Why I'm leaving nursing

I have decided to leave the profession I once loved dearly, due to the infamous nurse "burnout" no appreciation, frustration at the profession. Any nurses who feel the same as me please comment. Nurses General Nursing Article

I've taken the very hard decision in my life to leave nursing. I'm writing this as anonymous as I want only to be heard. I qualified as a nurse 6 years ago. I enjoyed the course and could not wait to qualify.

I remember thinking "when I qualify I will make a big difference and help people the best way I can". I became a nurse as Ive always loved helping others and enjoy being around people and making a positive difference to their lives.

I used to go into work so happy at the thought of seeing my patients and seeing their progression (I worked in a stroke unit). Id have my fob watch pinned on to my uniform with pride like a solider with a medal. To me at that time there was no greater joy than seeing my patients walk out the door, when a few months previously they were unsure if they would ever walk again.

Fast forward 6 years and I shamefully hate to admit that I loathe what nursing has become.

It seems to me that nursing is all "ticking boxes and notes" and being a "skivvy" for management. I love my patients and i know that I am (was) a fantastic nurse and I still take great pride in the fact that at the end of my shift my patients ask me "when are you next back on shift" to me. I still have all the thank-you cards (from patients).

This is not a rant or a dig at a profession that I worked so hard for. This is why I'm leaving the profession..... No appreciation or gratitude at all..... Obviously the odd patients who may be upset but mainly from fellow Nurses, management, other healthcare professionals etc.

I'm going to share some of my experiences so that people have an idea of why I've taken the decision to leave.

In my first job as an acute stroke nurse, it was routine that we were pulled out of our ward to cover shortages on other wards (very stressful in itself). I would go into my shift only to be pulled out and asked to cover gyne, a&e etc. One day while covering Gyne, I went into a side room to administer Fragmin. After injecting the patient, she grabbed my arm and stuck the needle back into my hand. I went to the nurse in charge to inform her and was promptly sent to a&e..... Because the patient was HIV positive (something I was not told or aware of as I was NOT a regular member of staff.... It also was NOT on the nursing handover sheet).

I was put on very strong medication for about two weeks which made me feel extremely ill, but what angered me most was that this patient was supposed to be have a 1-1 nurse due to violent outbursts another factor I was NOT made aware of. But hey, the management didn't care they just needed someone to cover.

A few months later I was nurse in charge of a night shift. We were a nurse down and only had two nurses and one HCA. We had very confused patients, and the ward was divided into 3 bays and two side rooms. Nurse one was in bay 1 doing observations, nurse two (me) was in bay 3 doing my IVs, the HCA was in a side room tending to a patient so that left one bay and one side-room unattended.

I called the bed manager for assistance and was told "sorry I'm on my break" and that she would call back.... She had been made aware we were short at the beginning of the shift also. That night, an elderly man escaped out of bay two and was found wondering the roads, thankfully unharmed but extremely confused. I cried on that night shift due to the shortages and the stress we were all under. We also had no break and worked through the full 12 hours.... All while bed management was calling us to transfer patients to discharge lounge as a&e was "pilling up" and they needed beds. The next morning I was called into the matrons office and asked "why did YOU let this happen"and was told how irresponsible I was.

A few months after I handed in my notice (after being signed off for a week with severe exhaustion and stress) I started a fantastic job as a palliative care nurse. The ward manger who was responsible for doing the rota gave her friends who worked on the unit the pick of the shifts, and worked the rota around them. I did flag this up with senior management but nothing was done about it. When I went to speak to her in person to voice my concerns I was told "if you don't like how I do my rota you can leave.... You're not irreplaceable" a few months later 5 nurses including myself handed in our leave.

This is just the tip of iceberg of some of my experiences of being a nurse. The guilt that I have felt over the past few months of making the decision to leave the profession that I once loved are still there. Ive decided to leave for my own piece of mind. I do not hate the profession but I hate how we are treated. A month ago I was put on a course of antibiotics due to a recurrent UTI was was caused by me not getting the time to drink while on shift or going to the loo. The job has affected my health emotionally as well as physically.

These are some of the things I've wanted to say in my job in the past month at work but didn't; these are not the reasons I'm leaving the profession but it has contributed to how I feel;

To the family members that shouted at me for not getting the bedpan to their mother on time "I did not "neglect" your mother". The lady in the bay next door with a history dementia and falls was trying to climb out of bed, plus we were two staff down.

To my patient with MND, I understand your frustrations at your illness. I understand that your angry and hurting. But please understand that Ive worked through my lunch break to help hoist you into a chair while being kind and smiling at you, and don't need to be a called a "wicked witch" for not being able to hoist you back into bed 5 minutes after you asked to be sat in the chair as I had pain relief to administer.

To the lovely cleaning lady last week, I was not aware that you were not allowed to mop urine off the floor. But thank-you for giving me the mop and cleaning products I needed to do so during my drug round. I understand that it's not your fault and that health and safety precautions are needed.... Again enforced by management.

My advise to the NHS and other organisations is this: Listen to the concerns of your staff, make them feel valued and appreciated. Stand up for your staff because the patient is not "always right". Also, paid sickness in my opinion is what's ruining the health service, as this is turn leaves staff shortages. Yes, people are genuinely sick. There are many who aren't.

Full pay for staying in bed? Why not eh? When I worked as a clinical lead (matron post) for a private hospital you would be surprised at the low level of sick leave... Probably as it was unpaid?

I really went into nursing to make a change. I'm not complaining about the pay as I would gladly take a job in a coffee shop as I know that I would get a simple thank-you at the end.

I'm 28 years old and I work two nurses jobs at times. I take verbal abuse on a daily basis, I work sometimes 7 hours a week of unpaid overtime if a nurse calls in sick and we need to wait for cover. I rarely get my full lunch break. Ive stuck it out for 6 years and now my time is done. Ive looked after and loved each and every one of my patients, but now it's time to look after myself.

Yours sincerely "Burnout Nurse"

I understand how you feel more than you know. I've hopped from hospital to hospital hoping to find a place where I can be happy. Then I learned something: agency nursing or school nursing takes one away from the management bureaucracy.

With an agency, you show up to work and do your job. Then you go home. I work for four agencies now, yes four, and work whenever I want. For two of the agencies, I have never even met my boss/manager/supervisor in person. We communicate by text, phone calls and emails only.

Also, I love school nursing. When you are the only nursing in the entire building one receives a lot of respect from staff, students (patients) and parents alike.

Do not give up on nursing, there are so many specialties you can delve into without ever having to step foot into a "facility" every again. Good luck. :)

Dear Burned Out: I am a Canadian nurse. We have most of the same pressures here. Take the time you need to re-energize your soul. This is why the young are leaving nursing so soon after graduation. The poor treatment and lack of respect given nurses is global.

My only piece of advice to you is to keep up your license. I'm not sure how that works in the U.K. I was forced to quit nursing 2 1/2 years after I graduated. I was born a nurse. All I ever really wanted to be. I was heart broken to leave but had had 2 car crashes (not my fault) and I couldn't keep up the physical or mental demands. I let my license go. I received a letter from the college of nurses telling me I could not call myself a nurse if I didn't have a license. That hit me in the gut. Even if I hadn't been fortunate enough to return to nursing as I have, I would have continued paying every year just to call myself a nurse. Like you, it was that important to me.

You can't tell what the future will bring to you. I never thought I would return to nursing and in part had a breakdown because of that. The universe and/or God has shone upon me and allowed me to re-enter nursing without jumping through hoops. That was 17 years ago (Yikes!) I have had the time of my life in my second go at this career. I have done community nursing, flight nursing, managed a cardiac critical care floor, managed and directed flight nursing, and now I am in the absolute best nursing job in the world. I have autonomy and respect. From doctors and management! Unheard of in most nursing positions.

So while your soul is bruised at present, there may be something lying in wait for you. While I was off those years, I worked for a house builder as an executive assistant. I want my retirement career to be a wedding officiant. With all the pain and suffering I have witnessed, I want to be part of something good.

Good luck with your next part of your career!

Capt C. Most of us still love nursing. It is still, in my opinion, one of the nobelist jobs in the world. The problem is everything comes back to the almighty dollar. Please maintain your optimism. There are good and great positions in nursing where respect is a little more forthcoming. We need you to be a nurse. Many of us will retire. I want a good, no a great nurse, looking after me and that may be you. Good luck in your career.

You don't need to leave nursing altogether. I felt the same way at one time. Today, I work as a Legal Nurse Consultant in a law firm. I am very happy here, finally! I get to use my knowledge each and every day. Find something else in nursing before you leave entirely. Someone once told me it may only be because I hadn't found where I should be. I found it. You can, too.

Here's is an idea.

Nursing is one of the largest, highly trained and educated workforce's the United States.

Pilots would not operate a flight short of crew. Why should a nurse operate a shift short?

As a union nurse I have a contract that dictates how management can interact with me, schedule, etc. I can object to unsafe assignments and file grievances against them for this.

Why is everyone throwing their hands up and leaving? Where is the fight? This is our profession!

National Nurses United has over 180,000 members. As nurses we could be the largest organized workforce in the US and dictate how we expect wards to be run.

Time to stop being so passive fellow nurses. Organize, fight, solidarity!

This being said it is still an uphill battle to staff even with a union but at least there is a paper trail of misdeeds. Very handy when things go wrong and everyone blames the nurse.

-IfNotNowWhen

Here's is an idea.

Nursing is one of the largest, highly trained and educated workforce's the United States.

Pilots would not operate a flight short of crew. Why should a nurse operate a shift short?

As a union nurse I have a contract that dictates how management can interact with me, schedule, etc. I can object to unsafe assignments and file grievances against them for this.

Why is everyone throwing their hands up and leaving? Where is the fight? This is our profession!

National Nurses United has over 180,000 members. As nurses we could be the largest organized workforce in the US and dictate how we expect wards to be run.

Time to stop being so passive fellow nurses. Organize, fight, solidarity!

This being said it is still an uphill battle to staff even with a union but at least there is a paper trail of misdeeds. Very handy when things go wrong and everyone blames the nurse.

-IfNotNowWhen

Because if pilots refuse to fly, people are inconvenienced, if nurses refuse to work, people die. While I do agree with the essence of what you are saying, in reality, it just won't work. Nurses are over a barrel. Perhaps it may be unrealistic to expect to have a 20-25 year career of bedside care like they used to because of the shift in how patient care is delivered and reimbursed. In no other industry are entry level workers complacent to remain in their entry level position After 20 years. Maybe we are overstaying our welcome and should be moving on after 10 years or so and by staying longer, it only becomes a harder and less rewarding job to do.

Why I Left Teaching to Pursue a Career in Nursing

I just finished reading an article on AllNurses.com entitled Why I'm Leaving Nursing” which prompted me to write this post.

I decided to leave the teaching profession I once loved dearly and at close to 50 years of age pursue a career in nursing. The primary reason is the implementation of Left Liberal ideologies that have contaminated so many classrooms on so many levels. Unlike the author of the aforementioned article, UK nurse88”, the decision to leave my career was not a very hard decision” for me. The solution was as clear as day.

I first qualified as a professional public school teacher exactly 20 years ago. I enjoyed my four years as an undergraduate student and my two years as a graduate student. I could not wait to become certified and get my own classroom. I remember thinking, "when I qualify I will make a big difference and help students the best way I can.” I became an effective teacher as I am quite efficient at simplifying complicated ideas and getting the point across to others. I used to go into work so happy at the thought of seeing my students, seeing their progression, and meeting parents on Parent-Teacher Conference days. To me at that time there was no greater joy than seeing my students at graduation ceremonies, signing yearbooks, influencing young people to make positive contributions to society.

Fast forward approximately 10 years and I, unlike the aforementioned author did not shamefully hate to admit that I loathe” what my career had become. I merely loathed. That's all.

I wish I didn't have to drag politics into this, especially with the next US presidential election less than a month from now. For what it's worth I'm neither a Republican nor a Democrat. I'm an independent. Voted for Bush the first time around but not his second. Ditto on Obama. Of all the major employment sectors, however, few have been so negatively affected by politics as public education. The victimhood culture has become firmly entrenched in the classroom.

Case in point: A search of Google images for Explain These Bad Grades” reveals an excess of 200 websites all containing the same exact comic frame. The frame consists of two boxes, each containing a student, a teacher, and two parents. The first is dated 1969 and depicts the parents demanding that their submissive son Explain These Bad Grades” while a concerned teacher looks on. The second is dated Today” (2009” in some) and depicts the parents demanding that a submissive teacher Explain These Bad Grades” while a gloating student looks on. The specific dates themselves are less relevant than the message and posturing. In 1969 I was only 1 year old, but as a teacher in the late '90s and start of this century I normally had the support of parents and administrators when a student's academic and/or behavioral performance were less than adequate. Furthermore, grade inflation and social promotion were frowned upon. Fast forward to Today” and we find both quite rampant (lest any students get their feelings hurt), and all too often teachers find neither administrators nor parents their allies when it comes to enforcing classroom behavior. The magnitude of this paradigm shift has been unprecedented. What initially began slowly has increased in momentum with each downward spiral.

Now, mix this misaligned victimhood in with the social justice warriors' racist Black Lives Matter movement, add in the myth of White Privilege, and then finally the coup de grâce, the bigotry of Restorative Justice, and it's clear why public education has gone to hell in a hand basket. Minority students can no longer be disciplined as can Caucasians (even in schools where minorities are actually the majority). What they can do is spit in their teachers' faces, physically assault them, upload the whole spectacle online, get credit for it going viral, and be back in the classroom the next day more popular than ever. Think I exaggerate? Then you're spending too much with the politically correct CBS, NBC, ABC, CNN, MSNBC, and/or the New York Times and not enough with DrudgeReport, BreitBart, EAGnews, YouTube, Fox, and/or the New York Post. The Left has brought their culture of impunity to the classroom and assigned it front row seating. I know this is not an exaggeration because I myself have been berated, threatened, and physically assaulted, by students, administrators and/or parents. And I've seen many a peer humiliated in much the same manner.

I'm not so naive to believe nursing is entirely exempt of politics. No. I assume it's there, here and there. But I also assume that one needs to look more diligently to identify it, whereas within the realm of public education it's blatant and in our faces - literally!

Like the author that influenced me to write this, I too can state, This is not a rant or a dig at a profession that I worked so hard for. This is why I'm leaving the profession.” Unlike the author that influenced me to write this, I'm not going to share some of my experiences so that people have an idea of why I've taken the decision to leave.” (It wouldn't be very politically correct of me to divulge details now would it?) Suffice to say that the experiences of teachers detailed by EAGnews are real. The site has no agenda other than the presentation of truth.

I deviate from the author as well in that I have felt no guilt whatsoever of making the decision to leave the profession that I once loved.” I decided to leave because the field of education is no longer worthy of my presence - that simple. The nurse who left her/his job was negatively affected emotionally as well as physically. Same with me. But I have also been negatively affected mentally, psychologically, and physiologically. No thank you, you can keep it.

I'm too old now to be an optimist anymore. I'm not and never have been a pessimist. Now, more than ever, I am a realist. Part of this entails awareness of the fact that nursing presents many challenges I haven't faced as an educator. There won't be students but there will be patients, physicians, and of course the infamously notorious clashing egos of fellow nurses that have been the subject of at least four books. (1. Ending Nurse-to-Nurse Hostility: Why Nurses Eat Their Young and Each Other; 2. Toxic Nursing: Managing Bullying, Bad Attitudes, and Total Turmoil; 3. When Nurses Hurt Nurses; 4. ”Do No Harm" Applies To Nurses Too!). But there won't be the politics, the disgusting, vomit-inducing, projectile-vomit-inducing Liberal politics, at least not to the degree with which the average educator of today has been burdened.

Opportunities within the field of education, in spite of the millions employed within its confines, are relatively limited when compared alongside nursing. Yes, there are DoDEA teachers who are fortunate enough to work with the children of active duty military. Yes, there are positions in private schools. The former however are quite coveted, someone pretty much has to die for a vacancy to open. The latter pays not a whole lot more than many entry level jobs. What about postsecondary education you ask? Don't even bother asking, it's been taken hostage by the Left Liberal Loons' safe spaces long ago.

The author of Why I'm Leaving Nursing” claims that s/he really went into nursing to make a change.” I'm not going into nursing to make a change. My life is roughly 2/3's finished already. I'm not looking to make a change anywhere except within the remainder of my very own life. Selfish you may say, but realistic I say.

My first 10 years of nursing can, assuming contracts of 2 to 3 years duration, present at least three very different work environments. Money is secondary at this point in life, freedom to change direction on a dime is paramount. Even in the relatively economically depressed region in which I currently reside the wide array of available nursing positions advertised during just the last few months alone has been rather impressive.

I joined this nearly 1 million member strong forum of AllNurses.com during the second week of August 2016, lurked for many months before that, and two months later am just now posting my first message. My eyes well up with tears of joy every time I come across posts illuminating just how many choices and opportunities and options and possibilities are available within the field of nursing. Ahh just listen to it again: choices and opportunities and options and possibilities… choices and opportunities and options and possibilities. After the stranglehold, the claustrophobic suffocation of being a teacher, I could sing choices and opportunities and options and possibilities and choices and opportunities and options and possibilities all day long. And yeah, I've changed subjects, grade levels, schools, school districts, and even states. The Libs have hijacked each and every layer so thoroughly that changing direction is futile, you'll just wind up back at the drawing board again.

Nursing can be one on one, one on 100, or any number in between. With lots of coworkers, only a few, or none. Night shift, day shift, or a combination thereof. Part time, full time, or over time. Bedside or not a bed in sight. Hospital or miles from. Private sector or public, with reasonable pay available in either.

All career choices come with challenges. I wish UK nurse88” all the best in the future endeavor(s). May the new challenges not become insurmountable. If it's any consolation, s/he could have done much worse with the last six years of his or her life. I would not at all be surprised if s/he does eventually return to nursing, albeit to a much different environment than the bedside hospital settings described in the article.

In closing I would encourage any and all nurses who feel their careers have been negatively impacted by politics to please chime in. Unlike education, the choices available in the field of nursing are so numerous that they actually need to be whittled down by today's new nursing grad. I've got my red marker out, the one I haven't used since my last teaching contract, and am ready to start crossing off some choices and opportunities and options and possibilities. Bring it on.

I hated home health for exactly that reason... Them riding your butt about hurrying... Yet they would schedule patients 45 min to an hour drive apart. Idiots.

How FABULOUSLY written and spot-on. Wow. I wish I could articulate this well. Bravo on your insight. 100% correct. The news is vomit-inducing... I agree. I'm an Independent as well... So is my husband. Our country is the most divided it's ever been right now and it's so sad. I think it's only going to get worse, too. I think politicians want to divide and cinque the general public. í ½í²”

OMG, I know. The students we see at my hospital... The nursing students... they stand at the desk and are barely in the patient's rooms. They are apparently above giving AM care/baths. I'm appalled that their instructor doesn't have them doing everything for their assigned patients. Our instructors, 21 years ago, had us show up at the butt-crack of dawn to get report WITH the nurses working and these people show up at freaking 8AM and ask us a billion questions when we are trying to check charts. These students are going to be floundering without a clue how to time manage. What a wake up call it will be to them that they will have to wipe people's behinds. They won't be a glorified nurse just with that degree. They will sink or swim. But they will be so horribly Ill-prepared. I'm speechless with how unmotivated these students are. Scary.

Hi I'm really sorry you feel that way but have you try working in clinic? It's different from floor n u can still be nurse without leaving nursing..., just saying

Please reason my post entitled New Nuse in L&D is this normal. I am so scared of my future being like this. What are your future plans?