Rotating Shifts: Surviving and Thriving

Nurses General Nursing

Published

I've worked full time days, I've worked full time nights and I've rotated. Surprising to some, my favorite shift is -- drumroll please -- ROTATING!

Here's why: Days has the advantage of being, well, in the day time. It's natural for us to be up and about and working in the day time. It has the disadvantage, to quote an LPN I worked with years ago, "three meals and a bed bath." There are lots of people around -- visitors, management, teams of doctors on teaching rounds, consulting services, physical therapy (who always seem to want to walk your patient just when you've fed, medicated and changed all their dressings and have put them down for a nap), case management, pharmacy, RT -- the list goes on and on. It's exciting and you learn a lot, but you're also always on display. You can't sit down and put your feet up for a minute. Someone might SEE.

Night shift is quieter -- you have more autonomy to plan your shift, your breaks, and the times you cover your colleagues for breaks. You can sit down to chart and yes, put your feet up. (After visiting hours, of course.) You have time to look up meds, policies or the photo of the new surgeon coming on staff. Pinterest rules between 3 and 4 AM, and you have time to direct your orientees to allnurses.com. But night shift happens at night. And I have the best of both worlds -- just when I think I cannot STAND another day shift because of all the hustle and bustle -- it's time to rotate to nights. And when I cannot drag myself to work at 7 PM again, I'm rotating back to days.

Now for the tips:

  • Attitude is everything. It shouldn't have to be said, but I'll say it anyway. Most people are exactly as happy as they make up their minds they're going to be. So like everything else, enjoy the aspects of rotating (and of each shift) that you like, and tolerate the aspects that you don't. Remember this, too shall pass.
  • When you're on night shift, BE on night shift. Go to bed at the same time (or a few hours earlier) and get up at the same time on your nights off. I can't vacuum at 3 AM if DH is sleeping, but I can dust or do laundry. Or go to the gym, watch TV shows or movies I've got stored on the DVR, read books, pay the bills, do the taxes or cook. In some places, you can even shop. I used to do all my shopping in the middle of the night -- fewer kids trying to hit you with shopping carts.
  • Your sleep time is sacred, whether it's 8AM to 4 PM or 9PM to 5AM. Don't let anyone interfere with it. (There are plenty of tips on the Surviving Night Shift threads.)
  • You probably won't have much control over your schedule at first, but when you DO have control, try to work 2-3 weeks of one shift before rotating. I've discovered that 2-3 weeks works best, although I've tried everything from 6-12 week blocks (which just made me crazy, but works really well for some folks) or rotating twice a week. One former colleague of mine worked Day-Day-Night, off four and then Day-Night-Night. It worked for her. So if 2-3 weeks doesn't work for you, find something that does and try to stick with it.
  • In most places, there will be day shifters, night shifters and rotators. Try to make friends with all of them; you never know who is going to be there to have your back when your patient crimps two hours into your shift. That's more difficult when you rotate, because you don't see any one person as often. It's worth the trouble, though.
  • Night shift usually has bonding rituals . . . Sunday night pot lucks or grilling hot dogs every Monday night. Perhaps "liver rounds" at the local tavern at 8 AM. (Don't laugh -- it's how I met DH.) Participate in those as much as you can. It helps you to become part of the team.
  • You've got friends and family at home, too. Try to get them on board with the rotating thing as much as possible. When you're working nights, your husband can watch "Fight Club" over and over and you won't care (unless he's subjecting the 5 year old to it). He can eat Nachos for dinner, play his obnoxious eighties hits loud and sit around in his underwear scratching himself. YAY for him! There's benefits to the program for both of you. You can come home from work, drive the kids to school and get up just in time for them to come home to a rested Mommy who is willing to play Candyland before dinner. You can bond with your neice (or your own teenager) by chatting on Facebook at 1 AM when she should be sleeping.
  • Make sure your schedule is on the refrigerator -- or someplace accessible to the whole family -- so everyone knows when you're going to be sleeping days and working nights and when you'll be available to chaperone the junior prom. (No, you wouldn't really embarrass your kids like that, would you?)
  • If your kids hate you working nights, make sure to make a special routine for them that happens only when you work nights. Breakfast at the local tavern on Sunday morning before church? (Just you, your family and the drunks . . . don't laugh. My sister-in-laws family loves those breakfasts!) Nacho night on your first night off after a stretch? Ditto for the day shift.

I'm sure there are dozens of tips I've forgotten, but I'm counting on my friends on AN to remind me and fill you in! Happy rotating!

Thanks, Ruby Vee! I was just hired for 3 12s a week, rotating day/night every two weeks. I have done well on both days and nights before, but I was a bit apprehensive at first about rotating. I will follow these tips and keep a positive attitude! But I gotta say I can already imagine some of the advantages: being familiar with both shifts, getting to live a more "normal" life during the days weeks and enjoying the more laidback pace at work during the nights weeks. Great article!

As others have said, thank you for this article! I am graduating in about a week and my first job out of school has rotating shifts. A lot of very useful tips!

+ Add a Comment