the age I am and am thrilled women have many choices and do not have to be stuck in disrespected fields like this one.
1 hour ago, handydandy said:I'm thinking they're going to have us Techs/Phleb's start doing things out of our scope to make up for the shortages in LTC. Aide's and nurses are quitting or just physically run down.
Wouldn't surprise me. They have been doing this to nursing for years and years now.
Doris Carroll, BSN
1 Article; 51 Posts
Exactly. The ones in power, healthcare administrators AND legislators get VIP service when they or loved ones are hospitalized. They don’t suffer from unsafe staffing. I’ve seen it. The disconnect is astonishing. Therefore to make change we need to make our personal stories heard, and demand change based on two decades of staffing research. However, it appears, like Covid, half of this country ignores science, are not compassionate or cognizant of over 600k deaths, therefore why should healthcare administrators and legislators consider staffing safely since they aren’t impacted by it directly.