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 left nursing with no regrets. I now own a doggy daycare and boarding faciltiy. Not a day goes by I don't count my blessings! I do keep my RN license current but these days it just collects dust.

Specializes in ICU.

Don't do it.

I'm a nurse of 10 years and I passionately try to talk every want-to-be nurse out of the profession. I'm in the US and ratios are mostly enforced, we do have union help, and it's STILL horrible almost every day.

Find another profession.

So true in California!!!

I totally understand. Management is so bad where I previously worked and the new job I am at. It so makes me want to quit this profession but I just love my patients so much. I guess I am not at the burnout phase. But, we are so not appreciated its disgusting.

Good luck to you in all you do.

Socialized medicine ...you should move to the US, we have many nursing jobs, and the nurse unions will give you a stronger voice regarding complaints.

Please tell me this was a joke. Unions do not "give a stronger voice regarding complaints". The healthcare industry in the U.S. has become a highly for profit industry, legally not a socialized, single payer system but regulated by Medicare/Medicaid which are government programs that all the private insurance companies follow as well. Nurses in the U.S. are massively overworked, many nurses cannot find jobs because hospitals & other facilities would rather double a nurse's work load than hire another nurse, Medicare has now based reimbursement on "patient satisfaction scores" from surveys so hospital administration is adamant about having nurses play the role of customer service specialist first and life saver second (life saver won't get the hospital more money), the state boards of nursing have gone overboard in their punishment of nurses for minor errors & other mistakes (charting errors, med errors where nobody was injured, defaulting on school loans, mental health disorders) and nurses are terrified to make a mistake, hospital administration would just as soon throw a nurse under the bus than defend them in a lawsuit to save their own a**, nurses are not respected or treated like the professionals they are, nurses are being laid off in places due to administration wanting to save their own salaries/bonuses. The list is endless. So many nurses are leaving & learning how to do something else because it is not worth the aggravation & stress on a daily basis. I have been a nurse for 25 years, have seen healthcare change drastically in the last 10 years (not for the better) and would never recommend nursing to any young person or older person looking to change careers. Hospitals & other facilities don't give a rat's a** about the nurses that work there, even though they are the backbone of the facility. Administration cares about their own salaries/bonuses & will make whatever cuts necessary to ensure their own income. The second MBA's entered the scene & started replacing clinical administration, that was the beginning of the end.

Congratulations for being able to say goodbye to something that doesn't bring you happiness. Not everyone can do that.

I've been a Nurse for almost 40 years! Worked full time in a Hospital with no maternity leave like most of you. I can't believe the attitude of the Nurses that have only been around for a few years & you guys are quitting! You haven't even started! I have put up with more changes in the Hospital & could tell more stories than most. The biggest problem is management & it trickles down from there. At present I don't think I have ever worked with a lazier bunch of people in my entire career. They don't know how to take care of the patients! The new Nurses want to Nurse from the desk! The patients are always on their lights to tell their Nurses that they are done with this or that or ready for this or that or they need this or that. The Nurses just wait for them to call, they never get up & go check on them, they just tell them to call when they are ready, or want something & go sit back down.Some of the Techs went to school to get their RN so they could sit at the desk. most of them are at least 50 pounds over weight & I have never worked with a bunch that work so hard at getting out of work & it's not just the Nurses, it's the entire Hospital. HR has a lot to do with it too. They have coded everyone's job to a point that "It's not my job" is a true fact! If I could leave this profession, I would have left a long time ago! This is all I know! Management doesn't appreciate you when you actually work but they praise the one the cleaned off the bulletin board! The less you do the more respect you get from above! One day when I'm done with this career I'm going to burn this bridge & run like the wind! It's a Thankless job to say the least. Mostly management & they want more & more from you every year. I didn't marry my job, I divorced my husband! It's too bad!

I am still in nursing and would like nothing better than to leave. The changes in our role over the years is palpable, it has changed beyond recognition with the introduction of the power mad multiple management people with their offices with their entourages and clipboards. The pressures and unreasonable expectations that are regularly placed upon us nurses are unfair to say the least. To the senior staff you are just a number not a person, to be moved about into stressful alien work areas as and when they deem it necessary to cover other wards and leave your own ward understaffed and unsafe. The mountain of unnessary duplicated paperwork we have to endure is way too time consuming and irrelevant to most of our patients. The ward managers and senior staff are unrealistic in their expectations of just what we are safely capable of doing in our shift. Piling more and more demands on our workload, understaffed and all the time being watched and critised for not doing enough. The overall lack of care, empathy, fairness, support and faith in the staff by the management is no longer surprising, even though we are all working in a so called health care profession.

I'm relatively new to nursing, but I want to leave already. Nursing, and healthcare in general, is not what I thought it would be....

I think I would have been out after the HIV stick. Hope you are ok health-wise. In my opinion, most of the problems in healthcare are caused by bare-bones staffing as a way of doing business, by management that is willfully ignorant and concerned only with profit and their own renumeration. Medical providers including physicians are considered as widgets and tools only, not as professionals or humans who need to care for their own health also. Unless medical professionals eventually get this and stand up for themselves, it's not going to change. In the short run, I think it's good to get out before one's health is impacted permanently. Am also on that route. Good luck with the training you are getting, have had friends who enjoyed that field and found it enormously satisfying.

"Sick leave" is not ruining healthcare. There are some days to avoid being you, I need an extra day off to rest. Not often, but does occur now and again. Its management's job to account for that and have a back up plan. And maybe if the work environment wasn't so toxic and we weren't ran ragged, maybe we wouldn't need those days at all. It's the environment, poor management, and corporate greed that's killing healthcare.

Wow guys I just want to say thankyou for the support.

ill give you a bit of my background:

i worked in acute stroke unit for almost two years after qualifying. While there I did bank shifts of different wards (out of choice) on oncology etc. while I was a stroke nurse I was a "link nurse" for palliative care. From there, I went on to be a clinical nurse specialist in a hospice which I LOVED so so very much. The reason I left..., being told by manager I was not "irreplaceable" after sitting up with a lady singing to her (while she was in severe pain with end stage pancreatic cancer) for the best part of 12 hours while stroking her hair and soothing her untill she died that night.

From there, I went on to become deputy manager (clinical lead) in a priavte hospital.

My job was to educate other nurses which I also loved, it was my job to deal with complaints etc, and support staff.

While there, I opened a small palliative unit.

pallaitive nursing has (and will) be my passion.

While there, I was working up to 20 hours a week overtime (unpaid) when they were short of staff.

i left because I was not appreciated.

i will never ever let my nursing degreee go to waste...... Im setting up my botox clinic next month, then hope to become a nurse lecturer in a university teaching palliative care. I also hope to help other nurses how to deal with the infamous "nurse burnout".

im physically and mentally unable to deal with the day to day of nursing "politics" however, I do hope to help nursing students so all is not lost.

at the moment, im worrking as angency nurse to fund my studies and to lead me in a differnent direction x