RN's are part of one huge CULT!

Now in the business world for a business to be 'viable' they have a magic number for the sake of an argument lets make the number 2.85, each month health care managers have to achieve this number or come in lower for the efficiency to be reached! Nurses General Nursing Article

Many of the readers of my blog will know that I had a passion for nursing, it overwhelmed me, it suffocated me, it thrilled me, it was my life, I lived, breathed and would have died for nursing. I spent years and years researching best practice. I have spent years educating students and new grads sharing my passion and showing what a great profession they are working in. I defined myself by being a nurse first and everything else second.

Now 22yrs later I have just woken up in a shocked frenzy and I realize that I don't have the passion anymore I am tired, worn out, I ache in every bone in my body, I am sick of the moaning and complaining of my fellow workers and I no longer try to enthuse them.

Patients who were once the love of my life now seem harder to manage, they argue more, they want more, they threaten that if you don't do what they want they will either sue, report you, get you fired and most of the requests are so unreasonable.

Every patient, their relative, their meaningful other and their dog has read something on the internet that contradicts everything you are doing! Every pt, their relative, their meaningful other and the dog has watched lawyers on the tv, the cinema, on the internet and on huge billboards tell people about how you can sue the hospital and staff, just phone the 1-800 number and you can be rich.

As a nurse for 22yrs i can count on one hand (well maybe two) the amount of times i have worked anywhere which has been adequately staffed.

Just when staffing levels reach a 'perfect' number several things happen

  1. somebody calls off
  2. somebody leaves for a new and more exciting opportunity and they normally leave in 2's or 3's
  3. somewhere else is poorly staffed so somebody will go and help out there
  4. somebody injures themselves on duty and is sent to er
  5. somebody gets pregnant or goes on maternity leave oh yeah 2 weeks paternity leave

So what happens now...

  • the somebody who called off, stays off or is replaced by the next call off
  • the somebody who left for a new and exciting career opportunity is never replaced
  • the somebody who floats is always floating
  • the somebody who was injured is now on workers comp so still a number but cant work

So now we are extremely short of staff and we only had one week of the perfect number!

In today's nursing economy what we find is number crunching and hours per treatment reports, all designed by business men/women to make health care more affordable.

Now in the business world for a business to be 'viable' they have a magic number for the sake of an argument lets make the number 2.85, each month health care managers have to achieve this number or come in lower for the efficiency to be reached!

God help you if your hpt (hours per treatment) comes in higher, this means you are not reaching the efficiency that higher management have decided is the right number for your department, and all departments are not the same.

So what dictates how low or high your monthly efficiency number is calculated?

In a health care environment it is calculated by staffing levels, so if you want to be efficient then you stretch your staffing levels thin!

Yes by working your staff short, not replacing staff who have left and not taking into consideration the variables you can stream line your magic number and appear to be a wonderful manager.

If you are in my opinion if you are adequately staffed or over staffed you will not achieve your hpt, you will go over, indicating you are not efficient. What happens now is a huge spotlight comes over your department and everything you do is scrutinized and the very first place the business managers look is at the staff.

They say 'the first cut is the deepest' so in my place of work staffing is where you have to make the cuts, hours of the social worker and the dietitian are looked at first and they trim a few hours here and a few hours there. Then the secretary's are cut to one. Of course then the clinical staff are looked at!

Rn's are encouraged to drop hours, maybe a day a week this is done on a voluntary basis at first.

If nobody comes up to the plate to offer to drop hours you look at several things

  1. Performance
  2. Call off's
  3. Time served
  4. Discipline

Normally at this time, staff are always aware so they start looking around for another job because they are scared and feel unsettled.

The point I am trying to make is we need these staff but somebody in an ivory tower has decided we can manage with less staff so they have got to go to make the bottom line more acceptable.

So now we achieve the desired rn staffing level (remember we are expensive) and the ivory tower people are happy.

The amount of work is still the same, nothing changed with the amount of patients but now we have less rns working harder to look after more patients. Oh yeah now you also have to do secretarial work, social work and dietitian work because their hours have already been cut, but pts still need 24 hour care and advice, and the rn can multitask.

The rns who are left are happy to have a job, they have always worked hard so they soon adapt to the increased patient load and if they don't like it they can leave but there are no jobs because every department is facing the same problem. So they shut up and put up and management is happy again, until...........well you have increased your efficiency of 2.85 hpt lets now aim for 2.75 hpt and the cycle happens again.

The spotlight, the job cuts

Always remember the powers that be want you to know there is no nursing shortage just a shortage of jobs, this is a means to keep us under control, now they can number crunch and make 1 rn do the job of 2 rn's.

In reality there is and always will be a nursing shortage.

Rn's are now a part of a huge cult, we are being hypnotized into believing there is no nursing shortage.

Wikipedia says

Quote

This article gives a general cultural account of "cult". For its usage in the original sense of "veneration" or "religious practice", see cult (religious practice). For its use in a scientific, sociological context see new religious movement. For other uses, see cult (disambiguation).

The word cult pejoratively refers to a group whose beliefs or practices are considered abnormal or bizarre.[1] The word originally denoted a system of ritual practices. the narrower, derogatory sense of the word is a product of the 20th century, especially since the 1980s, and is considered subjective. It is also a result of the anti-cult movement which uses the word in reference to groups seen as authoritarian, exploitative and that are believed to use dangerous rituals or mind control. the word implies a group which is a minority in a given society. The word was first used in the early 17th century denoting homage paid to a divinity and derived from french culte or latin cultus 'worship,' from cult- 'inhabited, cultivated, worshiped,' from the verb colere 'care, cultivation'

A big part of the problem, is that say 25 years ago, the CEO of a corporation used to make 20x the salary of the most populous employee. Now, CEO's demand multiples in the hundreds, not just about 20x. This squeezes the heck out of the rest of the company. This sort of thing is what is killing american companies more than anything.

Sheer greed.

Jane

What is REALLY killing American companies is the idea that the shareholders are God, and that profits are the be-all and end-all of a companies function. The idea of producing a quality product has gone by the wayside.

If a worker cannot make a decent wage, he cannot BUY the products you MAKE. Workers who make 14.00/hr cannot buy Ethan Allen, they buy Ikea. So Ethan Allen loses revenue and lays off employees,those workers go to Ikea who pays 9.00/hr, now

nobody can afford anything, 60 companies go out of business.

Thus, the plight we find ourselves in today. But by all means, keep voting Republican. They just HATE those darn unions!

After 30 years of being an RN, I'm inclined to agree with the blogger. Back when I graduated from nursing school, being a nurse meant something. I gave everything I had to the profession. My love of patients was never in short supply. I have twice had to deal with situations regarding my State Boards and both times were as stressful as ... well, you can imagine. Lying doctors, (thank God he wrote a progress note on the said day), dealing with crazy attitudes.... I am looking at returning to a job I loathe that's nothing more than herding patients in and out of the hospital (Case Manager). Poor attitudes of staff, and a host of other problems. Am I compensated? Not nearly enough. I don't want to go back. I don't want to go back to that. But after all these years, I don't know how to get into another field nor do I have the resources. It's asphyxiating.

One of my fantasies ( althought I love the one here with the VIP having to hold their 'what ever' until they bust) Is to sit in the big healthcare system's ("situation room" which I am sure it's now been dubbed by these corporate folk) conference room with all the head business people and ask "Why??" "What in your view are you are achieving??" With the look of apuzzlement on my face.

Specializes in ICU/Ortho/Med surg.

Ok, I just HAVE to chime in here so grab a drink

...As much as I totally agree with pretty much everything that has been said, I have to ponder all the times I stood up to managers in the interest of "patient safety" ( you know, that little ole' thing called the Nurse Practice Act"?) for "selling out" and cutting staffing to the bone only to be handed my A** and thrown under the bus for no other reason than I was the squeaky wheel that needed greasing. All the times I have had conversations with co workers about unreasonable and unsafe nurse patient ratios only to be standing in front of the man with egg on my face and NO ONE was there to back me up (you know who you were and shame on you all) I have fought this fight right into the un- employment line and it would all stop immediately if enough nurses would privately get some chutspah and a good enough attorney that understands the nurse practice act and the willingness to stand up to these tyrants. My family thinks I'm nuts when I tell them there is no nursing shortage, the only shortage I have EVER seen is a SHORTAGE OF HIRING...PLAIN and SIMPLE. all this "woah is me, what are we gonna do!?" crap makes me want to vomit, get some guts and stand up to these bullies, start telling people the plain and simple truth. Nurses are the most psychologically abused people on this planet. Do any of you realize the crap we are told to stuff in and keep private? That goes against everything congruent with patient safety, "don't tell patients we are short staffed"...huh? why not?...it's the truth isn't it?...and the new crop of graduates? sorry people, I was just at a facility I used to work at and the ratio was 1 nurse and 1 cna to 5 patients...are you kidding me? this is totally insane but guess what? the nurse on duty had only been out of school for 3 years and all he talked about was how he couldn't wait to go work for a travel agency...say what?...out of school 3 years and you're ready to go work for a travel agency? ...very dangerous environment.

Now, it did occur to me that the majority of nursing are female...bear with me because I would love some input here.

My wife (who is also a nurse) comes home every day and she usually has to vent about her day and it is usually about the same thing...staffing, shortages etc, etc. I made the comment "When are you ever going to do something about it?" to which she replied " Honey, I'm just venting, I don't want you to answer me, I just want you to listen!"

OK, read that again and then answer me this question: Could it be that the majority of nurses don't want a real solution to the problem, they just want to vent?...please don't flame me, it's a perfectly legitimate question :-)

whatever the answer is, isn't it time we stopped "venting" and EVERYONE committed to doing something about it?

PIN

Millworkers, mail carriers, many many others have to go to work everyday and swallow the garbage too. They too need their jobs. Their is very little we can do without a union. There is only strength in numbers and one squeaky wheel will be tolerated only so long before she is fired. What would you suggest PIN? That is why turnover is what it is, we keep looking for better working conditions so we move around. If the cost of turnover is not enough to make employers care, then only legal mandates or collective bargaining can do it and they just are not there for most of us.

Back before I went to school for nursing I worked in the health insurance industry. Those CEO's make way too much money. They want the claims processors to find ways to deny claims if possible. If we could get the same healthcare benefits as them, the senators, and congress we as a nation would be a lot happier. People keep saying we will not get the same benefits blah blah. Well more will get better than what we have and if you have money then you can get better which is going on now anyway. Also if it is nationalized we wont have as many lawsuits etc. if the hospital is not worried about not getting their money from xyz insurance and there is a law enforced on these CEO about how much money they can make and there was a mandatory ratio on patients everything would be better less mistakes less malpractice etc.

Healthcare conditions today -poor staffing, astronomical Administration(CEO, borard of dicktators,financial CSZARS) salaries, unsafe patient conditions/care, neglegence, sentinel events etc- it all adds up to exploitation of the staff and the patients!!

Specializes in Peds, NICU, Mother/Baby..Education.

I agree with you 100%!! After 10 years of management madness, I started teaching. I loved the eagerness and excitement that I recieved from the students. When I run into students that are now working as nurses, they usually tell me that the " real world" is nothing like the the Nursing Process I taught them. I felt like such a lier.

I loved nursing so much..my own kids missed me while I cared for sick kids 12 hrs/day. I had a CVA in 2009 and lost most of my vision. I must say..I was cared for by my adult children, NOT by my profession.It took "thrive or die" almost a month to dx my stroke because the didn't want to pay for the MRI. I would caution the young nurses to " Just say NO!!!" Spend your holidays with people that love you back.. All money is not good money.. When someone makes 500K/yr and you make 65K/yr. You are being pimped( sorry for using gutter terms..but.. if it looks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it must be a damn duck!) I really loved Nursing and I loved my patients/ students...But it is NOT to die for. Even though my income has been cut 50%, I am at peace, my priorities are in order, and I'm a much better grandmother. God is good!

The sad part is we bicker amongst ourselves and if only one out of 30 employees complain at times I wonder should I pursue another career they cut jobs and with so many job layoffs swome nurses are the bread winners in their families where they don't want to lose their only means to support their family so they grin and bear it lookbat the teachers that strike they still lost their benefits but I say cut the fat one upper management salary can probably pay for five nurses salary plus benefits there are no easy solutions or shortcuts we have to get our head out of the sand and act collectively without struggle there is no progress as dr phil our silence "how's that working for you"

Specializes in Operating Room.
"The average compensation nationally for a hospital CEO was $452,400 in 2010 and the average for the CEO of a health system was $683,000, according to a survey conducted by Integrated Healthcare Strategies, a business consultant specializing in the health care industry".

http://www.ajc.com/news/atlanta/hospital-ceo-pay-has-997155.html

Some of these salaries are seven figures. They constantly cry about struggling to make ends meet, yet they can pay top dollar for CEO positions? Can any of us even imagine making over $1 million a year? EVERY YEAR? Yet we have to take unpaid days if we call off sick more than three times in a year? We have to pay $1000 out of pocket for our health care expenses and we WORK for health care facilities? Isn't it ironic? Shouldn't health care workers at least have great health benefits?

Yep, I believe you may be right.

The CEO at my last hospital made over $3 million dollars a year.

Our CEO made so much $ for the hospital that they "forgave" him of a $750,000 mortgage he had.

Specializes in ICU, PIC, BURN UNIT, PEDS, MED SURG, PSY.

Dear Pin and everyone else, I began this fight 27 years ago when I wrote the Nurse's Story and got to go cross country doing TV, radio and print in 21 cities 3 different times. And though no one alone can make a difference, each one of us can. Now I have three online sites, I plan on taking all our problems to the American Nurses association and asking them who's watching our back? And if they say nurses don't support them, I'll ask if nurses even know what they do. But as it is now, any one of us can help educate and inform the patients directly....online. I just started to post on "lay people's" sites to let them know what's going on...I'm going to run webinars and get nurses together. There are over 2 million of us, and we have to get over the idea that we're powerless. We're not. But we have to team up! Patients trust us more than any other profession but should they? Defenseless defenders are no good at all! And maybe one at a time, we can be slammed but it only takes the good to do nothing, for evil to prevail. Now as we move into advanced practice, even more of us will be left hanging if we don't have unions or other backing, so we'd better step up now. Imagine if all the nurses called in sick for a few days? What would the CEO's do? What would the patients do? Let's talk about it Come and let's hash it out. You don't even have to give your real name. I'll cover for you. I'm also going to write to politicians etc. But we're smart, and innovative. We should be able to come up with something, and not keep playing the same game! Let's do it! Hey what if we get all the retired nurses to talk. They can't get fired!!! :)