Nurses are Irresponsible and Money Oriented

This article is about the growing public opinion that nurses are irresponsible and money oriented and, how this opinion discourages people from pursuing nursing as a carreer. This article is based on my observations and experience. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

Before pursuing nursing as a career, I had a bad impression of nurses from what I had heard but I never propagated it.

A couple of years ago when my grandmother had a knee surgery, I got a chance to look closely into how nurses provide care and communicate with patients and their family. I noticed how therapeutically the nurses talked to my grandmother. They explained everything so well and even answered the relevant questions I asked out of curiosity. Never before this episode did I ever want to be a nurse.

When I talked to some friends about my positive views about nursing and nurses, I was confused to hear what they had to say. Occasionally, people have opposing views but if they are contrary to what you believe in you start to doubt your own observations, it can be disturbing.

One of my friends openly declared that nurses are evil and work solely for money and do not really care about their patients. They care for the patient just enough to keep themselves out of trouble but they ignore a patient's unsaid obvious needs like positioning, which make them cruel.

Such views about nurses lead me to think if real nurses have forgotten their ethics but, something inside me said that these views are a stereotype. I decided to venture into the world of nursing to unravel the truth myself.

I have finished the first year of my nursing program and I am still determined to be a nurse. During my field placement at a hospital, I figured out the driving force behind the different opinions about nurses - the positive and the negative. Nurses follow some nursing ethics which form the very basis of their job.

Patient wellness, patient confidentiality, truthfulness, fairness and respecting patient choices are the values that need to be adopted in order to be a nurse, but does everybody has the ability to do so?

To be tough, caring, agile and strong enough to keep secrets all at once may not be the qualities present in a single person. People have preconceived notions about good nurses and they want them to 'act' accordingly. What they don't know is that it takes time for different personalities to incorporate a nurse's qualities.

People have different personalities and when they become nurses, their way of providing care and communicating with others differs. People categorize nurses as friendly or unfriendly, knowledgeable or unknowledgeable, caring or negligent etc.

It cannot be denied that negligence by nurses have lead to serious medical consequences for patients. However, it does not imply that all nurses are irresponsible. Despite all the hard work that nurses do, people seem to complain. Over a dozen of people I talked to had low opinion about nurses but only three of them had actually witnessed poor treatment by nurses. Why and how did the rest form a bad image of nurses? Maybe the same way I had formed it when I believed what people said.

Nurses are neither angels nor demons, only human. They make mistakes, try to learn from them and take care not to repeat them. Does anyone realize that when people vilify the nursing profession without putting themselves in nurses' shoes, how many good-nurses-to-be are discouraged from joining it?

Specializes in Geriatric nursing.
Everyone wants to survive and how do we survive? By WORKING. The field of nursing has been a buzz to different individuals who wanted to have a career where they can assure themselves that they will receive a good salary. I admit that I want to get into the nursing field to earn a living for my family. Aside from that though, I love to see the people that I help regain their health back to normal smiling and seeing their faces full of life. I want to be able to help my future patients to provide them not only with health care but also to provide them support spiritually, emotionally, and psychologically. Being a nursing is not all about the salary we receive at the end of every salary period but it is about providing our patients with the best health care possible and to be a supporting hand in terms of despair and sadness. There is more to being a nurse than just Money. It is sad to admit though that there are OTHERS out there that enters the world of nursing just for it.

I am glad you wrote this article. While reading it, I became inspired to work harder as a nursing student. :) God Bless you

Jema, I agree with you. I like your spirit! :) Well, it's true that nursing is a way to earn money but, if you don't have the desire to help people you will find it difficult to be a nurse. You just need to keep reminding yourself to work for the better of the patients. From my fourteen weeks of clinical experience, I can say that at times you will question yourself..why am I doing this? You may feel frustated and feel bad for yourself when you see the world outside the windows of a hospital room..you may want to break free but, when you remind yourself that the struggling patients who had been in the hospital for so long need somebody to take care of them..and that you are that 'somebody', you will actually feel better and proud of yourself because nursing is not easy.

Like Needshaldol said, we may sound idealistic (a friend at school had told me that too) but, if it's certain that we will change, I will be happy if I succeed in changing the least..by trying my best to follow the nursing ideals. (I want to see for how long can I stick to this thinking of mine).

Thanks for your good wishes :)

IMO, if people become nurses for any reason other than the patients, they're in the wrong field. Maybe something involving inanimate objects would be a better fit-- lol.. The ones who go in it for money, and ONLY for what they can get out of it, help ruin the public image for all of us.

I don't understand working in a union for the same reason. I've always been told of my salary and benefits before taking a job, and if it wasn't satisfactory, I looked elsewhere. Unions weren't even around in any job I've had as a nurse. Thank God. I'd be hated, since I'd work if the union striked since I'm a nurse for the patients, not some collective group.

Specializes in Geriatric nursing.
Jema

You sound so idealistic. Please get into reality land. You will make a difference for some, yes. But most patients are sent home still recovering. It is not like many many years ago when people actually "recovered" in a hospital. And you will be so busy with electronic charting, paper work, that your time with the patient will be mostly just to pass meds and change dressings, give blood transfusions, etc. So while you are doing that, you will have that time to spend. You will be lucky sometimes because just sometimes you will have time just because all your other patients were easy, walkie talkies or unable to even use a call light. You are going into it with the right attitude but you will change because it is not about you, but about getting the job done for the next nurse to continue it.

I confess that my thinking is a bit idealistic too..I guess I'll learn the reality with more experience but, I still want to stick to the ideals for as long as I can..it helps me look at things in a positive way :bigcandle:.

Specializes in Geriatric nursing.
Thanks for your posting. Being a nurse is by no means an easy job. You need to want so much more than just money to be an excellent nurse. I have been disappointed a few times by hearing people take nursing pre-reqs just because they want more money...they're in for a good one when can't hang taking care of patients. I really think being a nurse is something special.

-Mo

Exactly! Thanks for reading my article :)

Specializes in Geriatric nursing.
I have read this article 4 times, and I STILL don't understand the point. Apparently, nurses need time to grow into thier positions; yes that is true; and the general public are quick to judge with little reason to do so. Was that it? I am just not sure what I was supposed to take away from this.

Steelydanfan, I'm sorry if my article sounded confusing. I don't know to write well but, this article is about something I really wanted to say. In addition to what you already understood, I wanted to bring to light how the public opinion about nursing and nursing is getting more negative (when people hear from others that nurses are mean and nursing is a dirty job etc. and believe it without getting any first hand experience or information about nursing). I believe that this growing public view of nursing may somehow discourage people from getting into the profession or from working wholeheartedly.

It's not easy. It's not glamorous. It's not convenient. It's not clean. It's not comfortable.

But even back in the days before the electronic conveniences (I remember glass syringes, rectal paraldehyde, no glucometers, etc), even doing the needed tasks in a kind way, with someone smiling back (or even just griping less) made me feel like somehow by just not being abrupt, or worse (as I've experienced in the times I've been a patient), that the patient knew that THEY mattered.:)

Specializes in Geriatric nursing.

Thank you everybody for reading my article (my first article here) and posting your comments.

I have a question from reading the comments. Seems like many nurses are infuriated at the way the management works. Had there been any efforts in the past to make the lives of nurses a bit easy? I mean nursing is an always-in profession because they say there is a shortage of nurses (so, the ones that work...work like robots) but, then many nurses find it hard to get a job.

About nursing and money! I think though there are other jobs where you can earn more than in nursing, nursing is in demand..at least where I live. Maybe you won't lose your job in times of recession (like an uncle of mine says..people won't stop getting sick and there will always be a need of nurses). The salary here is decent too..so, maybe people do pursue this profession for money only (which I don't think is a reason sufficient to be a nurse).

Nursing being an honourable prosession..I think it is an honourable profession indeed. When somebody is in pain and needs help and you help them...they respect you (not all though...it depends on the person..just like there are good nurses and bad nurses). Above all, you feel satisfied if you think that you are helping people.

My thought about nursing being just a job or not...I think nursing is a job..true! It is a way to earn money..but, it is a way to earn money for people who think they can help othes. Even if you put your learned nursing skills to use just to earn money, you will feel frustrated and fatigued if you don't do it for people.

One last thing, nurses do a hard job but, they don't get thanked enough. They are even treated badly by the management and the patients, but, if you know that there is at least one person who thinks that you make a difference, you will feel better. But, of course if we deserve more, we should do something..more than just blaming the management and/or the patients.

OK I just figured out how to make life easier as a nurse on a hospital floor, or at least at most hospitals.

Why do I have to run from one end of the hall to the other for something that I need that is not available at my end?

Why do we have two supply rooms but they are supplied differently, so once again, running.

Why do they cut staff so much that now I have to discharge a patient, take a patient to radiology? Why are our two kitchens (for patients) with little food? My patient wants cranberry juice (oh yea, the teeny 2 yr old size) and not there so back running to the other kitchen. Oh, forgot vanilla puddings and just have chocolate at this kitchen and of course my patient wants chocolate. So run run again.

Hospitals do not ask nurses how to make their life easier and thus, patient gets better care. How many of you work the old halls? How about a round pod with nurse station in middle and rooms around the pod? Can you imagine? No running forever. And there are desks with computer and a place for MARS just for that nurse. And when that nurse finishes the shift, he/she is responsible for cleaning it for the next group. Just sayin.

When one of the local hospitals built it's cardiac center (3 floor free-standing facility- connected by hallways), they got the nurses' input. I've been a patient there many times, and it seemed really nurse-friendly. They also had internet for the patients, to e-mail friends/family, and look up diagnoses info..... some places are listening. But the old buildings are still standing. Agree- they could at least make the supplies easier to get to. One place I worked at had a cabinet at each room for linens, trash, and tape, gauze, etc.

Specializes in Geriatric nursing.
OK I just figured out how to make life easier as a nurse on a hospital floor, or at least at most hospitals.

Why do I have to run from one end of the hall to the other for something that I need that is not available at my end?

Why do we have two supply rooms but they are supplied differently, so once again, running.

Why do they cut staff so much that now I have to discharge a patient, take a patient to radiology? Why are our two kitchens (for patients) with little food? My patient wants cranberry juice (oh yea, the teeny 2 yr old size) and not there so back running to the other kitchen. Oh, forgot vanilla puddings and just have chocolate at this kitchen and of course my patient wants chocolate. So run run again.

Hospitals do not ask nurses how to make their life easier and thus, patient gets better care. How many of you work the old halls? How about a round pod with nurse station in middle and rooms around the pod? Can you imagine? No running forever. And there are desks with computer and a place for MARS just for that nurse. And when that nurse finishes the shift, he/she is responsible for cleaning it for the next group. Just sayin.

I had my field placement at a hospital that has the facilities (in bold) that you mentioned. I have had just one field placement so far so, I have not experienced the pains of running around much but, I do have an idea of how it can drain your energy. So, the suggestions you have are great. Now, if you want these suggestions to be adopted into the system, what could you do? I mean what's the next step? Can you write about it to the hospital administration? or to make life better for all nurses, can we just contact the governing bodies for nursing in our respective countries?

I have heard that some hospitals do get a lot of donations..can they make use of it?

Thanks. But our hospital is not interested in nurse in-put. They say they are, listen, to do us a favor, and go their own way. We are in the process of building a new hospital. They have totally gotten rid of our gorgeous view. So now I look out the window at a huge ugly parking garage instead of the beautiful redwood trees and the bay. Why didn't they put in an underground parking facility???? The new structure is turning ugly, huge, and viewless. Oh well, they call it "progress". I call it "not thinking it out". But at least we will have enough plugs for equipment and and AC. Yes, no AC for 50 years, so we have fans running, cords everywhere. The poor patients suffer in hot stuffy rooms. We did put in a few window units. And our hospital is rated at the top 5% in a big state. Go figure.

thanks for sharing