Published
To whom it may concern:
I am writing this letter because I have most recently encountered the most horrid, eye opening experience of my entire 10 year career as a registered nurse. Throughout my career I have loved being a nurse, in fact I have devoted my entire life to taking care of patients. I do not pretend to not have made mistakes, because I have, as I am only human. However, I consider myself to be very knowledgeable, competent, and above all proficient in the care that I provide to my patients. I pride myself in my ability to assess a patient and collaborate with the physician in order to provide the best care possible to my patients. It makes me feel good to see patients get better and go home to their families.
Most recently I felt I needed growth and change in my career and I accepted a position as a nurse manager over the intensive care unit and medical surgical floor at a small hospital in Arkansas. I had worked there 8 years ago and didn't think I was going in to the job blind or naive. It had not been an easy job as a staff nurse 8 years ago and I knew that things were going to be hard. I believe the exact words from the CNO I interviewed with were "Its going to be rocky for the first 6 months". This was an understatement to say the least. I was also told that she wouldn't anticipate that I would have to take patients that often as it was staffed pretty good considering that their average census on the floor was 20 and 4 in the ICU. I was told that she didn't want me to staff she wanted me to manage so that I could correct the issues at hand.
The first 3 days of my job were overwhelming but ok, the second week was terrible. This is when I began to notice that the problems at hand were so awful not only with the nursing staff but throughout every department and every process they employed.
All of the nursing staff on my floor was disgruntled and disconcerned with everything. Patients were showing up to the floors unannounced with no orders. Nurses were at the desk, there was a patient who was sent there to die and was dieing with no nurse at her bedside. I had to tell the nurse to call the physician and then instruct them to stay with the family and still she never got up to stay with the family. Some of the nurses were shouting profanities at the desk. One of my nurses was so emotionally unstable all she could do was stand at the desk and cry. The nurses had one free charge RN and the 3 LPN's had 10 patients a piece. One man who was actively having a heart attack in the doctors office was sent over as a direct admit by wheel chair escorted by unlicensed personnel to our ICU. The nurse was not trained properly and did not know he was having a heart attack and the man died. Pharmacy only was open until 6pm without night coverage. The nurses were only allowed to get stat or now orders from a thrown together medication closet if they needed medications for their patients. So if you didn't have a routine medication at night, sometimes the patient just did not get the med. It would be charted on the medication sheet as "MED NOT IN DRAWER". Sometimes there was only one nurse in the entire facility at night with access to the medication closet and that was the ICU nurse who was alone with 4 or more patients.
The first two weeks of my job they called me day and night, I couldn't get any sleep. The 5th through the 8th day of my job, I had no RN coverage on the floor so I had to staff with absolutely no orientation to the paper work or the floor. I might stay on the phone for 6 hours of my day trying to call people in but still no coverage and the people that were coming in were working everyday, some had 120 hours in one pay period. While I was trying to care for patients, I would have to try and call in people or deal with sometimes 20 or more phone calls.
I kept telling my self that it would get better, that I would hire people. Everyday there were callins, No call - no Shows and there was no one to call in or no one would come in. Absolutely no RN applications. Most often I only had one RN on the floor to assess 28 to 34 patients. One day I caught an LPN trying to hang blood on a patient (which is against policy) And she said, "Well if I don't do it, it won't get done. The RN says she doesn't have time".
Two days ago, I was called to a meeting in which I had to leave to help the nurse on the floor who said that she had 5 admissions at one time and that the emergency room called to send another patient. The nurse told them that she was the only RN on the floor and the other nurses had 9 and 10 patients a piece and she couldn't take that patient right then. At that moment two paramedics presented to the floor with a Man that was dripping in sweat, grey in color and short of breath with a heart rate of 133. They had brought an unstable patient to the medical floor with absolutely no nurse to nurse report.
I escorted them to the room and began to admit the patient but started to realize how unstable he was and immediately called the physician. The local surgeon came to see the patient and agreed that the patient shouldn't be on the floor and needed to be shipped to a higher level of care.
After, getting this man settled in, the admissions just kept coming in. Because I was concerned about not having staff to care for these patients I called administration to inform them that we were not adequately staffed to provide the appropriate care for these patients. We were told to admit until we were full. Later, that night the floor was completely full with 35 patients and only 3 nurses and one nurse's aide to care for these patients. While these 3 nurses had 11 patients a piece, one of their patients was beating
His wife, and then attacked one of my nurses. Numerous things were going on but still the nurses were doing the best that they could under the circumstances.
I was under the impression that the unstable man was to be transferred as soon as possible but to my surprise he was still on the floor the next day more unstable than the day before. I had come that morning to staff in the ICU where we had six patients and only two nurses (another nurse and my self). Soon after I came in I was called away by the physician of the unstable man who wanted to complain because so many orders were overlooked on him throughout the night. The man was not transferred because the doctor could not get an accepting physician and was subsequently moved to the ICU where I assumed his care.
While caring for this man in the ICU it was noted early on that he was in very critical condition with potassium of 8, in acute kidney failure and with a very high heart rate of 144. The surgeon was notified to place a central line, while I was assisting the surgeon with this procedure; they were attempting to extubated another patient from the ventilator. The patient began to decompensate and was immediately placed back on the ventilator, at which time another patient arrived from surgery with a Blood Pressure of 70/30. Almost minutes after receiving this patient we were brought another patient from the floor that had to be immediately intubated and placed on the ventilator. While this was going on another patient was hemorrhaging and receiving blood, while a diabetic patient was in the room next door.
While all of these things were happening there was no one but me and another nurse, no one to answer the phone, no one to put orders in the computer until 2 pm that day. They stayed for about two hours and helped put in orders but then left.
During this time, the CNO, the administrator, the assistant administrator, and the CFO were on a plane to Florida for a meeting. The person left in charge, THE HUMAN RESOURCES DIRECTOR came to the ICU and was notified that the criticality of the patients warranted at least 4 nurses and that the doctor's office was sending us another patient with a possible heart attack. I conveyed to him at this time that I did not have the staff to care for these patients adequately in the ICU or on the floor and that it was critical for the safety of the patients and the nurses to stop admitting.
Mentally and physically exhausted, I reported off to only two nurses that night and went home. I arrived home at 9pm and went to bed, at 1am they were calling me saying that they were moving patients to the obstetrics floor as overflow and continuing to admit and that the CNO had called from Florida and instructed them to continue admitting. I told them on the phone that I was sorry but I quit. It was completely out of my control.
How disheartening to know that this happens all the time at various institutions around America. How sad it makes me to see that hospitals are more concerned with their census and how much revenue they can generate than to provide quality care to patients and a safe work environment to their staff.
And what even saddens me worse is the fact that the patients trust their lives to us and are so unaware and mislead of how unsafe the conditions are. People are paying millions of dollars and furthermore, our own government is paying millions of dollars for unsafe, substandard healthcare.
Why should the hospitals care? They are making millions and billions of dollars and we as nurses are placed in a catch 22 from the get go. We show up for work, we can not leave because it would be abandonment. We cannot refuse because it would be insubordination. But, instead we are forced to work out the shift in these conditions and take the chance of being charged or even sued for negligence. Does this seem right to you? It doesn't to me. I mean your damned if you walk out and your damned if you stay. Who should be accountable in this situation? I mean, do you think we want to walk in to conditions like this? We are forced to deliver such minimal care that it is dangerous. Even a competent nurse can only do so much, we are not super human.
We as nurses became nurses because we care. We did not go to school for the money, it's good but not good enough to expose our selves to disease and biohazzerdous material 1000 times a day. It seems to me that the nurses and the patients are both suffering.
Now, I have had to quit a job without notice. It may seem like I have no work ethic but instead I think otherwise. I have a lot of ethic. I have an obligation to provide safe care. I am accountable for my own actions. If the environment I work in is unsafe then I have to say " NO ! I WILL NOT PARTICIPATE IN SUCH SUBSTANDARD CARE". "I WILL ONLY PROVIDE CARE IF I HAVE SAFE WORK CONDITIONS, SO THAT I CAN PROVIDE GOOD QUALITY CARE TO MY PATIENTS."
THERE WOULD BE NO CARE FOR PATIENTS AND NO HOSPITALS TO PLACE PATIENTS IN IF IT WERE NOT FOR NURSES. WE ARE THE EYES AND EARS FOR THE DOCTORS. WE AS NURSES ARE HEALTHCARE.
In my whole entire career, I have been placed in several bad positions. But never have I been so terrified that someone was going to die and my license was on the line. I have never made a complaint, but I did this time. We all say don't rock the boat, don't make waves. Well now is the time to speak out, rock the boat, and blow it out of the water.
There is a nursing shortage and this is why. Hospitals have gotten by with this for years. They even take advantage of the situation because they know the nurse is stuck there the entire 12 hours.... Its Just one more shift covered for them. It is time for the government to step up and institute safe nurse to patient ratios. Hospitals do not staff by acuity. They staff by numbers.
Are you comfortable going to the hospital as a simple number instead of the criticality of your illness? I certainly am not.
The government has to do something about this. It cannot wait. We cannot just slap these hospitals on the hand and say oh ok, you screwed up. There are people's lives in jeopardy and nursing is also suffering.
It is time for nurses to get up, speak out and make a stand! It may be unprofessional to quit a job with out notice but I feel it is more unprofessional to provide substandard care. It is not about a paycheck, it is about lives being saved.
PLEASE HELP ALL OF THE NURSES MAKE HEALTH CARE SAFER!
Sincerely,
Just one concerned nurse wanting to make a difference,
Well, this is just really bad.
I live in Arkansas, also. I know it can't be my town's hospital, because I think I read that you said it was a 170 beds.
It has to be in one of the larger cities in Arkansas, it must be in Little Rock, or Pine Bluff, or Fort Smith maybe, or even Hot Springs.
I think you should send your letter to the Arkansas Democrat/Gazzette, and have it published, for the public to see, but I wouldn't want you to get in trouble.
I have never read anything so bad. I'm so sorry you had that to go thru.
Sure glad I don't live where that hospital is.
I would report suspected trolls rather than tackling them publicly here. If someone is holding dual accounts, please report it so the mods can address the issue.
Thanks for the advice.
'Twas not me tackling the issue; I was trying to understand Begalli's post (to follow). I was wondering how a poster would even know that a person has two accounts, or whether it was something the mods put into begalli's post.
Multiple Accounts
Creation of secondary accounts is discouraged. Use of 2 accounts by the same member simultaneously is not permitted, and one or all accounts may be banned or suspended without notice, especially if the multiple accounts are being used to troll the board.
https://allnurses.com/forums/showthread.php?t=31788
Last edited by begalli : Yesterday at 10:28 PM.
Hey....I don't even work acute care but know that this happens.
Why doesn't Oprah or 60 minutes care? The story isn't interesting enough? Everyone expects and some demand good health care, but does the general public really know what goes on or what the nurses really do?
If Oprah would do a story or two.....???
Thanks for the advice.'Twas not me tackling the issue; I was trying to understand Begalli's post I was wondering how a poster would even know that a person has two accounts, or whether it was something the mods put into begalli's post.
I would report suspected trolls rather than tackling them publicly here. If someone is holding dual accounts, please report it so the mods can address the issue.
Sorry guys.
I put that part of the TOS there because I felt strongly about it.
SmilingBluEyes - you're absolutely right, thank you.
I think this should be criminal with punishment the maximum by law. Shut this unsafe place DOWN!Do these patients require placement of lines, starting and titration of drips, pulmonary care, how on EARTH do you monitor these patients? What if two or even three drop their pressure at the same time? How on earth can this happen? How do families NOT see that their loved one is in profound danger in this situation?
Seriously, are your ICU patients intubated, are any immediate post-op? How are trends recognized, labs kept on top of, turning for skin integrity accomplished, and then how does documentation get done? OMG!!
I'm just absolutely FLOORED by this!
To answer your question, many of our ICU patients are intubated, several are immediate post-op patients, and some are even peds patients. You ask what if 2 -3 drop their pressure at the same time, well I personally pray and then I started going from patient to patient doing what needs to be done to keep them alive. As for monitoring, our bedside monitors allows us to set it up so we can monitor heart rhythm and vitals at any bedside, so we just set up every bedside to display the info on every patient. As for line placements, our docs have gotten pretty good at doing it by themselves or they just make their office nurse come with them and assist. When we start any new drip, we make sure both nurses know that it is being started and we monitor as we are doing bedside care with the other patients (I explained above monitoring). If we see a problem with the drip or if we see that it needs to be titrated, we immediately go to that patient. As for charting, we don't start charting until the next shift comes on. When my shift ends at 7pm, I take one of the laptops to the break and then I do my charting for that day based upon the hundreds of pieces of scrap paper, paper towels, etc. that I have jotted notes down on. Finally, about 2-3 hours later I am on my way home, unless I see that night shift is struggling and then I stay until midnight or when ever. It is a horrible situation and I am going to be leaving it. I have been offered a job at a large teaching hospital in their PICU. They maintain a strict 2:1 patient-to-nurse ratio. It's almost a 2 hours drive away from my home, but if I don't leave my current situation I know I will quit nursing altogther.
Schroeder
Schroeder -
I'm so glad you're leaving that place. I hope you find what ICU nursing can really be and what it really is...challenging, thought provoking, highly skilled, and extremely autonomous and rewarding from a professional point of view.
I just can't help but feel really bad for the patients and the nurses at the hospital you are leaving behind though. It's so wrong.
You GO SCHRO! And Good Luck!
Good luck to you, and bravo for speaking out. We've got to change the system/healthcare culture or die as a profession. Your situation brought back so many memories and feelings in me.
I was also an ICU/PACU nurse in Arkansas. The chief surgeon (and source of income for the hospital) had everyone so intimidated that no one, including the DON would stand up to him. He would curse the nurses in front of the patients and family members and threw temper tantrums frequently.
One surgeon threw an instrument during surgery, breaking the glass in one of the OR cabinets, and the crew just acted like it was a joke. This was typical behavior.
My aunt was admitted to the hosp. w/ a blood sugar of 29, but no one on the floor realized she was admitted, and she was alone for hours without so much as a peek at her. She managed to finally call me to ask for help, saying that she felt "really weird" and was afraid. When I was in ICU as a patient, my nurse didn't stick her head in the door until 11:45 one a.m. I know, because I was very coherent.
One of my patients was having a massive MI. When I reported that his blood pressure and O2 sat were falling, he was having Cheyne-Stokes respirations, was barely responsive to sternal rub, the color of a purple plum, and having frequent pvc's, the surgeon told me to send him to ASU for a barium enema as ordered. (Thought he needed some vagal stimulation to help out his arrythmias, I guess!) I kept calling and informing and documenting and finally was allowed to contact his primary care doc. Within minutes, the PCP was there ordering the appropriate tests, admitting him to ICU. The damage was too great by then, tho, and I heard that he died several days later.
The DON threatened to fire me for refusing (politely & following the chain of command) to give a med contraindicated for the patient (black warning box), and ordered at two times the correct dose, in spite of the pharmacist and the drug company saying that I was right. They didn't want to upset the doc, who said that I couldn't take care of his patients anymore after I said that I couldn't conscientiously give the med.
I was left as the only person in PACU w/ fresh surgical patients in spite of the national standards requiring two licensed personnel. I tried to change the system using everything I knew, but nothing worked. When I asked the surgery crew to be at least within earshot, they would agree. I would learn later that they were all at the other end of the hosp. in the cafe, & I was alone with my patient(s) behind two sets of double doors, and the call lights didn't even work! Ever tried to ambu bag someone in laryngospasm by yourself and call for help at the same time? I did a lot of praying, but nurses shouldn't have to rely on prayers and hope!
These are just a few of many similar memories.
I was out of nursing for several years, but have been thinking of going back. It scares me to death. I would really like to start earning a living again, but the situations I've been in have made me wonder if there is any place that even tries to follow standards, or if I'm still up to it and knowledgeable enough after my absence. I've taken a refresher course and am doing a lot of reading.
Have any of you gone back into nursing after several years? Should I try a different degree/occupation? Any thoughts?
Schroeder, please let us know how it goes in your new facility. Obviously, you've touched a sensitive spot in many. I feel for you. Take care of yourself, whatever that means. Your patients are fortunate to have you.
If you are getting back into nursing, I would look for somewhere with a union. This is NOT to start a union vs nonunion debate! Been done in lots of places here on the boards already! Just that you may have a little more recourse with unsafe conditions if there is a union contract with ratios, or at least some grievance procedures for poor staffing.
Good luck and God Bless, Schroeder, in whatever you choose to do.
Our ratios are pretty well set, if we go over by even one patient on the floor/unit, everyone gets time and a half to compensate for the extra work. In the ER, if we are one nurse short OR no tech OR no secretary, we all get time and a half. Sometimes still not worth it, but it never degenerates to what you had to go through.
Oh my goodness such awful conditions!! You did the right thing by quitting. I would refuse outright to admit another patient if there wasnt sufficient staffing to provide care. I am worried now as i am coming to the States to nurse next year and i know from your letter that i have been spoilt from having a wonderful union here in Australia with 1 to 4 or 5 ratios. The most i have had is 8patients with a dvision 2 nurse, like your LPN except they dont give out meds. Maybe i should stay home?? I like to be able to provide quality care for my patients, something that is near impossible with ratios like you have pointed out!
NurseFirst
614 Posts
When I was working as a paramedic, and fairly new, I brought a patient in to the hospital to be admitted on the floor. My assessment of the patient was that someone needed to pay attention to him once I got him to the hospital, his vital signs and how he looked just weren't that good. Had I known the patient would get the reception ("just put him in the room, we'll get to him"--and then walking away) he got when I brought him to the floor, I would have taken him to the ER instead of to the floor. This was, ah, 27-28 years ago, so critical care units were not nearly as common as they are now. I've often wondered what happened to that poor man. Those of us who have been responsible for the lives of other people--some of those people haunt us over the years.
NurseFirst