The Aging Nurse in the Workplace

A scholarly treatise on the aging of the nursing workforce and its future impact on a failing American healthcare system. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

GOTCHA!!!!!

I haven't written a 'scholarly' anything since college, and I'm not about to start again at this lI'm a Registered Nurse and writer who, in better times, has enjoyed a busy and varied career which includes stints as a Med/Surg floor nurse, a director of nursing, a nurse consultant, and an assistant administrator. And when I'm not working as a nurse, I'm writing about nursing right here at allnurses.com and putting together the chapters for a future book about---what else?---nursing.ate date. Come on.....you didn't really think I was serious, did you? :rotfl:

What I am going to talk about here is Nursing: Baby Boomer Edition.

Now, I'll be the first to tell you I'm not really an 'old' nurse---I received my license exactly 14 years ago today---so I don't have as many years on the job as most nurses of a similar vintage. (In the nursing world, that's seasoned, not sagging.) But I do share a number of the same aches and pains, the same worries, and the same indignities as my colleagues who have been in the field for decades.....and it's these that make late midlife as an R.N. "verrrrrry interesteenk".

Ironically, up until about three years ago I was often mistaken for someone five to ten years younger, even though I was working floor shifts in a LTC facility that whipped my butt every night. Then I hit the half-century mark, and woke up one morning shortly thereafter to find that my mother had taken over the bathroom mirror and wasn't giving it back. Even so, I didn't know I'd aged THAT much until the first day at my current assisted-living position, when two of the residents walked up to me and said sweetly: "Well hello, dear. You must be the new move-in."

OK, so I'm getting a little gray around the edges. Actually, I'm getting gray all over, so I love it when a gaggle of Boomer nurses, who still have the ticket stubs from the rock concerts they attended back in high school, gathers together in the break room for what I call an "organ concert". This consists of a litany of complaints about the state of our organs. "Ohhhh, my poor dawgs," one will whine as she rubs her aching, bone-dry feet after a grueling 12-hour shift........"You know, he REALLY needs to get that checked out," says another, wrinkling her nose at the cloud of toxic fumes emitted by the dietary aide with gallbladder disease who just dashed in to use the restroom......."I swear, my back is gonna break in two at the waistline if I have to help turn that 500-pounder down in room 216 one more time," groans a third......well, you get the idea.

Speaking of foul winds........I think Boomers are the first generation in history to acknowledge, and even celebrate, the fact that humans really do have gas. Nurses have been talking about flatus for ages, but we might as well 'fess up the fact that we produce plenty of it, thanks to our lust for the greasy, spicy, fatty fare we consumed in our younger days.

We are arguably the best-educated and best-fed people who have ever walked the earth, but for some reason we keep forgetting that our middle-aged tummies don't handle pizza and pepperoncini as gracefully as they used to.....with predictable, odoriferous, and often hilarious consequences. (Even my 60-year-old husband, who is NOT a nurse, and I have been known to laugh hysterically when one of us bends over to retrieve the dog's toys from under the sofa and a goose flies out. Just goes to show we never grow too old to get some juvenile jollies over a call from "your son Rip on line toot".)

But all is not quiet on the Western front, or the Eastern, Northern, or Southern fronts either, when it comes to our future both as nurses and as recipients of health care. We know we're doomed. Most of us will have to continue working, in one form or another, until we're 70 or even older. We don't make enough money to pay for health care ourselves, we make too much to qualify for public assistance, and our employer-paid insurance stinks on ice. But we can count......and one of the scariest numbers is 75+ million. Try as I might, I can't see how the Medicare 'experts' will manage to cram that many Boomers into a system that was designed for only about half that. Forty or fifty years ago, most people just didn't live long enough to draw benefits for decades; now, it's expected that the majority of us will live at least another fifteen, and maybe even twenty or more years beyond official Medicare age. Now who's going to pay for all the care we're going to need as we grow older? And who's going to replace us in the workforce?

I don't know about you, but I like my plan better than anything the politicians have come up with so far: I'm just going to work until I literally can't put one foot in front of the other any longer, and then I'm going to go out into the woods like the ancient Native Americans did, and allow nature to take its course. No nursing homes for me with their tile floors and their understaffing; no cardboard box in an alley with no warmth and only the street rats for company. If I've learned anything in these years of being a Boomer nurse, it's this: sometimes, there are worse things than dying. And being destitute, elderly, and sick in a world that views such people with contempt is, to my mind, one of them.

Now if I could just remember where I put that letter I was writing to my Congressman, I could really bring older nurses' concerns to the forefront of..........oh crap, what was I talking about again??

I know the feeling ! I'm 54 and have been in the feild for 16 years!

Specializes in LTC Family Practice.

Ohhh how wonderful...y'all are writing about me!!! I will turn 61 in Oct, I've been out of work for 3+ years and finally got a job as a patient sitter at a local hospital. I start orientation Monday. Not the job I want, not the career path I planned...but I NEED a job NOW...any job. I let my license lapse in this state but at least I keep it going in another state via online CE's. I'll be working until they haul me out feet first. Anywho, thanks for this wonderful article...I'm right there with yah!

Specializes in Surgery,Trauma,Dialysis,Transplant.

Well,"Girls & Guys", I just celebrated the 60 mark the other day...the face in the mirror has a younger gal on the inside screaming, "What the hell happened?" Seriously, after 40 years, I am proud to say, with aching knees, back and bilateral plantar faciatis, I can still outrun those damn younger chicks in the OR! Even the surgeons will sometimes laugh about it. They won't let me give-up my NIGHT charge position b/c they said things go to-hell-in-a-handbasket when those dumbass young ones are left here. So there! BTW, the average age of an OR nurse in the US is 50! I'll bet LTC is even older. Yes, I see my beautiful 94 yr old Mom's face in the mirror, too, and pray I have her genes. Imagine...she has gone from horses 'n buggies to the end of the shuttle era and is still driving! I take that Senior Discount every time I can, carry an AARP card and hang-out with the young ones (40's). On my b-day, someone guessed I was 47 and I said "Yes!" One of the smarta-- young ER nurses said 71? and I said "Yes. And don't I look great?!" Can't afford to quit, get plastic surgery or even a new dog that I have to pay for (aren't shelter rescues great?), but I am rich in: the love of God and my Lord; my family; my friends; my patients and profession.

Final thoughts: Sad for healthcare and the world when we old gray mares are gone. One of the charge floor nurses who is about my age called the other night and said: "I've figured it out. They're trying to kill us so they don't have to pay our rate, our PTO, and can hire the young kids cheaper!" I think he was spot-on. God bless all of you out there who have worked until your bodies stopped and to those who are still dragging theirs in to do it another day. I love you all, my sisters and brothers!

Specializes in Nursing Professional Development.

I'm 56 and terrified of losing my job. I can't imagine how I would support myself if I were to lose my current job. I can imagine getting part time jobs teaching a few classes here and there, but such jobs don't come with health insurance.

It's the need for health insurance that scares me most. I can reduce my need for cash by living very cheaply -- I've done that before when I went to grad school. But where does someone my age with existing health problems get reasonable health insurance?

So I cling to my current job -- and worry.

Specializes in Med nurse in med-surg., float, HH, and PDN.
Just like most of our society emphasis on youth is everywhere. pity, because with age come INTELLIGENCE

This is the third time I've tried to type in my response to the above posting and if it doesn't 'take' this time I'll be screaming and sending my computer on a one way ticket to Smashville! OK. A friend remarked the she wished we knew 'all this stuff' at a much younger age. I said no, because younger people (kids) think they already know everything already and if they did know 'all this stuff' they'd be even MORE unbearable. Lest anyone gets riled up, thinking I am Age-ist, we were talking about HS seniors. So, in addition to the INTELLIGENCE wrought from time and experience,( I would like to say a hardy AMEN to that!) I feel better emotionally and mentally than I ever felt previously, and I wouldn't trade that for a brand new pair of knees or even (choke) a brilliant metabolism.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

If I could give you a hundred kudos for that post, No Stars, I certainly would. Bravo!!

I want to change careers and looking into CNA or CNA II. What do you think, I am definitely a boomer, 55. Thanks.

You only live once. Just be aware that it is hard physical labor.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.
I want to change careers and looking into CNA or CNA II. What do you think, I am definitely a boomer, 55. Thanks.

CNA II would probably be your best bet, as it can lead to careers in less physically demanding areas like home health and hospice, where you take care of one patient at a time rather than 10 or more. Unless you are in spectacular physical shape, you definitely don't want to work in a nursing home or acute care (although you'll certainly have to do your clinicals in the NH as a CNA I). Better yet, go to school for a couple of years or so and become an LPN or RN. :D

Thank you so much for insight. That work is more suited to someone in their 20's. I would have to go to college to be an LPN and just don't know if I have it in me.

Kudos to all of you.. I can only dream of being in your shoes-- I'm now "new grad RN" -- past the century mark and just getting started here in California! I wish i had your experience...!!!!