Nurses are Pushed to the Brink

No one knows for sure when things will get better but right now, in California, it’s a mounting crisis. It’s bad and it’s getting worse. COVID is crippling the state’s healthcare system. Nurses COVID Article

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Greetings from California ? The situation is dire here, and nurses are spent. I hope it's better in your area. I have an idea of how to make things a little better that I just can't shake.

It's a simple idea. Tell me what you think.

Short of Beds

Patients are lying on hard gurneys inside tents hastily assembled on concrete hospital parking lots. Meanwhile, inside, hospital beds are pulled up from basement storage in  and pushed to the end of MedSurg hallways with a privacy screen, a commode, and a handbell. There’s no TV, no call light and of course no bathroom. 

GI labs and surgery waiting areas are being converted to ICU overflow beds. Patients are even being held in lobbies and gift shops of hospitals that have run out of beds.

Short of Nurses

Nurses are calling out in droves. Nurses who aren’t sick drag themselves in to work but are physically and emotionally fatigued. Suffering moral distress, some have seen more deaths in the last few months than in their entire career. Holding an ipad so their dying patient can face-time their loved ones to say goodbye is heartbreaking, but there’s no time to recover, even after their patient dies. Arrangements have to be made and the room turned over. An ED patient is waiting in queue for that bed.

Nurses talk quietly among themselves about who is the latest one of them to come down with COVID. Even though coworkers are getting sick, vigilance occasionally wanes because it’s exhausting to be on guard for months and months. On guard through Spring, Summer, Fall and now Winter.  Most times in break rooms there’s only 2 people eating lunch at opposite ends of the table. But not always.

In illogical denial, on one level some healthcare workers believe they won’t get COVID from their bff at work, but at the same time, worry constantly. “How’s my taste? Can I still smell OK? I have a headache. Is this it?” And in the back of every nurse’s mind is the very real fear of infecting their own family.

Inside hospitals, everything except for staffing has fallen by the wayside. Education classes are not attended, staff meetings are canceled.  Nurses are called to work every day, sometimes twice a day, and offered varying amounts of crisis pay. 

But $50.00/hr extra is no longer an incentive for nurses who are exhausted as never before.

Short of Travel Nurses

Hospitals are desperately trying to hire crisis travelers. Federal, state and county government agencies are trying to get healthcare workers to hospitals. The National Guard sent crisis workers. The state sent crisis nurses to work for 48 hrs but some of these nurses had been retired for years (read about crisis nurses Hippy Harry and Geriatric Barbie in Day in the Life of an Educator). 

Even with lucrative contracts of $180.00 per hour base pay, there are not enough travelers to meet the need.

California Ratios

In California, nurse-patient ratios were waived by the California Department of Public Health (CDPH). Here are the changes:

ICU ratios went from 1:2 to 1:3

Step Down units went from 1:3 to 1:4

MedSurg went from 1:5 to 1:7

Tele went from 1:4 to 1:6

ED went from 1:4 to 1:6

In reality, it’s a moment by moment staffing. Two nurses may take a team of 13 patients, with 1 nurse giving meds and the other doing assessments. If lucky, they may get a “helper nurse” from the OR because surgeries are canceled, but OR nurses aren’t familiar with the meds, have never barcode scanned medications, and have limited experience with computer documentation. 

Why Not Hire A LOT of Nursing Assistants?

If RNs have to double their patient loads, work 16 hr shifts, come in on their days off, and be exposed to COVID, then they should be given all the help possible.

Today, in the midst of a national emergency where nurses are central, RNs need to focus on RN tasks. Not clerical tasks. Not housekeeping tasks.

Over the years, hospitals have cut nursing assistants and PCTs to the bare minimum, and RNs have picked up the slack. RNs spend a lot of valuable time chasing down supplies, answering phone calls, answering call lights, wheeling patients out for discharge, helping patients and families, sometimes even cleaning beds and turning rooms over.

But what if RNs didn’t have to answer call lights? What if all patients were toileted and bathed, ambulated, turned and proned, with water pitchers full and vitals taken? What if? If the RN could focus on RN tasks, she/he could safely handle a higher workload.

This isn’t about RNs being too good to perform non-RN tasks. It’s about patient safety and maximizing RNs when they’re overburdened. Would it be helpful if a surgeon on his way to perform an emergency surgery stopped to answer a call light, make and serve coffee?

How about turning the buzzword “working to the top of your license” into a reality?

I’m talking about hiring a lot of nursing assistants and PCTs. Flood the units with them. Is there really no money to hire unlicensed personnel? Paying RNs $180.00 per hour while having 1 nursing assistant per 15 patients is stepping over a dollar to pick up a dime.

If a massive number of nursing assistants had been recruited and hired just a month or two ago, there would be some relief today for nurses and more help for patients. 

Hopefully, it can still happen. What other ideas might help? Having clinical pharmacists pass meds? Have lab techs perform all draws, or as many as able?

GI techs and OR techs can go to the floors and help patients call their families, or run to Distribution to pick up supplies.

Just my thoughts, thanks for reading.

What do you think?

Be well and stay safe.

Best wishes,

Nurse Beth

Specializes in Med Surg, Tele, Geriatrics, home infusion.
15 minutes ago, Nurse Beth said:

It really does. You have to wonder if ventilators will be rationed.

I think we'll run out of nurses who know how to take care of vented patients first ? and if this ship doesn't turn around soon we probably will be rationing ventilators by Feb-March.

Specializes in Tele, ICU, Staff Development.
1 hour ago, scribblz said:

I think we'll run out of nurses who know how to take care of vented patients first ? and if this ship doesn't turn around soon we probably will be rationing ventilators by Feb-March.

That's a good point. I think finally it's sinking in how indispensable nurses are

Specializes in NICU, PICU, Transport, L&D, Hospice.
49 minutes ago, Nurse Beth said:

That's a good point. I think finally it's sinking in how indispensable nurses are

Maybe in some post pandemic world that will translate into better wages, better staffing models and more autonomy for RN'S...we are maxed on responsibility, accountability and necessity. 

On 1/4/2021 at 7:29 AM, CaliRN2019 said:

YES! Please hire some ancillary staff! The hospital I work at in the Central Valley got rid of their CNA's 7 years ago for a few bucks pay raise for the RNs. I can't believe the RN's and union let this happen. We are understaffed, ICU patients remaining on the tele floor, lots of chaos and lots of death. We have no CNA's, LVN's, break relief RNs, or help of any kind. RT's only come for emergencies and to set up high flows and Bipap but we otherwise manage it all. It's reckless and dangerous and we burn through staff at a huge rate.

My hospital tried that years ago and the RNs said "NO THANK YOU?!"

20 hours ago, Nurse Beth said:

Great ideas. At my hospital we are hiring new grad nurses to work at CNAs for a couple of months before they start their residency program. It's a win-win bc they are getting experience whereas otherwise they'd be at home waiting to start.

We're making it super easy to get them to the floors- onboarding 1 at a time if needed.

This is great, but in my observation most new grads/ nursing students aren’t nearly as “strong” as experienced CNAs.
 

Entry level CNAs need more pay.  As it is, they make the same or less than working teenagers.

1 hour ago, Queen Tiye said:

This is great, but in my observation most new grads/ nursing students aren’t nearly as “strong” as experienced CNAs.
 

Entry level CNAs need more pay.  As it is, they make the same or less than working teenagers.

Agreed-and with COVID being a reality, who the hell would want to work for the same amount they can make at a grocery store with a lot less risk-yeah it’s still there too but coughing in public is almost like a crime now. Patients aren’t wearing masks. 
 

Some people may really need a job, but many are not willing to deal with the craziness of COVID without some incentive for putting their own lives on the line. 

I realize that family members are prohibited from coming into the hospitals, but so many have already had Covid. With so much community spread, is it time to require a family member (previously proven positive) at the bedside to help with these ADLs?

Specializes in Ortho, CMSRN.

This is such a fantastic idea! I was thinking prior to reading this article that maybe they could hire more EVS and train them to go into a covid room to empty waste baskets. It's such a  small thing, but we don't have time for it. Maybe hire a nurse whose sole job it is to update every emergency contact on the unit on the doctors notes for the day. I love this though!

I agree Beth! But like you said... IF they had been hired. At my hospital not many people are applying... many have gone to travel including CNAs. 

Specializes in Tele, ICU, Staff Development.

Good news- my hospital has hired 12 CNAs who start in a few days- and more to come. Speak up to your admin, it can't hurt.

I have been pushing this on my unit for a while now.  We get sent “helpers” from other units.  It’s hard to delegate to them as they are unfamiliar with our unit.  I’ve been telling our supervisors we need to utilize them such as turn teams, clean ups, baths, back care.......  I’ve met resistance from my higher ups.  So now I just delegate it myself for my patients.  
 

All of our patients are so sick right now that we can’t get anything done.  I feel like I’m running in circles all day.  We have a ton of travelers that aren’t familiar with how we do things.  Our ratios are higher.  I’m having to help with these travelers plus my own patients.  I was fed up yesterday.  I started having them do cleanups, blood sugars, and turns.  
 

It’s not that I’m above doing that.  At first in my mind I felt guilty.  But, I’m running dialysis, titrations gtts, passing meds, assisting in bedside procedures, talking to families on the phone, charting......  I’m only one person with two arms.  There is only so much we can do.

Specializes in NICU, PICU, Transport, L&D, Hospice.
30 minutes ago, LovingLife123 said:

I have been pushing this on my unit for a while now.  We get sent “helpers” from other units.  It’s hard to delegate to them as they are unfamiliar with our unit.  I’ve been telling our supervisors we need to utilize them such as turn teams, clean ups, baths, back care.......  I’ve met resistance from my higher ups.  So now I just delegate it myself for my patients.  
 

All of our patients are so sick right now that we can’t get anything done.  I feel like I’m running in circles all day.  We have a ton of travelers that aren’t familiar with how we do things.  Our ratios are higher.  I’m having to help with these travelers plus my own patients.  I was fed up yesterday.  I started having them do cleanups, blood sugars, and turns.  
 

It’s not that I’m above doing that.  At first in my mind I felt guilty.  But, I’m running dialysis, titrations gtts, passing meds, assisting in bedside procedures, talking to families on the phone, charting......  I’m only one person with two arms.  There is only so much we can do.

You are directing the actions and activities of a team...a team leader.  Back in the day we were trained to do this and units were organized in that model.  Kudos to you for returning to a functional model to save yourself.