Shocked and angry. Need new job.

Specialties Ob/Gyn

Published

My birthing unit is suddenly closing. There are 75 nurses on my unit and most of us found out by reading the paper :angryfire . Actually my sister called me from work (she works at same hospital, different unit) and told me. No advance notice, not one member of management called anyone to tell them. There were several meetings the next 2 days to discuss our options... there was very little info and a whole lot of fluff. "we are so sorry how everyone found out>>>> blah, blah , blah." The hospital is going to open a bariatric surgical service on our unit and we were told we would be "shining stars" if we stayed on and worked there :angryfire !! I am on the fence as to what to do. There are plenty of other floors to work on, maybe ICU or ER? All of the regional affiliated hospitals have a few OB jobs, and with seniority I might get one. In the meeting they talked and talked about incentives and severance packages. OK, what are the incentives? "we don't have any numbers." Followed by "come next week and tell us what you want to do" Well, how can we know without all of the info. Also to go to a regional hospital ( and stick with OB) we take a pay cut. Funny thing, they just opened a NICU a couple of years ago, spent millions I am sure. The hospital swears that it is staying open and they will transfer sick babies in. We were level 3. When asked about separating moms, they said that they would tranfer moms also!?! Can you imagine being PP mom sharing a room with bariatric patient?

I am really thinking about ICU or ER. Any of you with experience there? Do you think it would be a difficult transition?

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.

Well in this context, the "bariatric surgery" patients were what we were discussing.

That this hospital seems to think taking care of bariatric bypass surgical patients would be easy is ridiculous. It's hard work, and they are rife with potential complications.

I know there are a lot of obese patients; I am getting to the point where I am surprised when I have a patient under 200lb anymore (and these are young ladies mostly). Folks (including me, I need to watch my own weight) are getting bigger and our backs are being stressed more each decade.

Specializes in NICU, PICU, educator.

Ah.....World Class Care at it's best. Heck, across town we knew you were closing before you did. No one wants to come way downtown to have babies and their NICU is most likely going to go down the tubes too....rumor has it that they want to extend the peds cardiac to that unit. That unit won't last...heck they don't even have their own transport team, they rely on outsider to do that from 2 other hospitals.

Run, run! I'll stay at my large how people should be treated place LOL Come work for us, we have a great OB dept!

Specializes in NICU, PICU, educator.

Ah.....World Class Care at it's best. Heck, across town we knew you were closing before you did. I am sure your management did also because the NICU girls knew. No one wants to come way downtown to have babies and their NICU is most likely going to go down the tubes too....rumor has it that they want to extend the peds cardiac to that unit. That unit won't last...heck they don't even have their own transport team, they rely on outsider to do that from 2 other hospitals.

Run, run! I'll stay at my large how people should be treated place LOL Come work for us, we have a great OB dept!

Bariatric patients do indeed present unique challenges. And like Steph and others said before me, ER and ICU are not the same either. If you are willing to crosstrain, more power to you. I still say working there would not be an option for me if I had a choice. The way this was handled was very wrong. I would not trust management or administration in the least after this.

i am an RN who actually had bariatric surgery in 2001. i know everyone is different, but i would think it would be an exciting place to work. it is a new beginning for these patients. we dont have a bariatric surgeon in our area, otherwise i would be intested in this type of nursing. many do require larger beds, wheelchairs, etc. i have lost over 150 lbs and am like a new person. enhanced self esteem. i wonder if the 24 hour stay may be referring to laparascopic or banding procedures. those may very well be short stays. well, just wanted to put my two cents in. thanks for listening. deb

My birthing unit is suddenly closing. There are 75 nurses on my unit and most of us found out by reading the paper :angryfire . Actually my sister called me from work (she works at same hospital, different unit) and told me. No advance notice, not one member of management called anyone to tell them. There were several meetings the next 2 days to discuss our options... there was very little info and a whole lot of fluff. "we are so sorry how everyone found out>>>> blah, blah , blah." The hospital is going to open a bariatric surgical service on our unit and we were told we would be "shining stars" if we stayed on and worked there :angryfire !! I am on the fence as to what to do. There are plenty of other floors to work on, maybe ICU or ER? All of the regional affiliated hospitals have a few OB jobs, and with seniority I might get one. In the meeting they talked and talked about incentives and severance packages. OK, what are the incentives? "we don't have any numbers." Followed by "come next week and tell us what you want to do" Well, how can we know without all of the info. Also to go to a regional hospital ( and stick with OB) we take a pay cut. Funny thing, they just opened a NICU a couple of years ago, spent millions I am sure. The hospital swears that it is staying open and they will transfer sick babies in. We were level 3. When asked about separating moms, they said that they would tranfer moms also!?! Can you imagine being PP mom sharing a room with bariatric patient?

I am really thinking about ICU or ER. Any of you with experience there? Do you think it would be a difficult transition?

I work in OB and I feel like I work in the ER!! You never know what is coming through the door. So, if you are a good OB nurse, you'll fit right in in the ER! Thats the bright side:)

You and your RN buddies need a good lawyer.

Find an employment attorney that will take this case on contingency. Get with the others in your situation and explore your options together. Are you in a collective bargaining or union state?

You might not get your jobs back, but you will see your "severance packages" improve greatly as they make some forced out-of-court agreements.

Best, but not necessary: Find an RN attorney that can represent you!

If s/he is not a nurse, go for the bull dog that wins. You'll scare the crap out of them. I can bet that the hospital you work in is a for-profit and that the executives got a nice raise....

Specializes in NICU, PICU, educator.

I can tell you that a lawsuit will not scare that place in the least. They eat people for dinner and get around many, many things with all the political ties they have. They will tell them, hey, we offered you jobs, we aren't throwing you out. The OB unit there was not doing good business and they weren't attracting the type of clients they thought they would. Everyone in this area raised their eyebrows when we heard that they were even opening an OB service there.

They do have a great peds cardiac center, pretty world renowned. They have a lot of peds subspeciality there also.

They aren't union and OH is an at will employer state. I wouldn't work there if I had to, no matter what they pay.

I hope you find a new job soon. I was looking for a while and found two. Now I have to choose. Keep mailing specs. I wish you luck. There are always more and more shocking things in this day and age. Don't get angry get even or chalk it up for experience.

All of you go back to school and get your masters in midwifery and start your own company...! Use the "unemployed" and "laid off" status to help you get financial aid in school! Link up with a sharp nurse with an MBA. Start your own birthing center! Contract an MD to cover you and build relationships with the local hospitals taking complicated OB pts....

You're a nurse! You can do ANYTHING you set your mind to.

Success is the BEST revenge.

My birthing unit is suddenly closing. There are 75 nurses on my unit and most of us found out by reading the paper :angryfire . Actually my sister called me from work (she works at same hospital, different unit) and told me. No advance notice, not one member of management called anyone to tell them. There were several meetings the next 2 days to discuss our options... there was very little info and a whole lot of fluff. "we are so sorry how everyone found out>>>> blah, blah , blah." The hospital is going to open a bariatric surgical service on our unit and we were told we would be "shining stars" if we stayed on and worked there :angryfire !! I am on the fence as to what to do. There are plenty of other floors to work on, maybe ICU or ER? All of the regional affiliated hospitals have a few OB jobs, and with seniority I might get one. In the meeting they talked and talked about incentives and severance packages. OK, what are the incentives? "we don't have any numbers." Followed by "come next week and tell us what you want to do" Well, how can we know without all of the info. Also to go to a regional hospital ( and stick with OB) we take a pay cut. Funny thing, they just opened a NICU a couple of years ago, spent millions I am sure. The hospital swears that it is staying open and they will transfer sick babies in. We were level 3. When asked about separating moms, they said that they would tranfer moms also!?! Can you imagine being PP mom sharing a room with bariatric patient?

I am really thinking about ICU or ER. Any of you with experience there? Do you think it would be a difficult transition?

http://www.bariatricsurvivor.com/

We have a midwife service. They are nervous also. Midwives are a dime a dozen here. No jobs.

Bariatric Unit??!! Yikes, I hope they are very very good at having the proper equipment at hand for the care and repositioning of those patients. I wonder what the employee injury rate will be...would be interesting to see. I float to most of the floors that are short staffed, on one unit there were five nurses on light duty!! THAT IS AN INDICATOR!!! I, for one, am NOT MIGHTY MOUSE!!!!!

LOL

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