Published
I've been hearing stories from my fellow nurses about not having enough equipment (or it goes missing) at work, so they end up buying their own, such as personal pulse oximeters or wrist blood pressure machines. I would then ask if they made management aware of the missing or broken equipment, and they said that when they did, they were blamed for the missing or broken equipment, so the facility wasn't going to get new equipment, and that nurses would have to share what was left.
I even know a couple of nurses who bought their own thermometers for work because there was only one available for over 150 residents in the facility. Another even mentioned that her facility (she works LTC) recently spent over $600 on new phones for the facility and bought flat-screen TVs for the rehab sections, but then claimed they couldn't afford more Criticons. I guess I'm fortunate that I work at a place that actually has enough equipment to go around.
I just don't get it. Why should nurses have to buy their own pulse oximeters or thermometers to use at work? Is it really more important to have tricked-out phones and TVs than to have enough working equipment so that nurses can actually take vital signs?