Nurses' Week - Upended.

Nurses General Nursing

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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 OB.
Lol, I can't help but roll my eyes at our gift last year. Our union had negotiated that we were allowed to take naps in the breakroom during our lunch break, and we kept getting stern emails from admin saying that we weren't allowed to use hospital linens (i.e. pillowcases) during naps because it was driving up laundry costs. That year, they gave us a hospital-branded blanket along with the message "Now you can stop using our hospital linens." The blankets were nice-ish (similar to the thin fleece blankets on airplanes), but most people took it as a huge "screw you" from admin.

That's actually kind of hilariously passive aggressive. I would say "screw you" right back...as I settled in for a nice sweet nap break. Kudos to your union for negotiating that allowance!

I feel bad about all of the comments from nurses feeling completely disregarded by their facilities. I've been lucky enough to work where nurses were treated well, so that when I received token blankets, umbrellas, and lunch boxes with the hospital logo on them for Nurses Week, I thought they were corny but still appreciated the thought. If your hospital sucks, I say treat yourself this week to something you deserve!

Specializes in ICU.

It has nothing to do with a crappy gift. Our hospital goes all out for the doctors, nurse practitioners, CRNA's, and administration. They get really nice gifts for Christmas, doctor's week, etc. In other words, they cater to the money makers. We nurses would like someone to notice what we contribute, too. For me, it isn't just a job for a paycheck, it's a career.

Our hospital changed nursing week to hospital week. 🙄

Specializes in LTC and Pediatrics.

It started out as Nurses Day and was on Florence Nightengales' birthday. Then it became nurses week. This year, National Teachers Day fell on a day during this week. So many non teachers are applauding teachers this week. Only other nurses are saying anything about nurses day on my social media.

The only time I received anything from a boss was the year I was working per diem through and agency. We all received a gift card to the big regional convenience store in our area. WE could use it for whatever we wanted there. This convenience store is a very nice one, in case anyone is wondering and all over the area I lived in at the time.

I would appreciate a Happy Nurses Week and a heartfelt thank you. I'm way irritated over it being called Hospital Week and the fact I got a small water and Halloween size granola bar. It's an insult!!

Yes, I would to be acknowledged for all the crap I put up with. Not feeling safe at work, no supplies, no meds, crappy families, and being constantly criticized for my work. Oh you didn't chart this, or chart that correctly. You missed charting a bath. All the meanwhile, I'm being hit and kicked by a patient in one room while I'm trying to keep death away in the next room.

I'm really burnt out these days. A nice thank you would actually help. The administrative assistant on our unit got treated like a queen on her day. Instead, we get crapped on.

Specializes in Urgent Care, Oncology.

So our CNO has a big event this week. Just one person had a conflict. So, our entire hospital system (1500+ nurses) celebrated Nurse's Week LAST week because she had a conflict this week...

Specializes in HIV.

... And people wonder why the new nurses are treating it as a paycheck, rather than a respected career choice. This is because the people running the show treat it that way, and we follow accordingly. I've been doing this for nearly 6 years and just in that time, it's amazing how much nursing has changed for the worse. Administration wants to treat me like someone they just pass a check out to, that's okay - I'll do the same in respect.

I really think nurses need to respect themselves more like physicians do. Nurses are so busy fighting among themselves and criticizing each other, that the higher ups fly under the radar collecting our actual raises and benefits into their pockets.

It's a very messy system and I have to imagine it has to do with the fact that nursing is a female-dominated field. Society has an amazing way to make women give up so much of themselves for nothing in return.

I hear ya.. It's also has teachers appreciation day the same day as nurses. It seems we are still forgetten .My agemncy gave us a 20 dollar Starbucks card. Loved it..Yeah form them ..Hospital gave out towels.

I definitely understand where you're coming from. Nurses work hard. As a Medical Laboratory Scientist, we have to put together our own activities and food for National Laboratory Week. Administration completely ignores this time. It seems like this trend is moving out of the lab into the rest of the hospital. It's disheartening.

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:

The nurses who are left out end up feeling worse, and the nurses who are shown appreciation, are probably shown appreciation throughout the year. Such as management saying, "I know it's been a particularly rough day," or, "you handled that family really well, thank you for your hard work. It does not go unnoticed."

You know, honestly, that's all I need. To hear a genuine Thank You. If management were to simply say, "Thank you for handling that incredible workload. If it were up to me, I'd give you more nurses," I'd have stuck around some jobs much longer.

But no. All I've ever experienced are nurse managers who say it's our fault. Poor time management. To even the most hard working, organized, intelligent seasoned nurses.

Specializes in medsurg, progressive care.

Our med students graduated this week, so we had a couple luncheons and parties for them. It was in the bulletin, we got emails about "hugging a med student!", whole shebang.

The managers did something individually for their own units (candy, box of joe, small stuff from their own pockets).

The actual hospital? RNs didn't even get a mention in the daily email blast about nurses week.

Specializes in LongTerm Care, ICU, PCU, ER.

In all of the Nurses' Week hoopla, night shift nurses are forgotten. We aren't around when management can see us, so we don't exist.

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