The ridiculousness of LTC/SNF

Specialties Geriatric

Published

Oh where to begin. Anybody else running to save their sanity and nursing license or is it just me? I have been an RN since 2007 so I'm a very seasoned nurse. For the first 9 years of my career I worked strictly in hospitals. I worked on just about every unit imaginable with the exception of OB, peds, and NICU. Over the last 3 years I transitioned to LTC facilities thinking that having a routine and the same patients every shift would be less stressful. And initially it was. The first LTC I worked at I liked until a CNA who had no business becoming a CMA (she was a meth addict) was put through CMA school by this facility and became a CMA on my hall. Over a period of months myself and other nurses noticed that she was getting done with a med pass that took a seasoned nurse 2 hours to complete in 30 minutes. Especially as a brand new CMA, something was amiss.

Then residents who were alert and oriented were saying they weren't getting their pain medications. The CMA would always insist that the pain meds were given. Well one weekend when a nuse was working the med cart and was swapping out the sharps containers and noticed that it wasn't full of used needles, it was chock full of pills. We figured out how she was getting through the med pass so quickly, she was popping them and putting them in the sharps container, and she would pocket the narcotics. We notified the DON, but not a single thing was done. And she actually got smart and would give the very few residents who were alert and oriented all of their meds, but she continued to pop the meds of the residents with dementia but instead of putting them in the sharps container, she would throw them in the trash and then empty the trash well before shift change thinking nobody would notice, but we did notice and reported her to the DON, once again nothing was done.

One day one of my residents with a history of epilepsy had a grand Mal seizure in the dining hall. I notified the doctor, the doctor asked how much Dilantin he was on, so I told him, and the doctor stated "wow he is on the max dose of dilantin. Get a Stat dilantin level." Guess what his dilantin level was? Zero. He wasn't getting his dilantin (real shocker, nobody was getting their meds). I felt like my license was at risk and the DON refused to take action against the CMA so I resigned.

I got a job at another 172 bed LTC/SNF. They told me that the SNF portion is 20 beds, so they have 2 nurses on that hall, each nurse gets 10 skilled residents and then in addition you split a LTC hall and took 10 LTC residents. So essentially you have 20 residents which is not too bad for the 3-11 shift. In July this independently owned LTC/SNF was bought out by a large corporation who like all corporations are focused on the profits, we were told that we would be getting a lot more skilled residents and that they were actually turning one of the LTC halls into another SNF hall. They also told us we would be getting higher acuity residents with TPN, wound vacs, pressure ulcers, bipaps, etc. What they didn't tell us was that they were taking one of the nurses away. So now you have 1 nurse for 20 high acuity skilled patients and you also have 20 LTC residents. The nurse that was working day shift when they made the change said "this is not safe" and quit. They brought a nurse from one of the other LTC halls to work and she made it about 2 months and then quit. They asked me if I would go to 7-3 for a $5 an hour pay raise and like an idiot I agreed in September. And in came the higher acuity patients which 90% of them I can tell you belong at an LTACH not a SNF.

Here comes the good part. We work 8 hour shifts. On Monday the NP comes and you have to round with her on EVERY skilled resident and give her a rundown. That alone knocks an hour off your shift. If she gives you 75 orders, you have to put the orders in the computer and fax them to pharmacy, etc. Kiss another hour off your shift. Then you have to go to standup, and seeing as there are 172 residents in the building and every resident has to be reported on, that knocks another hour off your shift.

So you get to start off the work week trying to do the job of 2 nurses and 12 hours worth of work in 5 hours.

20 skilled residents means 20 complete sets of vital signs, 20 had to toe assessments which you have to document in the computer, 10 residents with fsbs who get ss insulin, we have a wound care nurse but she doesn't do any of the wound care she just rounds with the wound care doctors once a week on Wednesdays and they rip off everybody's dressing and take measurements (but don't replace the dressing). In fact you don't even know that the dressing is off until PT or OT says "Hey we just came to get Ms.Jones for therapy but her dressing was removed and she's lying on her side." You walk into the room and sure enough there the resident is with their a** in the air but because PT has a schedule too, you have to drop what you'really doing and do wound care. You have patients crashing left and right, one day I sent 3 skilled residents out and all were admitted to ICU. Wound vacs galore, TPN galore.

The day I told myself "enough is enough" I had 20 SNF residents and 20 LTC residents. Of the 20 skilled residents, 6 of them were hoyer lifts, 8 of them were 2 person transfers, 2 were getting TPN via PICC line and they needed lab work drawn and the results faxed to pharmacy, both of their PICC line dressings were due to be changed. One residents lab work came back and his creatinine was 4.62 (no history of kidney problems so he got sent out), I had 2 wound vacs dressings that needed to be changed, 3 people with stage 3 or higher decubs that needed their wet to dry dressings replaced, 10 on fsbs with ss insulin, 3 peg tube 2 of which were continuous, the other one was bolu feeding, 6 people on duonebs and it is corporate policy that you cannot leave the resident unattended while the duoneb is going, 3 of my LTC residents had fallen and were on neuro checks 2 of my LTC residents had MD appointments, my TPN arrived and I had nowhere to put it because our refrigerator was full of antibiotics. As I'm talking to the ADON about where to put the TPN, 2 admits roll through the door at the same time and my CMA shouted to me "Hey their rooms aren't even ready yet!" I yelled back "WTF do you want me to do about it?" And to top it all off neither our printer nor our fax machine worked at all that week so you had to go clear across the building every single time you needed to print or fax anything which you know is pretty frequently. For the last month my 8 hour days have become 11 hour days. I had a nervous breakdown and self terminated that weekend. Right now I'm on a mental health vacation. WTF is Healthcare coming to?

Specializes in retired LTC.

kbrn - well said.

I still haven't figured out what a CMA is or why it is 

Specializes in Dialysis.
17 minutes ago, whatintheworld said:

I still haven't figured out what a CMA is or why it is 

Certified medication aid. They can pass certain meds and do certain treatments. Cheaper than a nurse

Specializes in retired LTC.

Often, CMAs are regular state-cert CNAs who then go on to take a certifying med ADMIN course. And that's all they do - just pass meds!

For good or for bad, there's no in-depth pharm knowledge. Just pill pushing. Makes one wonder why nurses have to take such rigorous pharm studies.

CMAs are highly utilized in AL facilities where pts should be more stable.

Specializes in long trm care.

Long term care is a total nightmare you work your *** off only to be told your not working hard enough and not kissing some damn hospital pts ***! The poor LPN are being used as RN substitution and given a dozen or more high acuity pts. The long term care hall is full of short term young rehab pts who seem to think the nurse is their slave. This is why nurses cannot escape this hell fast enough? The LPNs try to care for these people but the work load is impossible but no one cares after all the managers are all RNs who have never touched a LTC resident and donnot understand why the LPN cannot handle multiple high acuity residents.Bless these nurses whom are overwhelmed and put down!

Specializes in Dialysis.
Tired nurse said:

Long term care is a total nightmare you work your *** off only to be told your not working hard enough and not kissing some damn hospital pts ***! The poor LPN are being used as RN substitution and given a dozen or more high acuity pts. The long term care hall is full of short term young rehab pts who seem to think the nurse is their slave. This is why nurses cannot escape this hell fast enough? The LPNs try to care for these people but the work load is impossible but no one cares after all the managers are all RNs who have never touched a LTC resident and donnot understand why the LPN cannot handle multiple high acuity residents.Bless these nurses whom are overwhelmed and put down!

In the LTCs that I worked in, and still occasionally work PRN, DON and ADON are the only 2 RNs in management positions, the rest are LPNs. The other few RNs employed are on the floor with LPNs working with pts that are higher acuity evey year, and more demanding, families more demanding. And expected to say "it's my pleasure" and "I have the time", just like hospital scripting. I've not had many younger pts (under 65) in years

The RNs on the floor are expected to do more simply because they are RNs. They are still only 1 person just like the LPN

I'd like to add that SNF's now serve as homeless shelters and drug rehab for people 60 and younger down to the 20's. I've witnessed nurses and residents get into arguments and fist fights because the resident didn't get percs or xanax exactly the minute it was due. A resident runs a speakeasy out of his room at a facility I've worked at, and the DON was escorted out from another facility for taking the narcotics and fell over asleep on the med cart. Drugs, prostitution, sex crimes, etc. run rampant in a lot of these so-called "SNF's". They go and get people off the streets to move them in, which hasstrained the system so badly. 90-year-old woman roomates with a 2-year-old who blasts her music and keeps trying to feed the elderly lady who is NPO. They work employees like mules. 

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