Nursing is slavery Period!!!

Nurses Relations

Published

I am probably going to offend some of you and I apologize in advance for that.

However I really need a safe place to vent my frustrations about nursing and

this is the place.

A little background:

I have a Bachelors in Business. I worked in that field for just under 8 years. I liked it but it was starting to get boring and I felt I needed a challenge. I got my BSN and started working as a nurse for a big hospital. I didn't expect it to be all roses however I have to say what I have found in this profession has quickly turned me negative. I have been in this profession for over 2 years now and while I know that isn't long I have to be HONEST and say that I don't feel that I can honestly make it in this job.

Here is what I have noticed about the roles a nurse plays:

to administration: cogs (yet they don't want to pay the price required to keep us

so they keep increasing our task list, Responsibilites, documentation requirements,

etc while not increasing our pay)

to Dr: waitress/slave

to families: waitress/slave

Every job I have done went by satisfactory meaning I have never been written up or even had a verbal warning given. In this job people get written up for stupid stuff and no one thinks to give verbal warnings. The amount of demoralization that takes place on new grads is profound and now I understand why the smiles on new grad faces quickly turn sour. Every Dr I have s/w told me the same thing which is "get out of nursing or go higher fast . . . but do not stay in it"

Thus the message is clear that this profession needs a Major rehaul. Policies change on a daily basis (No Joke) and there is no effective means of getting the information across to all employees such that NO ONE has any idea what is the proper way of doing anything anymore. Everyone I've asked has a different idea and the new policy is not always on the intranet. The more nurses I talk to the more I realize they are not leaving this profession only because they do not have another option. The ones that do take it QUICK!

I keep hearing people tell me that nurses make such great money at the bedside but I have to say Nurses earn every single $ they make NO JOKE. We are expected to work tirelessly without taking bathroom breaks, lunches, etc. There is no regard for our healthy while all focus is given to patient safety. Now I know why nurses burn out at the rate that they do.

And after all is said and done the amount of responsibility and liability that a nurse carries is starting to increase. We live in such an age of Entitlement where people want the best care and they do NOT understand the stressors that are forged upon nurses such that if you don't bring them their cup of tea on time they get upset with you. I thought about pursuing my MSN in the clinical arena however after much deliberation I realized despite the fact that my desire to help people is strong I don't want the amount of liability that comes with it. I am working on getting out of it. Although I do feel like a failure because I will always remember that I wasn't able to make it in nursing.

I have spoken to other new grads about this and they feel the same way in fact a lot of them didn't even finish 1 year bedside nursing before they turned around and enrolled themselves in NP programs to get out of this dreary profession.

Please feel free to comment on this post. . .

Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.
I have no idea! I'm just slightly amused that the "reason" for becoming a nurse was for a challenge - seems like OP's job is a winner!

So all anyone has to say to us is "hey this is a challenge!" before they call in the dump trucks full of crap? She isn't the first person who found nursing to be not as advertised- and I'm sure that if the economy was better there are places she could go that would be what she thought nursing would be like.

I think it's worth noting that despite the difficulty, she put forth the effort to ask multiple people what the correct P and Ps were, and that she had received no written or verbal warnings in 2 years. Sounds like she was up to the challenge but just doesn't think she has it in her to go on much longer. Not exactly something to be scorned for.

I realize you are being a bit tongue-in-cheek in your responses, but jeeze some people pulling out the Mother Theresa card and starting their own threads in response etc is over-the-top here!

If you remove the word slavery her complaints are actually garden variety for allnurses, unfortunately.

Who started a thread in response to this? I'd like to read that point of view. Can you elaborate?

Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.
Who started a thread in response to this? I'd like to read that point of view. Can you elaborate?

The majority of the first post speaks for itself. It was this ending that caused me to believe it was in response to this one:

Another thread says nursing is slavery...I say nursing is a labor of love. I say that many seem to have lost the caring and compassion element of nursing.

I say that if any nurse does not love what they do...it may be time for them to re-evaluate what they are doing.......

https://allnurses.com/general-nursing-discussion/so-check-out-718956.html

Based on all the kudos ("likes") he got, I guess I'm the only buzzkill in the crowd! I have no doubts, however, about my Compassion Quotient™ :)

https://allnurses.com/general-nursing-discussion/so-check-out-718956.html

Based on all the kudos ("likes") he got, I guess I'm the only buzzkill in the crowd! I have no doubts, however, about my Compassion Quotient™ :)

no, you're not a buzzkill.

if you really analyze it, a new grad is feeling insecure and seeking validation, that's all.

i totally agree with how you feel.

those of us who are secure, don't need to shout it to the world.;)

leslie

my advice would be to get another job...or two...before you give up entirely. you may still decide that nursing isn't for you, and if that's the case, you should definitely move on. however, you may find that you just don't like the current job instead of the career itself.

i started working at a hospital on a med/surg for when i was still in nursing school. it was "okay" at best in the beginning. i loved the patient care part of the job. i hated going home at the end of every shift feeling like my legs were going to fall off and worrying about who i had upset and thinking about who had upset me (co-workers). over the course of working there i had a few meetings with my manager for different reasons. we would always chat a little about how i was feeling, how things were going, etc., and when i would express my concerns she would assure me that it was "like that EVERYWHERE!" as time wore on, i started to hate my job. i hated the morale mostly. i felt like a lot of the people around me were lazy, rude, etc.

luckily, i got to go to a lot of different areas of the hospital as well as other facilities for my clinical training at school. i started to quickly realize that it wasn't "like that EVERYWHERE!" there were people who actually liked being at work, who were considerate to their co-workers, and the environments were pretty relaxed (as relaxed as they could be). they at least weren't running around like crazy people looking miserable all the time. i found out that some people even got to take breaks! when they weren't taking breaks, they were actually able to work at a pace that didn't have everyone's blood boiling. they would have the energy after work to do something other than drive directly home with the windows down/radio up and go directly to bed due to exhaustion. thank GOD i got to have those experiences or i might have just stuck with that job forever, been miserable, and believed that it was "like that everywhere."

i quit...and it's the best decision i ever made. i LOVE nursing. i couldn't imagine doing anything else (and i had other professions). it wasn't being a nurse that i couldn't handle. it was the place i worked that i couldn't handle. don't give up without feeling out your other options first, and there ARE other options.

Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.

Leslie -- Thank you. :hug:

Specializes in Forensic Psych.

So all anyone has to say to us is "hey this is a challenge!" before they call in the dump trucks full of crap? She isn't the first person who found nursing to be not as advertised- and I'm sure that if the economy was better there are places she could go that would be what she thought nursing would be like.

I think it's worth noting that despite the difficulty, she put forth the effort to ask multiple people what the correct P and Ps were, and that she had received no written or verbal warnings in 2 years. Sounds like she was up to the challenge but just doesn't think she has it in her to go on much longer. Not exactly something to be scorned for.

I realize you are being a bit tongue-in-cheek in your responses, but jeeze some people pulling out the Mother Theresa card and starting their own threads in response etc is over-the-top here!

If you remove the word slavery her complaints are actually garden variety for allnurses, unfortunately.

I have no issue with her complaints. For some, the rewards of the job are worth the crap. For some, the crap outweighs the rewards. Some jobs are better than others. Some people are hardier than others. Some people have no other options, so they choose to love what they do. Some wear the difficulties of the job like a badge of honor.

I suppose, personally, as a daughter of a nurse who left the field, I just don't find these things "shock and awe." Nurses were being treated as glorified waitresses long before OP became a nurse - she entered the wrong field. It sucks, I get it, and of course the best option would be for everything the change, but the most realistic option is for people to be aware of what they're getting into.

I'm not faulting OP for choosing to be a nurse; I'm just fed up with the whole situation. Schools are making false promises about the job market and working conditions and flooding the market with people who would probably NOT become nurses if they knew the truth.

Show me a slave making $70k as a new grad and I'll toss you some sympathy.

Holy Chicklets! :eek: Show ME where a new grad RN makes 70K! I know I"m in a low-pay area - but are you serious? :eek::eek::eek:

I wouldn't say slavery per say, but I will agree that the hospital nursing job is very demanding and difficult mentally and physically. I am not a nurse but I am a Patient Care Assistant. Some things I have encountered are very rewarding, some things break my heart, Others make me madder than a **** ant. However, I know I am able to leave and find a job elsewhere at any point in time. I like the hospital I work at, I just want to change floors I work on....I will say we are over-worked, under-paid, and under-appreciated.

Specializes in ICU / PCU / Telemetry / Oncology.

Holy Chicklets! :eek: Show ME where a new grad RN makes 70K! I know I"m in a low-pay area - but are you serious? :eek::eek::eek:

Are you kidding? In the NYC and San Francisco metro areas particularly, $70k would be considered on the lower end.

Sent from my Android phone using allnurses.com

I work on a cardiac imcu; I started on the unit when I graduated and have been there a little over 2 years. I must say I am completely burned out and get very little satisfaction and a lot of stress from my job for the past 6 or so months I have been thinking about transferring. Recently an endoscopy position was posted and I was hesistant to apply for it at first because I kind of feel I might be cheating myself by leaving the floor and not giving myself a chance to get more experience and see more stuff. However after heavy thought this week I decided to go for it. I'd rather try a less stressful area with consistent hours where I might actually not dread going to work everyday versus staying somewhere that i have become burned out on constantly flipping between day/night shifts and dealing with other inconsistencies just for the sake of experience.

Specializes in ICU, CM, Geriatrics, Management.
... I'd rather try a less stressful area with consistent hours where I might actually not dread going to work everyday versus staying somewhere that i have become burned out on constantly flipping between day/night shifts and dealing with other inconsistencies just for the sake of experience.

You're 100% correct. Your situation is surely affecting your inner health. Happy for you that you're moving forward on getting out of there.

Good luck!

+ Add a Comment