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"

Been there, try moving to a different hospital and a different setting, that helped me. Every job has its stressors but there's so many specialties where you won't deal things you're describing. School nurse, home health, surgery centers where everyone is NPO and family members are limited, telephone nurse jobs. There's many more but I'm sure other people could give their two cents on that.

It's sad that the field has gotten this way. I just graduated in may yet I have no motivation to work in the field. I have been dragging my feet and since nursing school I have been extremely unhappy. I started with bad nursing preceptors and was treated horribly by other nurses. I hate that the nurses really do eat their young and no help is given. Just from clinicals and being a CNA alone I am burnt out. I don't blame you for making that decision. Think of other options in nursing. There's IT, informatics, etc.

Specializes in Psychiatric, Med-Surg.

Side note: I have to go to work sick all the time, at the hospital, because I don't have enough paid sick time. I feel awful about it, and hope that I don't get any patients sick. If I called out every time, I wouldn't have a job. Just putting in my two cents.

Specializes in Medical-Surgical, Supervisory, HEDIS, IT.

I left bedside nursing after 6 months because it was not for me. I managed a doctors office after that for another 6 months and loved it but the (micro)management company i worked for was terrible so I threw my resume out there. Got a bite from a head hunter and did a HEDIS season on a 4 month contract and loved it! Then got an offer to work in informatics and review charts for an insurance company I did HEDIS for. I make more $ there, I work from home, and it's challenging work that you are still using your nurse brain

There are so many different facets of nursing that I hope you re-consider leaving the field entirely and think about a different field of nursing.

Whatever you choose, just be happy! ::hugs::

I wear SAS Freetime shoes, my feet are never very sore.

Specializes in PICU, Pediatrics, Trauma.
Thankyou.

its something ive had to do for my own self. I still love people and love to help others....... It's management and everything else that goes with it that has worn me down.

I work very hard at my job, but kept thinking this is a blip and things will get better..... They didn't for me.

im opening my own clinic next month doing aesthtics and possibly in the future I would like to get into lecturing, so helping people in another way.

Nursing is a fantastic job and I will miss i greatly but I know things won't get better x

I agree things will not get better, at least in the near future. I'm considering leaving as well. When I get my thoughts together, I will post to you.

There are many different types of nursing jobs that you could try. I went to dialysis in an outpatient setting and I love it. Don't give up on your love that quickly. Good nurses are always needed.

Specializes in PICU, Pediatrics, Trauma.
Try Ohio, California, or New York. They do. Also, in the otherwise backward and right-to-work (slave) state of Tennessee, the hospital in Oak Ridge is unionized and has a max nurse-patient ratio of 1:4. They are always calling on agency nurses! My best friend when I lived there worked agency for a long time and loved working there.

I work in California. Yes most hospitals are unionized. Many are weak though and not always effective. We still have the ridiculous

Expectations, short-staffed, poor attitudes on the management part, doctor coddling, well...everything you experienced.to one degree or another. And, our BRNs are unfair and don't give a.crap about nurses rights.

I am a Patient Care Tech and I was a Nursing student. I have been a tech for almost twenty years and decided to go to Nursing school which with all of my experience has been pretty easy for me. I work in a rehab unit and pretty much I have seen what the administration has done to the nurses and to us. Our nursing manager went on a full scale effort to hire enough nurses and techs so that we would never experience the shortages that we have with techs having 10 total or max care patients a shift. But the hospital doesn't care and nurses and techs from my unit are always used to staff the rest of the hospital, given the heaviest of patients. I have loved being a tech and I am a very good tech. My patients even the difficult ones have been my joy which is why I went to nursing school so I could help people even more. But I have learned that my opinion does not matter, what I observe is irrelevant and I am disposable.

So I am also leaving nursing, even though it is before I have actually gotten there. So to all of us out there...YOU REALLY ARE NOT ALONE!

Nursing is a wonderful career. Especially if you understand that being at the bedside is only one narrow position of "nursing". Nurses roles are vast and far reaching. Take the skills you have gained in assessment, critical thinking, exploration, communication and explore the many other areas were nurses make a difference in the world. Many people need the skills and gifts nurses can bring. You are not limited!

Specializes in Geriatrics, Mental Health.

I finally retired from nursing because the job finally broke me down. When I first started in nursing, supervisors and managers were supportive of the staff. Doctors were somewhat respectful. What begin to wear me down was not anything to do with my patients, but the change in attitudes by management and supervisors. The first clue was that I noticed that my supervisors were not qualified to be supervisors or managers. The next clue that the management style changed to the negative style. Beat them up, wear them down and throw them away. Politics were far more important than actual competency for supervisor choice. I worked for the VA, and retired from it at 19 years and 7months, I couldn't take anymore. I had hurt my back trying to take care of a patient in bed. There was no one to help me. Often, I was expected to do the meds, charge, or take a patient run. This was not primary care, this was a nursing home. I was not able to keep my charting up, as expected because of some of the other duties. I am not complaining, but the elderly use the restroom very frequently. Unfortunately, everyone has to go at the same time! Can't be in two places at once. We were always short of NAs and LPNs. People quit, part of the reason was the "do more with less" mentality. There was also the " this is what we have, suck it up." The new RNs came and went. Management felt that we "Old timers" were the reason. But, it was management and the nurse manager that was cited by nurses leaving. We all retired. Surprise! the problem continue to exist. Finally, the nurse manager was forced to retire, and the nurses still leave. My point: management style changed from positive to negative style, which did not help the nurses solve problems or attempt to fix short comings of the system. Politics have always won out, but the conditions were never as bad as when I retired. The chronic short staff, and the expectation that you can do meds for the entire floor, do charge, and pick up part of a patient run contribute to staff loss. To bad all the times that I spent charting after my shift couldn't be billed.... and then there was the mandatory overtime exhausting us. My hat is off to all the nurses still in the field of nursing.

I loved my patients, the Veterans are a special group, but the management mess, short staff, expecting one nurse to do three jobs impacts patient safety, and staff safety. The newer nurses seem to take these things in stride, but they will burn out to. I have respect for them as they face challenges now, that I did not have to face in my early career. I too had felt nursing was a calling, but I also knew that we saw people sick, not at their best. Families struggled to deal with illness, this I accepted, but the hostile work environment, unsafe conditions, and incompetent management was not acceptable. I did not expect thanks, from the patients or their families, and it was nice when my patients or their families told me thanks. This career has changed, it is a bit more business than just taking care of patients. Goodness, what if I submitted a bill for unplugging a toilet? (which I did many a night.)

After 21 years (and counting) as a nurse, I understand your feelings completely.

I have tried to move on from hospital nursing-- hospice for 9 days (not my thing to go into scary neighborhoods and unknown people's homes) and long-term acute care facilities... But I always went back to the hospital.

I have worked for NUMEROUS facilities and none of them have been run "perfectly." Our job IS often a thankless job. It's one of the most stressful jobs around... But... I always try to remember those patients who DO appreciate us and DO get better and whose hearts we DO touch.

I didn't go into nursing to be thanked all of the time... I went into nursing because I wanted to help people and make a difference in people's lives. I see burn-out daily... I have experienced it A LOT, myself, which is why I have cut back my hours recently to part time. Can I really afford to do that monetarily-speaking? Not really... But you do what you need to do... Just like you are doing what YOU need to do.

This is job isn't for everyone. We complain about management daily... Some of us are just used to how things are because we have complained and complained and nothing changes... So we have adapted. You adapt or you move on... There's always a choice, thankfully.

Best wishes for you in your future endeavors. I know your patients appreciated you while you were there. Hugs.