am i reasonably resigning?

Nurses Safety

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Hi there :)

I graduated from nursing school in May and have been working as a med-surg nurse since September. I just hit my six month mark and am brinking on seven. I love being a nurse. I love my coworkers and my patients. However, I can't shake the sense that my job is unsafe and I need to get out of there.

Our staffing is horrendous (which I know is like most places), but when I say horrendous, I mean that two days ago I had eleven patients on PM shift. I was "protected" for the first six months of this job cuz the newbies are only allowed six patients at a time. Now that I suddenly broke my six month mark, though, suddenly I found myself being one of two nurses for twenty-two patients. I couldn't keep track of anybody and I did not feel safe on the unit. The average runs at about eight or nine patients, but I have seen nurses at ten or eleven patients often enough in the past who were still expected to take admissions.

A week or two ago, I had an admission who died (but not on my shift thankfully) and it was a patient with whom I had a good rapport. Finding out that patient didn't make it felt awful because he died of some minute thing. All I could think about when I had eleven patients is how I was praying no one else coded because I would never have known. It just feels like I'm gambling with people's lives and it's not worth it. I didn't have time to catch the little things and, as we all know, the little things can be so important. My coworkers tell me that "you have to make room for human error," which I get, but I want out.

I'd been planning on handing in my two weeks notice tomorrow, but now I'm second-guessing myself. I don't have another job lined up and I pay approximately $1000 a month for my nursing loans. However, that uncertainty seems minute when compared to playing with the safety of someone's parent, grandparent, sibling, or child. Am I crazy for quitting without another job lined up?

Please let me know what you think :)

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
leave without a job lined up. because your license is on the line.
The OP's license will be even further "on the line" if (s)he resigns without a job lined up and no way to repay that $1,000 monthly student loan payment.

Nowadays, most state boards of nursing are aggressively revoking the professional licensure of nurses who default on their federal student loans.

you can put your loans on temporary forbearance - while the interest may rack up for a while, interest is nothing compared to peace of mind and safety.

Specializes in critical care, ER,ICU, CVSURG, CCU.

you and me Ruby v:cool:

Specializes in Oncology.
The OP's license will be even further "on the line" if (s)he resigns without a job lined up and no way to repay that $1,000 monthly student loan payment.

Nowadays, most state boards of nursing are aggressively revoking the professional licensure of nurses who default on their federal student loans.

Really? I've never heard of this. Seems like the concept of debtor's prison. We'll put you in prison until you pay back your loans, but make sure you have no way of earning money to pay back your loans.

First: If you have federal loans - call the servicer and see if you can get put on an income based repayment plan (IBR). 1000$/month is crazy. If they're private loans, you're basically SOL tho.

Second: that is a crazy workload and doesn't sound like a job most people would enjoy. Report up the chain of command... not that is will probably help but you want to try and cover your own ass. Make sure you have your own . Actively (aggressively) look for a new job; make sure to network. Don't quit until you have a new job unless you have a spouse who can provide 100%, you have a crazy amt of money saved, or are independently wealthy or something. Nursing jobs just aren't always that easy to come by.

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