Who took the NURSE out of Nursing?

Nurses General Nursing

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WARNING: THIS POST IS REALLY LONG. BUT I HOPE MANY OF YOU WILL READ IT. I THINK IT IS A VERY IMPORTANT ISSUE FOR ALL NURSES.

I haven't written a post for quite some time. My husband learned today that he has a "high grade invasive bladder cancer" from a cysto and biopsy he had done one week ago; he was originally hospitalized in acute renal failure which was reversed after one run of hemodialysis, the insertion of 2 nephrostomy tubes and a foley cath all of which he came home with on 11/3 and which I have been caring for.

During the past several years I have witnessed some disturbing trends in nursing. In a world famous MAGNET hosptital in HOuston, TX. for 6 days no nurse did a head to toe or systems assessment on my husband; no nurse did a neuro check; no nurse asked questions regarding pain or other discomfort; no nurse ever physically touched my husband. I did all of his care and I wanted to do it, but I did wonder how the nurses charted on him when the only thing I had seen ANY of them do was give him his meds in spite of the fact that he was on a telemetry floor and was acutely ill. He had been admitted because of a sudden onset of mental status changes with confusion, disorientation, visual and auditory halucinations, slurred speech and stuttering, staggering gait and weakness of the extremities, particularly the legs. The did EEG, cardiac echo, MRI and MRA of the brain and extracerebral circulation, doppler of the carotids, skull films. The only thing they did not do was a lumbar puncture and I don't know why they didn't because he was discharged minimally improved with no diagnosis. I never saw any of his labs, but I bet his CBC differential showed elevated WBC's with a shift to the right because I have often thought that he could have had West Nile encephalitis since he came down with this where the mosquitoes that carry it were prevalent and I have cared for patients with viral encephalitis and he had many of the symptoms. He gradually recovered completely after several weeks.

The point I really want to stress however is that from what I observed back then in Houston and now with nurses and Nurse Practitioners at the VA here in Arizona, I believe our profession to be at a critical juncture. Nursing is at the brink of losing its status as a profession partially due to the continuing shortage which initially brought about much needed increases in salaries but when the pay did not have the effect of bringing more competent, quality people into the ranks, desperate measures were sought to fill the vacancies left by aging baby boomers. We now can evaluate the consequences of some of the less desirable means utilized to fill the positions for competent RN's with what amounts to the equivalent of "warm bodies". Because of the current job market, former truck drivers, auto production workers and people who would never have considered nursing as a possible future job for themselves are signing up at record rates because it is a guaranteed job. People are going into nursing because they know they have a job waiting; because they can travel; because it is one of the few professions that you can start out in with an Associate Degree and I recently read that there is a push to get RN's out and working in something like 3 semesters. Many of these candidates have no realistic picture of the myriad of tasks that are involved in being a RN. Many would rather work in a sewer than touch or be touched by another living person's bodily fluids. Some people actually consider it from the prospective of the accessibility of narcotics.

Recently when my husband was in the hospital in renal failure, he told me that one of the nurses did not give him the correct dose of his scheduled pain medication. He said that when he told the nurse that he was supposed to get one more pill,the nurse replied, "Well that's what is ordered". Yet for the 2 days that he was on that unit, the night nurses gave him the correct dose, the exact same dosage and the same pills that he had been taking at home for more than one year so there is little chance that my husband was mistaken. Unfortunately, he did not tell me this until after he was discharged and I admit that right now turning in that nurse is not my top priority.

I would say for the most part that the nurses who write into this forum are the good nurses. Why? Because the bad nurses could give a rat's ass about anything to do with their job after they go home. I can hardly believe that they would spend time on their computer reading what other nurses think and say about their profession. To the bad nurses, nursing is just a paycheck. And most will get advanced degrees so they can "get away from the bedside", which is a good thing when you get right down to it.

It is so sad to me to think that all the work that thousands of dedicated nurses have done over the past 3 decades to bring nursing the respect and status of professionalism that it deserves may be lost when the public gets wind of the some of the "trailer trash" types and "gangstas" we are letting into our ranks. I can't work right now; 30 years of 12 hour shifts, most without breaks and most that ended up being 13 or 14 hour shifts, took its toll on my body. I have too many ailments to list, but right now there isn't any kind of nursing that I would be able to do. Just sitting and typing this, I have had to stop several times because of the pain and stiffness I get. Nursing is not the kind of job that everyone should do. It is a profession that you really have to desire from the heart and know that there comes with it a lot of things that most people would call "icky"; but in spite of the "icky" if you can derive satisfaction from the patient who thanks you for starting his IV because no one else could, or who remarks "You must have been doing this for a long time; I can tell just by the way you can talk and work at the same time." If you can look back and feel good because you KNOW that there are people walking around today because YOU were there to provide expert emergency care that was needed during that critical moment between life and death and no one gave you a medal or a bonus or a raise but it was enough to know that it was your hands that helped save a life, THEN YOU KNOW YOU ARE IN THE RIGHT PROFESSION. Then you know you are a "GOOD NURSE".

I know there are still good nurses out there. There was one in the ER named Manny who is young and fit and eager to learn, yet compassionate, caring, never forgetting that it is a human being in that bed. And when I read a lot of the posts in the forums, I see that you are out there and I thank God for you. Because we baby boomers are getting old and tired and we look at you because we see ourselves on the other side of the bed someday and hope that we will get one of the "good nurses". God bless you all!!

SORRY THIS IS SO LONG,....AS USUAL..............

I also came from a truck-driving family, but I understand what you mean. It's the characteristics of the type - those who actually really do embody the stereotype - not the blue-collar background itself.

"30 years of 12 hour shifts, most without breaks and most that ended up being 13 or 14 hour shifts"...

I suspect that THAT kind of body-and-sanity-taxing work + today's dominance of health care as customer-service-driven big-business + all the hyper-documentation a nurse needs to do to address the constant specter of potential law suits + the now expanded career options for those who would make good nurses had they not gone into other fields = nursing shortage and all the problems attendant to it.

I'm a nursing student, who is very wary of "what's out there" in the real world of nursing - what the field has evolved - or, rather, devolved - into. I'm not sure if any amount of altruisum can buoy the "good nurses" through years of high-stress 12-hour shifts. I think nursing is the most admirable, and toughest, job in the world, and lift my hat to all the "good nurses" out there! Here's hoping the nursing field will continue to attract potential "good nurses"...

In nutshell, a Sairy Gamp is a nurse who is lazy, doesn't give a crap, thinks of herself first in all situations, and gives poor care. "Sairy Gamp" was also known to be a bit of a drunk, and to steal from her employers.

Sairy Gamp is a Charles Dickens character. Some literary historians believe she based on an actual nurse

Thanks

I guess I'm not as well read as I thought I was. I've never liked Dickens. Too wordy.

I am sorry about your stressful time with your husband at the hospital. One small point though...

Be careful about assuming head to toe assesments were not done. Especially for neuro exams that might upset the family, I do my first, very through assesment before visiting hours during my first assesment.

I get plenty of dressing changes, linen changes and personal care done when the family is absent so they might have a little uninterrupted time when they visit. I work in ICU, and if acuity is low, it is possible to do this. A family might not see all I have done for their loved one.

Thanks

I guess I'm not as well read as I thought I was. I've never liked Dickens. Too wordy.

I didn't read the book until after I'd read several journal articles and books on the image of nursing, which mentioned Sairy.

I think this is a problem with younger people in general. I have seen it in my construction trade. All the younger workers work less and get paid more, far more than what I did when I was younger (and I worked twice as hard).

I keep hearing this and I just get ticked off every time. I worked two full time jobs at one point both as a caregiver, cleaning up bm, vomit, and urine. I did it while I was going to nursing school full time. I didn't have to do that my parents were willing to pay for my dorm room and give me extra spending money every month. I wanted to work to provide myself with a home and the things I needed. Most of my classmates work their butts off with me doing a "dirty" job that they don't have to do. Classifying one age group as lazy is ageism and I'm sick up to my eyeballs of it. Thank you.

To the Op I'm so sorry this happened to your husband this is disgraceful. Unfortunately the nursing shortage has been helped along by people who will not staff their hospitals sufficiently. More and more good nurses are going to keep leaving the bedside leaving behind severely overworked and underpaid RNs who are no doubt bitter about the position they are in. Welcome to the profit driven American Health care system. *shudder*

Thanks

I guess I'm not as well read as I thought I was. I've never liked Dickens. Too wordy.

NURSING.............

It was the best of times. It was the worst of times.

Not only was Dickens wordy, he was wishy-washy.

NURSING.............

It was the best of times. It was the worst of times.

Not only was Dickens wordy, he was wishy-washy.

:rotfl:

for 6 days no nurse did a head to toe or systems assessment on my husband; no nurse did a neuro check; no nurse asked questions regarding pain or other discomfort; no nurse ever physically touched my husband. I did all of his care and I wanted to do it, but I did wonder how the nurses charted on him when the only thing I had seen ANY of them do was give him his meds in spite of the fact that he was on a telemetry floor and was acutely ill...

First of all...I can only imagine what you and your husband have gone and are going through...I am sure that you have a terribly stressful situation. I pray that you and he will find the strength, courage, and faith needed to see you through the coming days...

Now...I am going to play the part of the Devil's Advocate...how can you be certain that for a period of six days not one nurse actually performed a physical assessment on your husband? I am wondering if the stress of having your husband hospitalized and suffering from a serious illness might be clouding your perceptions of the care that was actually delivered. If the nurses in question were only performing on the most minimal levels as you have described...would you not have reported their actions or lack thereof to Nursing Management?

Again, I am not accusing you...I am merely asking these questions. I pride myself as being a very conscientious nurse...and, I have been fortunate enought to be ecognized my peers and my facility as a good nurse...yet, I sometimes have a family member swear that I have not done something that I know that I have done. I am willing to bet that you have experienced the same...

Specializes in Cardiology, Oncology, Medsurge.

?

Oh, wait, God created everyone equal everywhere. :idea:

:lol2::lol2::lol2:Just hope George Bush figured that out by now!

Celeste, I love your sharing your experience with us! You make me want to be a more conscientious nurse than I perhaps in some areas (mainly charting) am not! thanks AGAIN!

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
I think this is a problem with younger people in general.
Whoa, there . . .It's not very nice to stereotype an entire age group of people, especially when the only evidence is your personal experiences in the construction industry.

I'm a 'younger' person who has worked hard labor prior to switching careers, and I am definitely not lazy or lacking in work ethics. I worked 12 hour rotating shifts at a factory atop a 3-story paper mill for three years of my life, and I left work on a daily basis covered in sweat, pulp, and paper dust. I've been dirtied and verbally abused as a grocery store clerk. I worked as an aide for adults with mental retardation, which involved the dirty tasks of cleaning poop, changing diapers, giving showers, feeding people, and so forth. I've arrived home from clerking at McDonald's smelling strongly of grease and pickles. In other words, I've done the work that nobody else wants to do, with much pride.

I must also mention that I've accomplished more than numerous people who are twice my age. I know of countless lazy, jobless, unethical people who are middle-aged.

My point is that lazy, shiftless people come from ALL age groups, ethnicities, social classes, family backgrounds, and educational levels. Please do not pigeonhole the young people as the only ones who lack the work ethics.

WARNING: THIS POST IS REALLY LONG. BUT I HOPE MANY OF YOU WILL READ IT. I THINK IT IS A VERY IMPORTANT ISSUE FOR ALL NURSES.

...Because of the current job market, former truck drivers, auto production workers and people who would never have considered nursing as a possible future job for themselves are signing up at record rates because it is a guaranteed job. People are going into nursing because they know they have a job waiting; because they can travel; because it is one of the few professions that you can start out in with an Associate Degree and I recently read that there is a push to get RN's out and working in something like 3 semesters. Many of these candidates have no realistic picture of the myriad of tasks that are involved in being a RN. Many would rather work in a sewer than touch or be touched by another living person's bodily fluids. Some people actually consider it from the prospective of the accessibility of narcotics. ........

I don't think the OP is disparaging truck drivers or factory workers, actually she is making the point that many may have entered nursing b/c of job stability rather than having any real interest in nursing as a profession or a caring attitude...that is not to say some may have had a true calling, but one also wonders if there was no job shortage in manufacturing or some other fields whether some would have made the switch. The same question would apply if scores of accountants, meteorologists or linguists suddenly decided to switch to nursing & there was a job shortage in those fields (which at least for accountants is never gonna happen!)...

I have nursing friends that have given up the battle of being a nurse and are now truck drivers. They deliver cookies and cakes and make everyone happy.

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