"The Calm Before The Storm" Laying Nurses Off To Prepare For A Pandemic Surge

This article discusses the struggles of one hospital’s nurses going through what seems to be just the beginning of the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. While many hospitals are overwhelmed, understaffed and without equipment some are laying off their nurses and cutting back their hours. Nurses COVID Article

Hospitals and Nurses Are Overwhelmed

Throughout the US many hospitals are overwhelmed with the ongoing pandemic of the COVID-19 virus. They are short-staffed on nurses forcing them to work long overtime hours. Many are so overwhelmed that they are hiring travel nurses to make up for the shortage. I am currently an RN at a hospital in Minneapolis MN and am experiencing the complete opposite of this.

Social-Distancing?

I work on a floor consisting mainly of elective, emergent as well as non- emergent surgeries. A little over two weeks ago all elective surgeries were postponed and absolutely no patient visitors are allowed in the hospital. Initially they told us this decision was made to promote people to stay home (social distancing) and to conserve hospital beds, ventilators, monitors and other critical supplies that will be needed for this pandemic. This has left the hospital quiet and very empty compared to the normal chaos of the typical daily pace. Patients are anxious and feeling alone not being able to have family members with them for support. Family members are confused and scared, constantly calling to get updates on their loved ones’ condition. As nurses we are taking on a lot of stress relaying messages between doctors and families, consoling people that are sad or upset, and trying to be positive to help shed some light on this situation.

Hospitals are Unprepared

It seems as though the hospital did not know how to prepare for this type of crisis. After the first influx of patients being tested it took weeks to figure out where they would put these patients and how we would get proper protective equipment. They now have elected one of our medical floors to take all of the COVID rule-out and positive tested patients. In addition, some ICU beds have been dedicated to caring for the critically ill patients needing ventilators. You can see and hear the frustration with this decision because now all the responsibility to care for these patients is only on a select few units. They are putting themselves as well as their families at risk to be exposed to this virus. While these nurses are hard at work and in a high-stress environment, other floors have completely shut down or decreased their patient populations immensely. This includes the OR, care suites, surgical specialties, orthopedic and observation units. This last week many nurses have been called off to stay home or put on low need due to the decreased census of patients throughout the hospital. Nurses are being floated every day to sit at door entrances for hours, screening visitors trying to enter the hospital. Other nurses are teaching classes about how to put on and take off PPE equipment. Some are walking around going to every unit basically begging to find any place they can help. I have done so myself and can speak for most of the nurses that we all feel a little useless not being able to care for patients.

Financial Struggle Equals Threat of Lay-Off

This week we received notice that the hospital is struggling financially due to this pandemic. No surgeries and a major decrease in admissions mean no money coming into the system. In the next month they will be cutting back nurses’ hours, laying people off, or paying them a minimum of 50% of their FTE. The rationale for this is to conserve the hospital revenue as much as they can; all to prepare and utilize it to stock up on PPE equipment for the upcoming months when COVID numbers are expected to skyrocket.

Calm Before the Storm?

It is uneasy and hard to tell if this is truly the calm before the storm or if many nurses will have to apply for unemployment alongside a large number of other Americans. People see the news and expect all US nurses to be the ones on the front line helping patients and communities through this crisis. It is truly heartbreaking to feel that you may have to look for a new job at the end of this or could be thrown back into a completely unorganized surge of ill patients, without proper training or equipment. Nurses are full of anxiety and on edge not knowing what the future holds for us in our career. This pandemic is truly affecting everyone in a different way, causing lots of uncertainty and stress. I just hope that some clarity can be shed soon so we can properly prepare for this and try to prevent the spread of this virus to our population and healthcare workers.

Specializes in Retired.
6 hours ago, Mywords1 said:

Statistically, less than 1 percent chance exists of a normal average American getting this virus. I figured it for myself where I live in a large metro area and I am in a higher risk category. Practicing the precautions and mostly staying home, roughly about .1% perhaps as low as .008%. This changes slightly every day and will rise--depends where you live, work, age, race and if you have a weaker immune system, etc. The media will not report this, and I am glad they don't. Plenty of other news should be reported.

Well, I'm glad that you can be home and be safe but others don't have that luxury. It's disingenuous to to say it's ONLY 1% of the population that will be infected. Since we have almost no testing , we will probably never know what the incidence is. But you are dismissing the harm it does to hospitals in areas that don't have storage for their dead. That one health care worker would have to die on the job is unacceptable and I don't get how you can diminish the magnitude of the consequences of this. You must live in a state that hasn't suffered thousands of hospitalized patients.

4 Votes
Specializes in Vents, Telemetry, Home Care, Home infusion.

PA state has easy to understand info re Covid-19.

Easy to see from this graph showing # coronovirus cases/per day per differing sections of our state. Purple: SE 5 county Philadelphia area where I live and Brown: NE Pocono's region (where many from NYC have a vacation home).

UPMC: Pittsburgh area and Geissenger: North Central have sent PPE supplies to Philadelphia area hospitals; national guard medical units assisting Philadelphia area hospitals..

On 4/25 Small Springfield Hospital, in SE Delaware County closed inpatient units, ED open-(mostly ortho surgery performed there) furloughed 30 nurses until June---my SE area will be last to resume normal operations and resume elective procedures.

PA's stay at home order went into effect 3/19. Per Gov. Wolf, sections of state may ease restrictions after May 8th once < 50 cases per 1,000 persons occurs. So nurses in most of state can expect quicker return to regular hospital functioning with return of elective surgery.

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1 Votes

A lot of hospitals do have low census right now. I got called off for some of my shifts already.

1 Votes