I'm About To Walk!

Specialties Travel

Published

This travel assignment has been ok until the past two days and now I seriously feel my licence is in jeopardy. I had seven surgical patients today. After the most horrible day of my 18 year nursing career, the unit charge nurse started yelling at me, in front of staff, doctors and patients/families, right out at the nurses station. I am a traveler and I will not be treated like this. This behavior was not in the contract that I signed. I have never in all these years, been yelled at by another nurse. Fortunately, I took the high road, maintained my professional composure and listened to her unravel. Now, I don't want to go back. I don't need this. I didn't ask for it and I will not put up with it. I am here, helping out in a situation that is both dire and unsafe for both nurse and patient. I realize that we are helping a bad nursing shortage, but I should not have to put up with this. I was humiliated and embarassed. What can I do about this?

Specializes in Brain injury,vent,peds ,geriatrics,home.

The unit charge nurse was VERY unprofessional.

Specializes in ER.

Part of maintaining your professional composure is to return to work and do a quality job, treating that idiot as a fellow professional, even though she is a turd. But make an official complaint to your NM, send it up the chain of command. Your refusal to gossip or go off on her in the same manner as she did will look incredibly professional, and you'll get lots of respect from the coworkers that matter.

Specializes in Trauma,ER,CCU/OHU/Nsg Ed/Nsg Research.

I agree that the nurse manager needs to know what happened. I would also inform your agency in case you do end up terminating your contract early. It might not look favorably on you if you just abruptly end your contract without communicating the string of events that led you there.

Specializes in Nephrology, Cardiology, ER, ICU.

I would go to your agency first and let them know of the intolerable conditions and then I would most certainly tell the unit manager.

Specializes in cardiac med-surg.

hope things are looking up

Specializes in Critical Care.

:madface: That's awful to be treated like that!

I would both make the NM aware of the situation (you might even get an apology out of that, especially if they are that desparate for staff) and let your agency know what is going on. If things don't improve immediately after speaking with the NM, others might get the bright idea to make you the scape goat for everything that goes wrong. Protect your license! If things don't improve, you would certainly not be the first person to end their contract early. By letting your agency know there is trouble early, you are more likely to stay in good standing with them for future assignments than if you just walk and tell them about it after the fact.

Good luck! Hope things improve for you!

I am saddened over this because these nurses on this unit are all about to drop, they run from start to finish, it is horrible. The problem has gotten out of hand because in the 6 weeks that I have been there, 13 RN's and aides (mostly RN's) have quit. There is no one to replace them. The other night, the night shift nurse had 14 patients with a one LPN and one CNA. These are gastric bypass patients, all of the quadraplegic flap surgery patients, and major abdominal surgeries gone wrong. Sick patients. There is no time to even visit with the patient so I feel that care is strictly technical. I have been told that the is NO time to visit the patient, get in get out and move on seems to be the motto here. I hate that. This is not nursing as far as I am concerned. This is assembly line care and not a type of position I ever wanted. I left there last night feeling that I can't cut it on day shift. I am dreading the next 7 weeks of my life.

One nurse to 14 critical patient? Are you kidding? And the hospital probably wonders why 13 nurses and aides have quit during the last 6 weeks. That hospital should FIRE that nurse who was so unprofessional as to yell at you infront of patients, visitors, and fellow employees. I would not stand for it. If I were in your shoes, I would file a formal complait with the hospital, send notice through the entire chain of command of that hospital, not just with one person (in case the one person doesn't address the issue.) Then, I would then notify your agency of all this. Then I would tell that nurse to get her head out of her ass, and then walk off the job. Frankly, I wouldn't even work 1 more day at a place where my nursing license (ok, I don't even have one of those yet) was in jeoprody. I'm sure you have worked way too hard to get to where you are now, and then lose everything because of a hospital that has unsafe policies. The consequenses of you quitting, having the hospital not like you anymore, possibly not going on any more assignments with that company, and maybe even having to pay back some money to the agency...all that is 1000 times better than losing your license. There are too many agaencies and hospitals that would love to have you work for them. Patient safety and your license should be more important to you than 1 single job. I would not want to work there another day.

How about the accrediting agency? I'm sure you can make an anonymous phone call regarding the unsafe conditions. I'm sure they would like to hear about it.

I called my recruiter and told her that I wanted straight nights or I would walk and pay whatever I had to to get out of the rest of the contract. I also complained about the nurse. Today, she called me back to switch me to all nights. And the manager is speaking to that nurse. I really really was not going to go into the politics. I traveled to get away from that but there are things I will put up with and things that I won't. I will not be yelled at by another nurse. If she wants to have a "meeting", that is fine. When I go to nights next week, I also will not take 14 patients. Period. There is a magnet hospital two blocks away from this hospital and I'm sure that is where the nurses are headed. I feel bad but am not going to compromise my own licence for this. Thanks for all your advice.

I'm glad to hear that you are getting help from your agency to get a needed change to make it possible for you to complete the assignment. I am also glad to hear that your agency is sticking up for you, not always the case when it comes to agencies. Hope everything smoothes out for you so that you can finish your assignment.

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