Published
Scary. I saw one of those kinds of scheduling for correction nursing jobs. And I thought: what!
Meaning you can't do two jobs with that kind of schedule and it's not even top pay. I'm not surprised though. There are plenty of nurses looking for jobs. Looks like schedulers will be have less scheduling headaches.
We used to get schedules like this and worse when we had a sadistic manager. Rotating shifts should be done in a thoughtful manner and should rotate backwards if doing all three. From night, to PM, to day, to night, to better work with the body's circadian rhythm. Also, each shift should be for a minimum of three weeks at a time.
We rotate day/ night (12 hr shifts), but we also self-schedule (we have to do 50/50), so for example, next schedule I work the first 3 wks on days and the 2nd 3 weeks on nights. Some people go back and forth, but for the most part, we get what we ask for (regarding shift, but they may change your day of the week). I could not even fathom trying to do a schedule like you describe.
In Ireland, UK and Australia we mostly do rotating shifts but it is 4 weeks of days then 2-3 weeks of nights, not this mixing it up each week.
the roster that you have is unsafe and scary! It takes my body a good 36hr to recover from night shift pattern, so after my 4 nights the next day is useless! Then I go back for another 4!
sweetieann
195 Posts
I work 5 days per week and was hired as day/night rotation. This is a typical weekly schedule for me:
Monday: 7am-3:30om
Tuesday: 7am-3:30 pm
Wednesday: 11pm-7:15 am
Thursday: "Off" (sleeping all day though since I get home 7:15 am Thursday morning from my Wed. night shift)
Friday: 7am-3:30 pm
This is happening every week. I knew I'd have to rotate, but this seems a little much. It's really throwing me off. Other schedules have looked like: night, off, D,D, D, off, off, night, off, D, D, D, D, D.
Thanks for any insight!