The Failure of Modern Healthcare due to Administration

Nurses General Nursing

Updated:   Published

I recently quit my job working at a Nursing Home as a CNA.

Out of the 8 patients I had my first and only full day of work plus the 1 additional I took on because he was abandoned by his CNA who wouldn't change his diaper because she didn't like the way he talked to her.

Out of those 9, I was only able to fully properly take care of 3 of those patients, 3 were mostly independent, and the other 3 were taken care of by 5 other staff members.

My eyes were opened to realize how much this modern Health Care system is managed to not actually work to fully and properly take care of most people as most people are in buildings like this and treated more like numbers than actual people.

They give 9 patients to a CNA MINIMUM there but it can climb as high as 20 legally in California for 1 CNA. 12-15 is normal in Hospitals I am learning.

I have heard from the patients themselves that they are not properly taken care of. For example you may have patients who wear diapers but they pooped in them and haven't been changed all morning.

The system keeps most of them alive barely, but they suffer so much and can be traumatized by their treatment.

A person needs not just their physical needs cared for, but they need to be treated as a person to and the system doesn't allow you to have enough time to do that for every person. Even then not all of their physical needs are met either.

I can't work with this system and I realize neither can anyone else.

Alot of people who work in this system do their best, but it's not good enough and it's the patients that suffer the most.

But the staff suffer to because most people like me go into the Medical field because we actually care about people and we want to help them in any way we can so when we are given the work load it would take in reality 4 or 5 of us to do and you want 1 of us to do it it breaks our heart because we have 9 people who desperately want help but we simply can't meet all of their needs no matter how much time we are given and we know we have failed them and they deserve better than that.

That's why I am not going to work in The Medical Field in direct patient care as a CNA until I pay back my parents what I owe them and save up $5,000 then they will give me a car and I can go back into Home Health Care.

I worked in Home Health Care in Hawaii for 2 years as a Home Health Aide without required to have a CNA license, but in California you need at least a CNA license to do that (which I just got in mail after a month a half of school and passing the state tests).

It is the complete opposite of most of the modern Health Care System in other places in many ways.

You get hired by an agency, they pay you and depending on the agency they pay for your gasoline to fuel your car to.

You need your own car because you have to drive yourself to your patient's home.

You call your agency and they tell you who they have that needs help.

You can ask as many questions as you want and you the right to refuse to care for anyone before you ever meet them.

And if you work with the patient and they and you don't get along you can leave their home and tell your agency you can't work with them anymore.

I had one patient one time who said Mary the mother of Jesus was not a virgin and Jesus and The Apostles were like hippies sleeping around with many people and I politely asked him not to talk about that stuff when I was working with him. He got very angry his face turned red and he said he refused to have anyone tell him what he can and can not do. So I went back home and the next day my Employers call me and wanted to suspend me because he told them lies that I said he was "The Devil".

I prayed asking God to help me in my head as they talked to me. I told them to look at my record in my reputation with my clients I have had with them and believe me not this lying angry patient I had.

They believed me and did not suspend me, but told me to avoid him.

In Home Health Care you can choose who you will meet as your possible patient and if you get along then you work it out between you and the patient when the best days and times that work for the both of you to work together. So you set your own schedule then you sumbit it to your agency Supervisor aka Manager so they can know and keep track of you.

You document what you do every day, go over it with the patient, and have your's and the patient's signature on it then you email it in to your agency and they log it in as your pay times and you get paid every 2 weeks.

You do whatever you are able to, trained for, licensed for, and can legally do for that 1 single patient for as long as you both agree to according to the schedule you both set up and agree upon together with your agency manager being notified about it.

I wasn't a CNA back then, but I did all the things I still do now as a CNA and more than that.

I cooked, I cleaned, I bought groceries (they give you their card and info and list to buy for them), I changed diapers (for only 1 patient), I showered people (only men), 

I taught old men how to use modern technology like cellphones or tvs even set up their phones to work easier for them,

I made phone calls on their behalf because they didn't have the patience or sometimes the ability to actually hear people they didn't know that well fully on the phone (mostly for Problems with their tv or phone or some thing else, tech support),

I also made phone calls to set up their medical appointments and calls to their Health Insurance services to set up transportation for their medical appointments as they could not drive on their own,

I acted as a go-between them and their health care providers and facilities,

I went with them to their Medical appointments and made sure they understood everything and were properly taken care of,

I called 911 for the ambulance when they needed it,

I even brought them their mail while they were in The Hospital so they could pay their bills and not lose their homes and services while they were recovering in The Hospital (which by the way I was not payed for as the agency won't pay you as long as your patient is in the hospital but they had no one to help them so someone had to do that).

Sometimes the patient just wants to be there to talk to them or listen to them or to watch a movie with them.

They often don't have any family or friends who can stay with them and do all the things you do for them.

They often live in government discounted apartments for the the poor and elderly or in their children's house sometimes or their own house alone.

They often can not walk or drive their own cars or even own a car or vehicle.

They often have no job or income and are retired and live on SSI and their health care is paid for by their insurance which can be Veteran's Affairs, HMSA, etc. and their insurance with a Doctor's recommendation note hire your Home Health Care Agency whom then pays you.

I like this as they often don't have to pay my services out of pocket. Their insurance will even send transportation for their medical appointments to and from their house or apartment with you to ride along with them.

I did this work for 2 years.

I am a man of my Word that's why I don't make promises or commitments very easily or quickly.

Every patient I care for I commit myself fully to in any way I can.

When people have to be in a facility, it is great in many ways as they can be cared in ways that are not always possible by yourself with your level of skill and training and equipment, but they are often given top priority for emergency care then they are increasingly pushed to side as they get better in health.

This is because modern Health Care is no longer properly managed and too many patients are given to every 1 CNA, RN, and even Doctor's which honestly  have it the worst.

Doctors are expected to see every patient no longer than around 11 minutes each when in the past they could take as long as they needed even hours for every patient.

I just hope and pray that I can bring more awareness and be a part of a change of this mismanaged system which honestly is from the enemy not from God.

We need lower Staff to Patient ratios, while it is true that there are often more patients than there are medical professionals we can't use that as an excuse to dump 9+ patients on 1 CNA and that's a low number from what I've read online the experiences of other CNAs who've had 15-30 or more patients they were responsible for all by themselves.

Sure the other staff step in to help when they can, but in reality my Job Title and description is a joke. My job 90% of the time has NOTHING to do with "assisting" The Nurse as a "Certified Nurse Aide". In reality my job is to DO THE JOB of The Nurse for MOST of THEIR patients to as much as I can do within my training and legal limits leaving them (in my limited perspective) with THE EASY stuff like taking vitals, giving meds, doing wound care, etc.

Nurses complain that 5 patients is "too" much for them to handle, they are completely out of touch with the reality of how us CNAs are treated by management and how we are drowning in patients while they complain about a mere 5 patients that they usually don't bathe, feed, reposition, change diapers for, get out of bed, get into bed, dress, etc. which doesn't need to be done "once" or even 3 times a day, some of these things happen all day long at various times! CNAs are like adult baby sitters which includes changing diapers at day care centers that are severely understaffed.

Now multiply by that by 2 or 3 and you got a "normal" amount of patients for 1 CNA. Meanwhile not all of the patient's needs get taken care of.

This needs to change.

There will always be more sick people then there are people to take care of them.

But the way we take care of people has to be the right way and if we take as much time as we need for each patient by giving each staff member only the number of patients they can handle then there will be less sick people as you can not possibly give the needed care to all patients for them to make a full recovery to independent stable health when you have too many patients and care gets split up and decreased over all the patients you have.

In case you were wondering, this isn't a new concept.

Dr. Victoria Sweet in her book God's Hotel tells her semi-biography of her work at a San Francisco Laguna Honda Hospital nicknamed "God's Hotel" of how things were run there before "Modern Healthcare Administration" took over to bring it up to "modern efficiency standards" by cutting the time with patients and the number of staff per patient declining the quality of the care for profits sake.

In her TED Talk on Youtube in her own words, "In seeking to put patients first, they put patients last."

Another Doctor along these lines is The Slow Medicine Doctor®
Dr. Michael Finkelstein, MD.

The concept isn't complex or difficult to understand, it is very simple: slow down and take care of each patient for as long and as much as they need physically and in any other way they need. Assign staff accordingly.

Specializes in Home Health Care.

Sorry I meant to say I've seen a call light taken away from a patient because they were too needy. I kept giving it back to her, because legally every patient's call light must be within their reach.

 

I think the main thing that may be hard for me to get used to would be not being able to have conversations with patients or them being able to tell me what they need as I work best when I have someone telling me what to do to take care of them as I'm there not for me, the money, or even the management or Hospital, I'm there for the patient.

 

But I love the idea of being a personal assistant to the Nurse rather than almost never see a Nurse yet be doing their job with no supervision.

 

Did I miss anything in my analysis of the ICU?

Anything anyone want to add?

Specializes in oncology.
1 hour ago, FlameHeart said:

Even simple things such as turning or bathing or changing a diaper are important for the Nurse assigned to that Patient to participate in or observe because everything is connected and related to keeping this Patient stable and alive and must be documented.

 

In the cases where CNAs may be hired to work in ICUs they will either do things that don't require supervision such as taking phone calls, restocking supplies including fresh linen, taking out the trash, cleaning rooms, or they will work closely alongside to help the Nurse as truly more in their title of "assistant" more so in this area more so than any other area of healthcare (sadly) this includes bathing or turning or changing the diaper or emptying the colostomy bag of the patient, taking vitals, and probably also includes admitting and discharging patients.

Before you accept the CNA position in the ICU, I think it would be best if you shadow an ICU CNA. I am not sure you are entirely accurate on what the RN role is and how it works with the CNA role. Your description above seems to imply the RN is always completing the patient-centered CNA activities with the CNA.

1 hour ago, FlameHeart said:

Emotional condition is almost never considered or properly treated in most HealthCare settings unless you're mentally unstable and even then you may be neglected (I've seen this first hand where a Hospital long term care unit will have Mentally Unstable Patients who belong in a Mental Hospital but they won't get proper treatment or restraints for them because of some stupid Law that takes away Medicaid or Medicare funding if your facility uses restraints effectively endangering the patient and other patients and staff because the patient has violent tendencies).

In the hospital setting there are strict rules (as cited by Medicare and Joint Commission) on the use of restraints and they are not used for convenience as you implied here. Hospitals also receive Medicaid and Medicare Funding. The Further acute care experience will help clarify this. Sometimes patients experiencing psychiatric disorders are on a medical floor because they have health care needs that are provided there. Psychiatric hospitals have a different focus than meeting a patient's complex physical needs such as wound care and dressing changes, Intravenous fluids and medications, etc. 

Specializes in Home Health Care.
9 hours ago, londonflo said:

Before you accept the CNA position in the ICU, I think it would be best if you shadow an ICU CNA. I am not sure you are entirely accurate on what the RN role is and how it works with the CNA role. Your description above seems to imply the RN is always completing the patient-centered CNA activities with the CNA.

In the hospital setting there are strict rules (as cited by Medicare and Joint Commission) on the use of restraints and they are not used for convenience as you implied here. Hospitals also receive Medicaid and Medicare Funding. The Further acute care experience will help clarify this. Sometimes patients experiencing psychiatric disorders are on a medical floor because they have health care needs that are provided there. Psychiatric hospitals have a different focus than meeting a patient's complex physical needs such as wound care and dressing changes, Intravenous fluids and medications, etc. 

Sorry. I just realized I said "Hospital" when I meant "Long Term Care Facility" is where I witnessed this treatment.

On 9/30/2021 at 8:52 PM, FlameHeart said:

I In reality my job is to DO THE JOB of The Nurse for MOST of THEIR patients to as much as I can do within my training and legal limits leaving them (in my limited perspective) with THE EASY stuff like taking vitals, giving meds, doing wound care, etc.

Nurses complain that 5 patients is "too" much for them to handle, they are completely out of touch with the reality of how us CNAs are treated by management and how we are drowning in patients while they complain about a mere 5 patients that they usually don't bathe, feed, reposition, change diapers for, get out of bed, get into bed, dress, etc. which doesn't need to be done "once" or even 3 times a day, some of these things happen all day long at various times!

It depends where you work. In an LTC facility, 5 patients is a dream. Five patients in a hospital or LTAC is on the verge  of stretching a nurse thin. The CNA's scope is a lot different than the nurse's. 

Specializes in oncology.
10 hours ago, FlameHeart said:

Sorry. I just realized I said "Hospital" when I meant "Long Term Care Facility" is where I witnessed this treatment.

The same restrictions on restraints apply in LTC facilities. The impact on the use of restraints on the human body and psyche (whether frail elderly or psychiatric patients) has been shown through many studies. 

Specializes in OB-Gyn/Primary Care/Ambulatory Leadership.
On 10/6/2021 at 10:49 AM, prayingmantis said:

.....sometimes CNAs are just lazy or too sensitive especially Women and don't understand an old black man screaming as he tries in a diaper on the bed laying down to defecate the hardest most painful BM I have ever seen someone go through and I felt it when I cleaned him up, it was hard.

 

Did I really just read that?

 

I quit reading this thread after I read that. Now I'm back at it, because I'm bored. And now that I've read through the rest of the thread, I am reminded why I quit reading it.

Specializes in school nurse.
17 minutes ago, klone said:

I quit reading this thread after I read that. Now I'm back at it, because I'm bored. And now that I've read through the rest of the thread, I am reminded why I quit reading it.

Might I recommend a support group for people who find themselves drawn back to threads that they'd be better off doing anything else than reading them...?

Myself, I just slap my hand if I start to click on the thing that I know will be an exercise in frustration. ?

On 10/5/2021 at 7:00 AM, FlameHeart said:

Usually I'm just myself and I make conversation with everyone I can as it flows and it's impossible to talk about myself without talking about God or Jesus eventually especially when someone is dying, I would see it as a sin against God not to speak the truth about him to a dying person, and I'm not ashamed of that and I make no apologies for any of that.  This is who I am and the truth, not what I believe. 


You are probably going to be shocked by this, but what you just confessed to doing is in my eyes as bad as if you’d told us that you are in the habit of physically assaulting or raping your patients as they die. Emotionally and spiritually assaulting a person in what is arguably one of the most vulnerable moments of their lives, is every bit as repugnant as physically assaulting them. You have no right to use your access and position of power, to force your beliefs onto patients or residents. Religion is your truth, it is not everybody’s truth.

I think it’s scary that you think you have a right to impose your beliefs on others and don’t appear to have any ethical qualms or misgivings regarding the vulnerable position the other person is in. A healthy person who disagrees with you could either tell you why they disagree, or simply walk away if they find you to be too much. A dying person doesn’t have that choice. What you described would not be tolerated for a second in any healthcare facility I’ve worked in. Proselytizing is not in a nurse’s or CNA’s job description.

You have every right to your religious beliefs. But when you’re at work, it’s the patient’s beliefs and needs that should be in the forefront. I read one of your posts in another thread, where you describe that it was so hard for you to think that a patient of yours who had died, ”would burn forever in the Lake of Fire”. Those are your feelings to deal with, you can’t try to protect yourself against feeling that by shoving your beliefs down a dying person’s throat. 

51 minutes ago, macawake said:


You are probably going to be shocked by this, but what you just confessed to doing is in my eyes as bad as if you’d told us that you are in the habit of physically assaulting or raping your patients as they die. Emotionally and spiritually assaulting a person in what is arguably one of the most vulnerable moments of their lives, is every bit as repugnant as physically assaulting them. You have no right to use your access and position of power, to force your beliefs onto patients or residents. Religion is your truth, it is not everybody’s truth.

I think it’s scary that you think you have a right to impose your beliefs on others and don’t appear to have any ethical qualms or misgivings regarding the vulnerable position the other person is in. A healthy person who disagrees with you could either tell you why they disagree, or simply walk away if they find you to be too much. A dying person doesn’t have that choice. What you described would not be tolerated for a second in any healthcare facility I’ve worked in. Proselytizing is not in a nurse’s or CNA’s job description.

You have every right to your religious beliefs. But when you’re at work, it’s the patient’s beliefs and needs that should be in the forefront. I read one of your posts in another thread, where you describe that it was so hard for you to think that a patient of yours who had died, ”would burn forever in the Lake of Fire”. Those are your feelings to deal with, you can’t try to protect yourself against feeling that by shoving your beliefs down a dying person’s throat. 

No one has ever been hurt by talking about God by the bedside to patients who are near death. God was here first, before you were born, so please don't spread mistruths. If the  patient says they are not interested, I can see refraining, but you gave no indication that the patient was offended. You personally might be offended, but  don't speak for patients that you don't know about. Christ  can be spoken about anywhere, to anyone who needs it.

29 minutes ago, summertx said:

No one has ever been hurt by talking about God by the bedside to patients who are near death. God was here first, before you were born, so please don't spread mistruths. If the  patient says they are not interested, I can see refraining, but you gave no indication that the patient was offended. You personally might be offended, but  don't speak for patients that you don't know about. Christ  can be spoken about anywhere, to anyone who needs it.

From your response I’m guessing that you believe in God? 

I’m not asking this in a snarky way, but how on earth would you know that talking to a dying person about God hasn’t hurt a single person? I don’t think you’re in a position to decide that.

Having read several other posts that the poster I responded to has written, I very much doubt that he’d kindly ask a dying atheist’s permission to talk about God and then take no for an answer and respect the fact that they don’t want to hear his opinions. Because in that posters words; It would be a sin against God.

Do you think you have the right as a nurse to give your unsolicited opinions on God, death, the afterlife/fire and brimstones to patients? 

What mistruth do you think I’m spreading? If it was the fact that I said that religion isn’t everybody’s truth, that’s not a mistruth. We don’t all believe the way you do. That’s fine. You can have your beliefs and I can have mine.

I wouldn’t have brought up God in this thread if OP hadn’t. I’m not entirely sure what it has to do with healthcare and administration, but when I saw his words I found them alarming, and chose to reply. 

32 minutes ago, summertx said:

Christ  can be spoken about anywhere, to anyone who needs it.

If you change that to ”Christ can be spoken about anywhere, to anyone who wants it”, then we are in agreement. 

Specializes in CRNA, Finally retired.
On 9/30/2021 at 9:52 PM, FlameHeart said:

I recently quit my job working at a Nursing Home as a CNA.

Out of the 8 patients I had my first and only full day of work plus the 1 additional I took on because he was abandoned by his CNA who wouldn't change his diaper because she didn't like the way he talked to her.

Out of those 9, I was only able to fully properly take care of 3 of those patients, 3 were mostly independent, and the other 3 were taken care of by 5 other staff members.

My eyes were opened to realize how much this modern Health Care system is managed to not actually work to fully and properly take care of most people as most people are in buildings like this and treated more like numbers than actual people.

They give 9 patients to a CNA MINIMUM there but it can climb as high as 20 legally in California for 1 CNA. 12-15 is normal in Hospitals I am learning.

I have heard from the patients themselves that they are not properly taken care of. For example you may have patients who wear diapers but they pooped in them and haven't been changed all morning.

The system keeps most of them alive barely, but they suffer so much and can be traumatized by their treatment.

A person needs not just their physical needs cared for, but they need to be treated as a person to and the system doesn't allow you to have enough time to do that for every person. Even then not all of their physical needs are met either.

I can't work with this system and I realize neither can anyone else.

Alot of people who work in this system do their best, but it's not good enough and it's the patients that suffer the most.

But the staff suffer to because most people like me go into the Medical field because we actually care about people and we want to help them in any way we can so when we are given the work load it would take in reality 4 or 5 of us to do and you want 1 of us to do it it breaks our heart because we have 9 people who desperately want help but we simply can't meet all of their needs no matter how much time we are given and we know we have failed them and they deserve better than that.

That's why I am not going to work in The Medical Field in direct patient care as a CNA until I pay back my parents what I owe them and save up $5,000 then they will give me a car and I can go back into Home Health Care.

I worked in Home Health Care in Hawaii for 2 years as a Home Health Aide without required to have a CNA license, but in California you need at least a CNA license to do that (which I just got in mail after a month a half of school and passing the state tests).

It is the complete opposite of most of the modern Health Care System in other places in many ways.

You get hired by an agency, they pay you and depending on the agency they pay for your gasoline to fuel your car to.

You need your own car because you have to drive yourself to your patient's home.

You call your agency and they tell you who they have that needs help.

You can ask as many questions as you want and you the right to refuse to care for anyone before you ever meet them.

And if you work with the patient and they and you don't get along you can leave their home and tell your agency you can't work with them anymore.

I had one patient one time who said Mary the mother of Jesus was not a virgin and Jesus and The Apostles were like hippies sleeping around with many people and I politely asked him not to talk about that stuff when I was working with him. He got very angry his face turned red and he said he refused to have anyone tell him what he can and can not do. So I went back home and the next day my Employers call me and wanted to suspend me because he told them lies that I said he was "The Devil".

I prayed asking God to help me in my head as they talked to me. I told them to look at my record in my reputation with my clients I have had with them and believe me not this lying angry patient I had.

They believed me and did not suspend me, but told me to avoid him.

In Home Health Care you can choose who you will meet as your possible patient and if you get along then you work it out between you and the patient when the best days and times that work for the both of you to work together. So you set your own schedule then you sumbit it to your agency Supervisor aka Manager so they can know and keep track of you.

You document what you do every day, go over it with the patient, and have your's and the patient's signature on it then you email it in to your agency and they log it in as your pay times and you get paid every 2 weeks.

You do whatever you are able to, trained for, licensed for, and can legally do for that 1 single patient for as long as you both agree to according to the schedule you both set up and agree upon together with your agency manager being notified about it.

I wasn't a CNA back then, but I did all the things I still do now as a CNA and more than that.

I cooked, I cleaned, I bought groceries (they give you their card and info and list to buy for them), I changed diapers (for only 1 patient), I showered people (only men), 

I taught old men how to use modern technology like cellphones or tvs even set up their phones to work easier for them,

I made phone calls on their behalf because they didn't have the patience or sometimes the ability to actually hear people they didn't know that well fully on the phone (mostly for Problems with their tv or phone or some thing else, tech support),

I also made phone calls to set up their medical appointments and calls to their Health Insurance services to set up transportation for their medical appointments as they could not drive on their own,

I acted as a go-between them and their health care providers and facilities,

I went with them to their Medical appointments and made sure they understood everything and were properly taken care of,

I called 911 for the ambulance when they needed it,

I even brought them their mail while they were in The Hospital so they could pay their bills and not lose their homes and services while they were recovering in The Hospital (which by the way I was not payed for as the agency won't pay you as long as your patient is in the hospital but they had no one to help them so someone had to do that).

Sometimes the patient just wants to be there to talk to them or listen to them or to watch a movie with them.

They often don't have any family or friends who can stay with them and do all the things you do for them.

They often live in government discounted apartments for the the poor and elderly or in their children's house sometimes or their own house alone.

They often can not walk or drive their own cars or even own a car or vehicle.

They often have no job or income and are retired and live on SSI and their health care is paid for by their insurance which can be Veteran's Affairs, HMSA, etc. and their insurance with a Doctor's recommendation note hire your Home Health Care Agency whom then pays you.

I like this as they often don't have to pay my services out of pocket. Their insurance will even send transportation for their medical appointments to and from their house or apartment with you to ride along with them.

I did this work for 2 years.

I am a man of my Word that's why I don't make promises or commitments very easily or quickly.

Every patient I care for I commit myself fully to in any way I can.

When people have to be in a facility, it is great in many ways as they can be cared in ways that are not always possible by yourself with your level of skill and training and equipment, but they are often given top priority for emergency care then they are increasingly pushed to side as they get better in health.

This is because modern Health Care is no longer properly managed and too many patients are given to every 1 CNA, RN, and even Doctor's which honestly  have it the worst.

Doctors are expected to see every patient no longer than around 11 minutes each when in the past they could take as long as they needed even hours for every patient.

I just hope and pray that I can bring more awareness and be a part of a change of this mismanaged system which honestly is from the enemy not from God.

We need lower Staff to Patient ratios, while it is true that there are often more patients than there are medical professionals we can't use that as an excuse to dump 9+ patients on 1 CNA and that's a low number from what I've read online the experiences of other CNAs who've had 15-30 or more patients they were responsible for all by themselves.

Sure the other staff step in to help when they can, but in reality my Job Title and description is a joke. My job 90% of the time has NOTHING to do with "assisting" The Nurse as a "Certified Nurse Aide". In reality my job is to DO THE JOB of The Nurse for MOST of THEIR patients to as much as I can do within my training and legal limits leaving them (in my limited perspective) with THE EASY stuff like taking vitals, giving meds, doing wound care, etc.

Nurses complain that 5 patients is "too" much for them to handle, they are completely out of touch with the reality of how us CNAs are treated by management and how we are drowning in patients while they complain about a mere 5 patients that they usually don't bathe, feed, reposition, change diapers for, get out of bed, get into bed, dress, etc. which doesn't need to be done "once" or even 3 times a day, some of these things happen all day long at various times! CNAs are like adult baby sitters which includes changing diapers at day care centers that are severely understaffed.

Now multiply by that by 2 or 3 and you got a "normal" amount of patients for 1 CNA. Meanwhile not all of the patient's needs get taken care of.

This needs to change.

There will always be more sick people then there are people to take care of them.

But the way we take care of people has to be the right way and if we take as much time as we need for each patient by giving each staff member only the number of patients they can handle then there will be less sick people as you can not possibly give the needed care to all patients for them to make a full recovery to independent stable health when you have too many patients and care gets split up and decreased over all the patients you have.

In case you were wondering, this isn't a new concept.

Dr. Victoria Sweet in her book God's Hotel tells her semi-biography of her work at a San Francisco Laguna Honda Hospital nicknamed "God's Hotel" of how things were run there before "Modern Healthcare Administration" took over to bring it up to "modern efficiency standards" by cutting the time with patients and the number of staff per patient declining the quality of the care for profits sake.

In her TED Talk on Youtube in her own words, "In seeking to put patients first, they put patients last."

Another Doctor along these lines is The Slow Medicine Doctor®
Dr. Michael Finkelstein, MD.

The concept isn't complex or difficult to understand, it is very simple: slow down and take care of each patient for as long and as much as they need physically and in any other way they need. Assign staff accordingly.

It's bad judgement to put your picture on your post, especially with your name attached.  Any employer can see this.  I know if I saw it, I would never hire you.  Never, never, never.  If you came to me when I was dying and started talking about Jesus, I would spit in your face if I had the strength.  How selfish of you to think of your own needs first before the needs of the patient.  The rest of your posts confirm my opinion that this is all about you.  Sooooo, bad judgement, religious zealotry and selfism would be good reasons to never hire you.  I know you would be a problem employee.

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