Nursing Is No Longer Worth It

Nurses are treated like expendable pieces of meat that are readily replaced like a disposable dead battery. Covid-19 is the straw that has finally broken the camel's back for me and now I'm ready to leave nursing completely. You only live once in this life. If you happen to discover this article and you're considering a career in nursing, I would urge you to turn around and look elsewhere. Nurses COVID News

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I'd Like To Tell You A Story

I've been a member of Allnurses for nearly a decade. It's a little surreal to contemplate that amount of time but I vividly recall writing posts in the pre-nursing students section pleading for help in Anatomy and Physiology.

A decade! Time really flies.

Given my involvement in this forum over the years, I created this new username to remain anonymous and to speak freely about my opinions and feelings about nursing.

In the beginning, nursing was an exciting, interesting, and thrilling career. As a student, I would spend extra hours delving into extra readings about A&P and care plans. I would tutor students and help anyone that I could. I even volunteered in a local hospital to get more exposure.

I was addicted to the idea of becoming a nurse!

As a newly minted nurse, I loved connecting the pathophysiological dots at the bedside and helping the providers make well-informed decisions by providing them with valuable assessments and up-to-date patient data.

I've worked in many specialties over the past 7 years but my primary focus has been pulmonary step down. I've traveled all over the country and worked in a variety of hospital systems big and small.

I've helped save lives through rapid responses, code blues, administered vital medications and important treatments. I've teamed up with fellow nurses to help them catch up on meds or other tasks, then find ourselves at a local diner for an early morning post-shift breakfast.

Those are the best!

I've also experienced a significant amount of pain and agony. I've seen more patients die than a I care to count. I've listened to hearts stop. I've seen heart die on monitors. I've watched people take their last breath completely and utterly alone in this world.

I've laughed, cried, and been stunned. A host of emotions over the years.

When I was done working acute care, I transitioned to ambulatory nursing and started triaging patients in a variety of specialty clinics. This was a weird shift because I thought ambulatory nursing where were lazy nurses go or older nurses go to finish out their career. I found that outpatient nurses were just as hard but simply in a different way.

I even found myself in a nursing supervisor position where I currently reside. Something I never would have thought I would have found myself in. I even tried to talk my boss out of it when she first approached me about it because I thought to myself, "You must be crazy! Why would you consider me?" I am grateful for the opportunity ultimately.

Something Has Changed

There was a time where I absolutely loved the nursing profession and my place in it. But, something changed along the way. Burn out? I have my doubts it's that simple. This feels more definitive than the insidiousness of Burn out. This feels more permanent than burn out.

Over the past couple years, I've really questioned my place in nursing. Is this profession for me? Was it ever? Is it worth it anymore? I think Covid 19 really pushed me over the edge and was the straw that finally broke the camel's back.

Here's The Bottom Line To Me

  • If I had to do it over again, I would not choose nursing as a profession.
  • Nursing is no longer a profession that is worth pursuing and if a person would ask, I would recommend they choose something else.
  • While there was a time when the love of the patient was what did it for me, ultimately, at this time in my life, nursing is no longer worth it because we are completely undervalued, underpaid, underappreciated, and understaffed.
  • We are forced into dangerous scenarios with massive liability with compensation that doesn't match the risk we take as professionals and individuals.

Hospitals Just Do Not Care

While they give the facade of caring, healthcare organizations and hospitals ultimately don't care about you and your well being as a professional nurse.

Hospitals don't want quality. They want the appearance of quality but in actuality they want quantity. They want more with less in even lesser time. More patients. More calls. More responsibilities. More liability for you. More destruction on your physical and emotional well being. You are treated like a disposable piece of equipment with a short shelf life.

And, when it comes down to it, your professional and personal butt is totally on the line and if you screw up, there will be every effort to blame you, avoid organizational liability, and throw you under the bus.

Don't ever believe your hospital is there to back you. Consider yourself fortunate if you happen to find a manager that will stick their neck out for you and back you when the **** really hits the fan.

The PPE Crisis We're Facing Is Unbelievable

It's shocking to me that our hospital "leaders" didn't have the wisdom or foresight to have massive stockpiles in place. Now, nurses and providers are force to buy PPE on-line (impossible currently), wear the same PPE over and over, or not have any at all. This is a clear example of the failure of leadership all over the country and the clear lack of consideration for the front line worker's safety. Of course, nurses aren't the only one feeling this pain.

Nurses Are Severely Undervalued And Underpaid

We take massive liability when we're administering medications and implementing the plan of care. Yet, where's the pay? When you try to negotiate your pay with HR, you're going to get a giant middle finger. Organizations have standardized pay scales and there is zero room for negotiation. Nurses have zero pull when it comes to pay negotiation.

My theory about pay is that nurses are a cost to the healthcare system. You are not a financial asset like a provider who has billable treatments and procedures. We don't bring in revenue to the organization. Therefore, nurses don't have negotiation power. Yet, we're somehow sooo "valuable?"

Don't buy us pizza, baked goods, and crappy nurse's day prizes. Give us better pay and better benefits. That is the way to create loyalty. Yes, nursing is also about providing a service to the patient but if you're a valuable, highly trained, highly skilled, and highly knowledgeable professional, you should be paid adequately. Period.

Here's a current representation of the pay issue. I'm seeing travel nursing contracts for $4,000-$8000 per week in some parts of the country. That's crazy money! The organization I presently work for is "volun-telling" ambulatory staff to either "go acute care or use PTO/unpaid leave." However, when these staff to go in-patient, they don't receive temporary differentials or hazard pay.

Furthermore, the acute care nurses taking care of Covid patients aren't receiving hazard pay either even though they are reusing PPE and taking care of dangerous patient populations. So we're going to pay travel nurses six figures? But, when you force nurses back into acute care or not adequately pay acute care nurses, that's supposed to be okay? Think again.

Nursing Isn't Worth It Because Of The Liability

I've traveled in certain locations where nurses were taking care of 10 patients at night on an acute cardiac unit.

Unbelievable. Talk about liability.

I'm not going to go into it now but if you practice nursing without professional , you're basically having unprotected sex but expecting not to get pregnant.

Why do you think providers have professional ? Yes, nurses get sued to and remember what I said above about hospitals throwing nurses under the bus? It's literally pennies a day for peace of mind. If you have any valuables or assets in your life you wouldn't want to be taken away, you need professional liability insurance.

Nurses Are Part Of The Problem As Well

The nursing culture is full of malignant toxicity, backstabbing, and bullying people. It's vial and toxic and incredibly hard thrive in.

I have rarely seen a unit or clinic act in a cohesive, team-based manner. My professional career has only been in nursing so I'm not sure how other professions are. However, most places I have been to, have been the same.

There are many nurses that bring their contagious negativity to the bedside and to the clinics. It's distracting and disturbing to be around and it has taken a toll on myself and I know it has on others around me. I'm speaking in generalities of course because not ALL nurses are like this but it's fairly common. Just spend a half a day on a nursing unit and you'll quickly notice who those problematic people are.

I once had hope for the nursing profession that someday they would come together and help change it for the better. There's what, about 3 million nurses in the country? That's a lot of voices. We're too busy bickering amongst ourselves to ever truly come together and create meaningful change.

Bickering, backstabbing, and bullying is easy. Coming together with a cohesive voice to promote real change in the nursing profession is hard and it will never happen in my opinion.

I guess I could go on and on about the failings of the nursing profession but I'll leave you with this:

Quote

Nurses are treated as expendable pieces of meat that are readily replaced like a disposable dead battery. You are severely under paid for the skills and knowledge you bring to the table. Hospitals don't give a crap about your well being even though they say the do.

Nursing Is No Longer About The Art Of Nursing

  • It's about the numbers.
  • The output.
  • Doing more with less in less time.
  • The satisfaction scores.

You only live once in this life. If you happen to discover this article and you're considering nursing, I would urge you to turn around and look elsewhere.

Nursing isn't worth the risk and the personal effects it has on your life.

On 4/14/2020 at 11:35 AM, 2BS Nurse said:

"Don't buy us pizza, baked goods, and crappy nurse's day prizes. Give us better pay and better benefits". Yes, this is insulting. How about the piece of clothing that's free advertising?

uuuuuh HELLO! Amen to this!

2 Votes
Specializes in Travel, Home Health, Med-Surg.
3 hours ago, HiddenAngels said:
3 hours ago, HiddenAngels said:

I agree also. My favorite was the T-shirt with the company logo that we were expected to buy ourselves. What?! You can guess how many people accepted that "gift".

2 Votes
Specializes in Supervisor.
19 hours ago, HiddenAngels said:

"an expendable piece of meat"... "a dead battery"....uhhh sir/ma'am, ..you killed me... LOL

I'm a guy.

On 4/14/2020 at 6:36 PM, jobellestarr said:

Yes ma’am, right there with you. (Or sir))

I'm in the 10% of nursing. I'm a guy.

2 Votes
Specializes in Supervisor.
On 4/16/2020 at 7:04 PM, Willcont2montr said:

All this hero talk ...when a nurse dies there is no trumpets there is no ceremony.

They say " Nancy died...can you work an overnight? "

Truth. 100%.

We don't get ceremonies. We get pizza parties. Raise your bread stick in honoring Nancy...

3 Votes
10 hours ago, AnonymousSuper said:

Truth. 100%.

We don't get ceremonies. We get pizza parties. Raise your bread stick in honoring Nancy...

Absolutely correct on that one! No one was caping for nurses until this pandemic. Overworked, underpaid and expected to do miracles without any complaints. What the hell is a pizza party supposed do for me...half of the time it’s not even quality pizza but the rinky dink stuff from a C-Grade restaurant! The level of disrespect, humiliation, and ingratitude we go through with management just do to our jobs on a regular basis is sometimes not even worth it.

10 Votes
5 hours ago, Millennial Nurse87 said:

Absolutely correct on that one! No one was caping for nurses until this pandemic. Overworked, underpaid and expected to do miracles without any complaints. What the hell is a pizza party supposed do for me...half of the time it’s not even quality pizza but the rinky dink stuff from a C-Grade restaurant! The level of disrespect, humiliation, and ingratitude we go through with management just do to our jobs on a regular basis is sometimes not even worth it. 

The other thing that boggles my brain about this whole situation is the lack of the presence of mgmt, the infectious disease nurse dogging us about wearing too much or too little PPE, JCAHO waltzing through the halls, ...where yall at now fighting for us when it matters?

5 Votes
Specializes in orthopedic/trauma, Informatics, diabetes.

I have to say that my organization has been amazing! Making us feel wanted valued, important and making sure we are safe. They are redeploying people that worksites are shut down (ambulatory surg facility). I work on an ortho floor and there are no electives going on. They have found jobs for us and if we are put on call, we don't have to use our PTO. Leadership has been visible and helpful. I feel truly blessed. Will never work for anyone else. ❤️

8 Votes
Specializes in PICU, peds, nursing instructor.

I agree with a lot of the posters listed here. I have been a nurse for over 23 years; when I started, fresh out of school @ 21 years old, I was going to "make a difference!" Earn a decent living. Travel. Be a blessing to others.

Nursing takes it's toll on your professional life, personal life, and aspects you never consider...I cannot even tell you how many Christmas dinners I missed with my extended family, or birthday celebrations, baby showers, weddings, and funerals. I can tell you I have missed my kids sports events, concerts, and some field trips. I have juggled and struggled and cried buckets of tears on my way to work because I could not do it all. Or on my way home from a shift because a child died and now I need to go home and wrangle my own family out the door to work and school and it doesn't seem right or fair....

It has been a mix of joy and pain, to say the least.

But overall, I have had some wonderful coworkers and teammates that I love and miss dearly. I have had some awful ones too, ones I do not miss and that clouded my vision of nursing and care. I have worked in lots of different areas of nursing, from adult hem onc and hospice, to peds, PICU, and pediatric surgery preop and PACU and adult surgery PACU. I have taught nursing, fundamentals and pediatrics, clinicals and online. And now, I have *landed* in public health nursing.

I don't know that I would recommend nursing, or what I would say, but I will admit my lovely rose colored glasses have come off over the years. When I see my students, eager and excited, to learn about nursing, I am both reminded of where I came from and where I am now, and what a journey it has been. I am not discouraging, but I am realistic....

That being said, there are always "places" for nurses, and jobs, and you can find, and something you can do. So I usually tell them some version of that. I have been able to work nights when I had young kids at home, weekends when I needed to be home more during the week, days when I needed some weekends and nights off, and have flexed my schedule all around to suit my family, and most jobs don't have that.

Nurses in general are usually overworked and overtired. Either from work or home. I did 20+ years of hospital nursing, never calling in sick, always coming in early and staying late, and at the end of the day....truly....nobody cares. It's that simple. I did not get a grand finale, a final bonus, a "hey you will be missed!" email, nothing....I put in my notice when I had enough, and got some nice texts from coworkers, and poof....I was gone. And that is pretty heartbreaking, but only to me and my family.

11 Votes
Specializes in OR.
On 4/14/2020 at 8:27 AM, AnonymousSuper said:
he personal effects it has on your life.

Amen, sister! The COVID thing has just exposed to the rest of the world what we who have been slogging along in this dysfunctional system have known all along. We truly ARE expendable! Advertise pay a few dollars higher than what some nurse in Podunk, Ms, Tx, La, etc. is making and they will drive nite & day to fill that position. Dangerous? No problem! Could lose your life, or, cause your family to lose their lives? Pay a few dollars more and there will be a warm body in that overcrowded ER/ICU/makeshift ICU in the PACU, etc..

I have worked contract for the past 20 years to be able to control my work schedule as to where and when I work. There is no work for what I do right now. There are 500 contract operating room nurses looking at or applying for the 5-10 travel jobs that are at places that you wouldn't take your dog to. I'm not just sitting out, but actively seeking work in any thing OTHER than nursing...not because I'm afraid of COVID19...I fear the idiots that are going to stampede the GDP (general dumb public) into operating rooms in ASC's and hospitals in the next two weeks.

The NIH recommendation to add as much as 30 minutes to OR turnover times because of the droplet contamination during intubation and extubation is going to drive some surgeons WACKY, as if they weren't already whining about turnover time. That process change 'might' happen on the first day, until the big swinging dick in the OR screams at administration about turn over time. I KNOW that OR's will jump back to 'bidness' as usual, and then it's ON for the SECOND wave of infections.

I left the last OR job I had in February, listening to idiot co-workers poo-poo the virus, "I'll just do the usual hot toddy tonite & I'll be good to come back to work tomorrow (through dripping nose and coughing)"....nice. I fear going to work with those morons MORE than going into a grocery store!

2 Votes
On 4/14/2020 at 8:44 AM, A Hit With The Ladies said:

Have you considered treating those healthcare organizations as expendable as well? We live in a capitalist country where everyone's worth and value is determined by their market value they provide for an organization.

It doesn't matter if you're a nurse or not. You'll see the identical patterns among attorneys in Biglaw, among physicians in giant hospital networks and group practices, among engineers in corporate offices (ever heard of Dilbert comics?), among computer scientists/software engineers at the big tech companies, and most other educated professions.

Your job is and always will be "just a job". If you make your nursing career your identity, then suppose your state board of nursing took away your nursing license - who are you, then?

Create value in the marketplace and leverage yourself.

Kinda agree with this! Leverage yourself to work the crooked system for whatever you can milk it for... and find ways to help others along the way. At least at the end of the day, nurses are helping people while earning their living. You can always help people away from the bedside. I don't discount the OPs feelings, because we've all been there! But we also know the literal **** we all dug through to get the BScN and RN. Don't give it up for anyone. You can utilize it away from the bedside. Most industries are sadly profit over people driven, you have to find a way to swim in it and keep your head above the water. Don't make nursing who you are... it's what you do. And it's a good thing to do with a life, but you don't have to stick in the roles that people think nurses belong in. We belong everywhere ?. I challenge every employer who has ever hired me on this one, and if they ever dared to question me... I'd be happy to make their statements public in a way they would certainly regret. So, wedge yourself in wherever you think you'd be comfortable and belong. Be pushy, don't ask where you can sit. Pull out a chair and tell them... this is where I sit and you're gonna pay me to sit here.

2 Votes

If you have the time, it does not hurt to focus on a "Plan B" career.

Side note:

For those working during this pandemic, here is a link to some freebies. Get them while they still care:

Free Coffee, Crocs and Doughnuts! Updated Freebies & Discounts For First Responders And Healthcare Workers

2 Votes
Specializes in Non judgmental advisor.
On 4/16/2020 at 8:04 PM, Willcont2montr said:

They say " Nancy died...can you work an overnight? "

It is so refreshing to see all the honest answers from nurses, I once was floored on how other nurses can be bamboozled into the hospital political verbiage of “we are like a family, we value you” I now see they knew and kept silent and prehaps with covid less silent. But this statement ^ Is the so accurate. I think there should be less shelter of hospital culture in nursing school. I think thats where the first disconnect happens.

On 4/20/2020 at 6:27 AM, HiddenAngels said:

The other thing that boggles my brain about this whole situation is the lack of the presence of mgmt, the infectious disease nurse dogging us about wearing too much or too little PPE, JCAHO waltzing through the halls, ...where yall at now fighting for us when it matters?

Furloughed most likely

2 Votes