Nurses have simply had enough and are walking out of acute care. How far will it go? Have we seen the peak yet?
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.”
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?
I worked as an RN just long enough to pay off my mortgage. I sacrificed many things to get out of debt so I could leave nursing as soon as humanly possible. I had to wait until my children were on their own before I could begin the process. I would have quit MANY yrs earlier if I could have. I have been free for 7 yrs. I keep my license up to date, just incase, but I hope to God above I never have to go back to that living hell. The chances I would have stayed would have been greater if it were not for crappy management in all 3 of the facilities I practiced in.
I check in with you all at this site whenever I get the insane urge to try it again. Thank you for stopping me from doing anything stupid. I can see it's only gotten worse out there.
On 8/23/2021 at 4:50 AM, Nurse Beth said:![]()
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?
Nurse Beth - Career Columnist / Author
Read My Book: Your Last Nursing Class - How to Land Your First Job..and Your Next!
Nursing is a hard job, we all know what that is. No support, long hours etc...and this has been going on for quite some time. There is a point where everything comes to a head. This is what is going to now.
Nursing is a public service that is paid with public moneys. Much like your fire department and police. However, health care was open for business to profit from it, not just profit but to make obscene profits.
Obscene profits and health care are incompatible and we are coming to a place where you can actually see why. The idea is to overwork nurses so to extract the most money from payroll. So, nurses have been burned out from this practice for some time. Adding covid to the mix brought it up to a boil. There is a point where you just don't let yourself be abused any longer. What do you do? You leave. Because that is something you can do.
At my facility they are paying a *** load of money so nurses will work on their time off. Hardly anyone took the offer. They hire all these nurses with no experience expect a few of the nurses with experience to do all the work. So, I'm thinking about leaving too. Just smell the flowers for sometime and than come back, maybe find something new who knows...
They always think they can bail themselves out of problems by throwing money at it. But this might not work this time. People are exhausted and money can't buy yourself out of exhaustion. People need to live a little and not just work.
I loved my job, but felt forced to choose between my family and my company so I left. My aging, high risk parents live out of state. I can't leave them alone over the holidays again (they grew very depressed) and they won't travel. Now that they are vaccinated, I have to guarantee that I can be with them at Thanksgiving and Christmas. There is simply NO WAY I could get time off around both holidays. I intend to look for another job in January.
I recently changed units because of bullying and to get to a day shift so I could see my family. Now they are offering a 15000 sign on bonus to new employees for a job I just took. Our union seems to be ignoring this as well. What about those who have beeen there and stayed? Maybe a retention bonus? Also I’ve seen options for travel nurses making a year’s salary in 3 months with only a minimum of 3 months contract with immediate benefits. I can’t travel for various reasons but may just do it anyway.
40 minutes ago, Tired and frustrated said:I recently changed units because of bullying and to get to a day shift so I could see my family. Now they are offering a 15000 sign on bonus to new employees for a job I just took. Our union seems to be ignoring this as well. What about those who have beeen there and stayed? Maybe a retention bonus? Also I’ve seen options for travel nurses making a year’s salary in 3 months with only a minimum of 3 months contract with immediate benefits. I can’t travel for various reasons but may just do it anyway.
I resigned for this kind of treatment. I wonder if it's really cost-effective otherwise it's a mind game.
Fled years ago.
Ain't going back.
16 hours ago, Tired and frustrated said:I recently changed units because of bullying and to get to a day shift so I could see my family. Now they are offering a 15000 sign on bonus to new employees for a job I just took. Our union seems to be ignoring this as well. What about those who have beeen there and stayed? Maybe a retention bonus? Also I’ve seen options for travel nurses making a year’s salary in 3 months with only a minimum of 3 months contract with immediate benefits. I can’t travel for various reasons but may just do it anyway.
And therein lies one of my biggest problems. Watching new nurses start just under what it took me 10 years or more to make.
I am SO DONE with being treated this way.
What I find amazing is that instead of helping out and understanding how we are stressed. Admin just double down and demand even more from nurses. I'm going to take a few weeks of soon, actually they own me a vacation this year because they didn't give me last years. I'll just leave if they fire me so be it. I don't care. My life is miserable working like this. No support. All these people inside their stupid little cubicles, don't put their hands in patients and telling us how we should work. Sick!
I'm so glad I left the hospital a year ago. I was looking to get out over a year before that due to the increased pressures of the job. I'm working in assisted living now and am so much happier. Less pay, but less stress and so worth it. I sold my high cost, high maintenance home with the big mortgage and moved to a cheaper state and bought a cheaper, more modest home. I'm in the last years of my career (I am 63 years old) and plan to work for 4 more years.
1 hour ago, old&improved said:I'm so glad I left the hospital a year ago. I was looking to get out over a year before that due to the increased pressures of the job. I'm working in assisted living now and am so much happier. Less pay, but less stress and so worth it. I sold my high cost, high maintenance home with the big mortgage and moved to a cheaper state and bought a cheaper, more modest home. I'm in the last years of my career (I am 63 years old) and plan to work for 4 more years.
Do you work as a manager or hands on staff nurse? How many patients are you responsible for? What do you do and how does it differ from the hospital? Just curious as I may consider working again part-time, but not at a hospital.
I am hands on. It is a small facility with around 70 residents. This is assisted living where the residents are able to get around by themselves and take care of their ADLs. There is no lifting, no IVs. It is mostly medication prep and pass and since this is a veteran's facility we deal with psych and addiction issues a lot. It would be boring for most nurses, but I don't need the excitement of acute care anymore.
I've been nursing 16yrs and this past year is the first time I have ever desired to leave the field. I feel deeply disgusted at how in general the medical profession and its leaders have responded to covid. Im still shaking my head. It feels like the very foundation of everything I've seen and learned is cracking due to the complete disregard for evidence based practice. My town is now monopolized by corporate healthcare and now most providers cant think outside of the corporate money making pathways. Im in skilled home healthcare as an extension of the hospital. When the hospital finally remembered we were out here they provided our PPE for covid patients and we received N95 with sewed on straps as though they had been repaired. Guess fit testing means nothing now?! They bought Face shields that fell apart during the first use while they began building a whole new wing for infectious disease. When we tried to protect ourselves properly by buying our own PPE, they told us it wasnt allowed and that the PPE provided is the most effective, WOW!!? While we were in the thick of it with covid patients there were only 5 of us that would go into the covid homes and admit to home health but they demanded we admit the same day of discharge from the hospital so we were rotating the 5 of us daily for night on call. When we were exposed we were td to keep on seeing patients. At the same time they stopped our PTO accrual and the 401k employer match. There were no other agencies in my county that would take the covid patients. They then post signs that read Heroes work Here which felt like a slap in the face. They also at the same time decided to increase our daily visit load which means every day turns into mandatory overtime in order to see everyone. During nurses week they thanked us with a coupon book for a total of $10 of purchases from the hospital store. Several nurses left so we are still very short staffed. We were not permitted to come into the office to chart during that time but now thats permanent because the charting room has now been rented out to some organization. So our vehicle is our quiet desk space. We are still trying to travel to see 6-7 pts a day. We have felt so much discouragement, rejection, lack of appreciation, and anger. Even the guys shed tears during this past year at the stress. One of our nurses even had a stroke. It felt like a twilight zone and still does. I love nursing but not when the puppet masters only want to make money which seems to be everywhere now. Im ready to leave.
Retriever5280
36 Posts
Just saw listing for travel CNAs and medical assistants. Interesting.