Nurses' Week - Upended.

Nurses General Nursing

Published

I have worked for a large hospital system for about nine years now. My initial Catholic hospital was acquired by a larger hospital system in the same area more or less because of a failure to thrive. My "old hospital", even when in it's imminent demise, still provided a Nurses' Week gift to all of its employees. The gift was equivalent to a burlap sack, but it still represented the respect that upper management had for its nurses at the time.

Fast forward to 2018 - this year the Nurses Week committee voted to not hand out individual gifts to nurses but instead offer them "plenty of events" to participate in throughout the week. These being the same events that we've had every week for the last 5-6 years since rebranding/acquisition. These events include chair massages that run primarily on day shift, ice cream socials that simply will not work for those of us trying to improve our health, and CE credits that are generally unavailable to staff who work the off shift. The individual gift was the one part of the week that united all of us as nurses. It made us feel good. It was the one giant "thank you," that we received from those who do not work the front-lines everyday. That thanks is now gone, due to what seems like whatever budgeting crisis the system is currently experiencing.

2017-2018 has been another average year. Another year with poor RN staffing, little show in improving employee satisfaction (IMO), and what seems like little thanks for again earning Magnet designation, proving HRO accountability, and meeting/exceeding other metric performance measures.

Forgive my selfish-sounding rant, but I find it difficult to believe that unit clerks are entitled to a gift, and the nurses are not. A $5 coffee mug or tumbler for each nurse surely cannot surpass a CEO/CIO's bonus each year.

Shame on my system. Shame.

Thank you for listening.

Specializes in Case Management, Acute Care, Missions.

I work in a smaller office for an organization that is supposed to be nurse driven. Our 'celebration' was held today and I stayed home because I couldn't stomach the fakeness of it all. Our non-nursing admin has been nothing but hostile toward the nurses over the last 3 years and one day of ignoring that was more than I could take. Never been one for token gifts, a sincere "thank you" would be wonderful!

Specializes in Critical Care.
The internet sadly did not reflect my tone. Perhaps I'm coming off as disgruntled and entitled, but what I'm really feeling is deeply disappointed.

I realized a long time ago to never expect great things from "the man," but this was some new level stuff IMO.

Happy Nurses Week.

Where I work they used to offer a free Christmas meal for those working on Christmas and then to save money they changed it to a dessert voucher. Now to me that's insulting. I think the least they could do was provide a meal for the staff that has to work Christmas, but that's just my opinion.

Just a patient--I'm disabled due to cerebral palsy and in a wheelchair. It's so sad to me that a profession that does so much for others and makes a difference in the lives of others can't get any recognition not even one day. Anytime I have been in the hospital, I would say how much I appreciated them. I would sometimes bring food and such for the nurses on the unit shortly after I got discharged, it felt nice to do something for someone who helped me through some rough times in my life. Its a shame employers don't feel the some way. Just remember you have patients who don't what they would do without you, and are very grateful for the work you do. You all rock!!! Happy Nurses Week!!

Just saw your post, Wheels!! Thank you!

As a nurse, this type of patient recognition means so much more to me than a silly hospital-branded token. Working at the bedside, it's rare that we get meaningful feedback from managers or admin because they interface with us so infrequently. In contrast, our patients (as well as our peers) work with us every day, and are able to provide us with far more meaningful, thoughtful sentiments of gratitude.

I have a pile of worthless, hospital-branded junk from Nurses Week that sits unused at the bottom of my closet. In contrast, I have a pile of personal thank you notes from families and pictures of my NICU graduates growing up, and I consider them some of my most prized possessions. They live on a bulletin board in my bedroom, and they bring me joy almost every day. :D

Specializes in Nephrology Home Therapies, Wound Care, Foot Care..

My facility "celebrated" early by combining Nurse's Week with Administrative Assistants Appreciation Day. What???!

Specializes in ICU.

I haven't received a "nurse's day" gift in years. It has been "hospital week" around here for a very long time, no special recognition for nurses. As a matter of fact, the last couple of times I did receive a gift, it was bought and paid for by the unit manager, not the hospital. I work ICU night shift, so I miss out on the "hospital week activities," which is ice cream and a cook-out.

Specializes in MedSurg, ICU.
Thank you Wheels! That's mighty kind of you to say that! That means so much more to nurses all over the world than a keychain flashlight!

I second what OldDude said! As nurses, it is easy for us to give and give without expecting things. It means a LOT to us when patients do things like what you described, wheels. I would be so excited to see you feeling well enough to visit my coworkers and I!

I don't understand feeling good or united over a coffee mug. Obligatory gifts have absolutely no meaning to me, at all.

Exactly so.

Where does Nurses' Week even come from? Who thought it up? Was it the ANA trying to strong-arm the hospitals, so now administrators make their resentments known by half hearted gestures?

I really am curious...

I've worked in a large organization that was 85% nurses and 15% front desk/admin/HR staff, and we didn't even get an email from the CEO acknowledging the week. My current employer is the largest healthcare system in the state and we got a beach towel (with our logo and "nurse" on it, so everybody on the beach or by the pool knows what I do and where I work), and that just feels impersonal and forced. Feed us or a gift card or something, but not the company-branded merchandise. That being said, no other job I've ever held has had a week or a day of appreciation, so it's no big deal to me. Teachers do deserve it, but I don't feel like I deserve it just because of my profession.

Specializes in school nurse.
I'm not sure if anyone else can relate to this...and without going into my rationale...but Nurse's Week, to me, has evolved into a negative event, that I could easily live without.:wtf:

Amen!

Specializes in ICU/community health/school nursing.
Just a patient--I'm disabled due to cerebral palsy and in a wheelchair. It's so sad to me that a profession that does so much for others and makes a difference in the lives of others can't get any recognition not even one day. Anytime I have been in the hospital, I would say how much I appreciated them. I would sometimes bring food and such for the nurses on the unit shortly after I got discharged, it felt nice to do something for someone who helped me through some rough times in my life. Its a shame employers don't feel the some way. Just remember you have patients who don't what they would do without you, and are very grateful for the work you do. You all rock!!! Happy Nurses Week!!

WHEELS! You made my Nurses Week. Thank you very much!

I'm not sure if anyone else can relate to this...and without going into my rationale...but Nurse's Week, to me, has evolved into a negative event, that I could easily live without.:wtf:

Agree with this statement. It only reminds me of how much I am disregarded. Akin to salt in the wound.

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