They don’t own the concept of “hospital”. If the community truly got organized and fed up (there’s a lot more that needs to be addressed than low staff pay-the public would be shocked), they could walk in and take the building from the corporation. “Nationalize” it. Of course, that will never happen because our gov and elites, those who own the corporations put up patsies and fake opposition, fake populists, and the ever intrusion of Dems and Repubs ruin everything.
I have been asking nurses to unionize since I started in 1991. We should be like firefighters and police officers, we do a physical, mental job like they do!! We should be able to retire after 25 years on the floor no matter our age!!! Like firefighters and police officers!!
Nurses have other routes they can take in their career. If you don't like bedside, go find a clinic, private office, school, health center, coaching, teaching, etc..
Your cognitive skills seem to be lacking. You complained of the job being too physical. I offered options within your field that are less physical. Your question was, " And that solves my problem how?" LOL @@missnurseeri
I’ve been a nurse for 52 yrs. It used to be patient focused and now only money focused. Administration used to back us, now it’s a struggle to get them to listen. Huge change in healthcare.
They’ve taken nurses away from the bedside but increasing the amount of documentation and increasing ratios. The changes are so overwhelming and it’s causing good nurses to leave the bedside.
I’m a new Rn and worked as a medsurg nurse for one year after I graduated college. It was the hardest thing I’ve ever done. I felt overwhelmed, exhausted and overloaded with work. It seemed we were always short staffed and had to compensate even when it felt unsafe. I lived daily in fear of messing up. I quit after one year to have my baby and have been off work 1.5 years since. I honestly have no desire to go back because of the lack of support from upper management. I though it was just bc I was new to the field that I felt this way so it’s refreshing to hear veteran nurses feel the same.
@doremifasolatido-ro7zs When I graduated in 2016, it felt like no one was hiring new grads (unless you were accepted in the hospitals' residency programs) so I took a position in LTC. My unit felt like a chaotic hospital but with more patients..I gained a lot of skills, but it was incredibly stressful and I burned out. I lasted 2 years at that facility but I'm grateful for what I learned.
100% true. As an RN in the hospital I have plunged toilets. I’ve cleaned rooms when a new patient is about to show up because housekeeping is unavailable. I’ve sat on hold with dietary for 30 minutes or more trying to order a patient their food because it was never delivered. I’ve walked to the cafeteria to get patients their food when it has not shown up after repeated calls. I’ve grabbed a cart and went to the basement of the hospital until I found the room the linen is stored in and stocked it with all kinds of linen and took it back and delivered it to my unit. I’ve regularly taken out trash, mopped & cleaned floors. I’ve spent my time searching through cabinets to find toilet paper because there’s none in the staff bathroom even though I’ve called repeatedly to request to be delivered. I’ve restocked soap and hand sanitizer dispensers because the ones assigned to do it have not done it. I’ve transported patients to and from everywhere in the hospital because transport is not available. I’ve completed numerous tasks that should only be completed by the respiratory therapist because they are unavailable due to also being short staffed. I’ve climbed on tables and chairs to fix clocks and TVs on the wall. During the time change, I’ve had to climb to the clock on the wall, and manually change the time myself because it’s not “maintenance’s job”. I’ve been talked down to because I’m unrealistically expected to know every aspect of the patient’s history and current condition. I could go on and on…
We have all been there. I leave my Nursing station clean but I have to draw the line somewhere or I just can't do this job anymore. The Nurse on the hall next to me plunged a toilet last night and I won't do it. We are taken advantage of. I work in a 24/7 facility and housekeeping is there for 12 hours a day.
Been a bedside nurse for 18 years and it's definitely getting harder and harder to be a compassionate nurse........ I am not sure what is going to take but whatever it is it needs to happen asap before majority of the nurses leave bedside. I am holding on hoping 2023 is going to be better..... it's sad when your job causes you anxiety & insomnia all at the same time
Curious, does your hospital, if you or others are in the hospital setting) grade your supervisors? That was required when I was able to work. I was graded and thankfully, I always made a 5, (1-5). All it takes is a manager or director to care about you, so you can care for others. I didn't do anything outstanding but only watched. I could tell when someone was struggling. Beating them to buy their Diet Coke before 3pm, changed their spirits - a simple deed, but we all won. I have an issue with how yearly evals are done. If you are not asked what you need, what will help you do your job better, etc... then someone needs training. Yearly evals are pushed off as if they hate to deal with it. But so much can be productive if used in a good way. Evaluations aren't a bad thing, it's an excellent way to know your staff and to have an idea of personal problems they are facing. We are then aware this nurse/employee might need some time off and we are prepared. We check on them, we treat them as humans just like we want them to treat the patients. I believe every manager up to the CEO should be evaluated by their staff every year! It helps us be better - and we don't have to take it personally, but as a way of growth. I have always said, The staff is a reflection on the management. I wonder how right that is with nurses these days?
Kendra… I’ve been asked to write something and I think you and your colleagues can help me be more realistic. “Why causes Doc/Nurse” burnout? Don’t laugh… some aren’t aware. Doctors want to know. From both sides…. I say #1 is Staff. Staff helps or hurts be efficient and causes less mistakes. Any others have input? If you want to ask this yourself.. great. If I take the answers, how do I give you credit and keep confidentiality? I’m serious… the question is WHY ARE DOCS/PROFESSIONALS leaving? This would be interesting to start a subject as patients who understand can ease the stress. Working together is healthy! For any who don’t believe Kendra, others on here or the importance of patient edu…. The 3rd leading cause of death is medical errors. Patients can not leave it to the staff. I educate patients… intimidation should never be a factor. I will be glad to give info on myself. In a safe place. Hang on!!💕
I retired a few years ago but when I was an ICU nurse I had to take out my trash, be the monitor tech, and they got rid of the CNA's. It was almost impossible to do your job while having compassion and time to spend with the patient. I had PTSD for a few months after retiring from nursing. I pray for all my fellow nurses and the hardships you are going through.
Ive been an RN 30 yrs, bedside nurse for 15 then became an NP. They are both hell & I regret ever becoming a nurse. Left 3 yrs ago, have let both licences lapse. No. More.
Naaa!… you are probably retired. No one is going to take what you said literally. A little deceiving, but good luck on your retirement. You don’t need your come back. The new nurses will do what we gotta do till then✌️
Your nursing knowledge is very valid. Just don't do direct bedside care. There are different opportunities you can still pursue in different industries with your knowledge...
No nurse on earth should ever feel like this... It's unfortunate but I'm sending love your way. You have given so much of it to your patients, may it come back to you in many ways even to your family. GOD bless you ❤❤
I walked away from the bedside after 16.5 years 3 weeks ago. No notice. I’m done. Its a terrifying feeling to be facing a career change at 41 but I can’t do it anymore.
@@RuinVystopia just started a job in Case Management and it’s already so much better than bedside! Definitely a different world and a huge learning curve but so worth it to not be at the bedside anymore.
@tiffany1268 That's awesome! Glad to hear that progress is being made. I'm figuring out if nursing would be a good career field for me or if I should go back to truck driving. I have a passion for both fields but I just need to figure out if it'll do me well to expand myself in the medical field.
@@RuinVystopia the only advice I can offer if you choose nursing is to make sure you 100% have the heart for it and it is truly a calling bc bedside is HARD!! There’s a lot of others areas of nursing to explore though so you would have a lot of doors open for you! Good luck with whatever you decide to do…I’m sure you’ll do great!
I just made the decision to leave. Er icu is all I’ve ever done my whole adult life. But it has got soooo bad I can’t take it one more day. It’s like being hand cuffed to a bowling ball and thrown in the ocean… and then written up for drowning 😂
@@KendraRN finishing out my notice right now. Not sure what I’m going to do. Might take a break from healthcare for awhile or might just take a easier gig like doctors office nurse or something. 18 years paramedic, flight medic, er nurse, and now icu rn…. So not sure what to do. No family or huge bills so not in any big bind. Just my health is biggest priority. Bc I’m young. Started on ambulance at 18 years old.
Hello Kendra, I am glad I found your channel! I'm a retired RN who feels exactly the way you are feeling. You are speaking my words and the concern I felt. I started in 1979, worked full time until I went PRN in 2019. Retired in 2020. It was not easy but I had to perservere with God leading the way! With The Good Lord on your side you will endure. I know I absolutely could not have done it without Him!🙏🏽🙌🏾👏🏾👍🏽
I wholeheartedly agree. I reported a leader for bullying then my direct manager bullied me then my director and CNO defended her. Now I am being told they want me to resign my leadership role, move to a different department, or take a severance package. The upper administration needs to change or this will get worse. My issue right now is I am burned out and don’t even want to be a nurse anymore. My family doesn’t understand because to them I make good money.
They're stressed too. Today walking into my job at an assisted living, I see a woman walking out who I recognize and vice versa. We talk, she was my former boss at another facility . She fired me during covid for non compliance. Valid. I hated her for years. But we talked. And hugged. I forgave her today. Now I'm crying. Thank you RU-vid.
I'm going into education with my degree and not in America. The healthcare system here is ridiculous and I feel like absolute shit when I can't advocate for my patients like I AM CALLED TO DO! There is no longer a chain of command that gives a damn about resolving issues. There is no accountability
I don’t recommend anyone getting into nursing this day and age. It’s a toxic culture with more and more stress put on nurses. We know how to do everyone else’s job, no one knows how to do ours. We supposedly have one voice: the ANA, yet there has been no supportive push back or stances from them to stop the corporate greed. Very disappointed with the career choice I made years ago.
Most of my colleagues have left bedside care for management, NP, mobile clinics, specialty clinics. Less work , same or more pay. Gotta work less and make more. Work smarter not harder to earn your cash
I really want to become a nurse .. I wrote it down in my journal, thought about it, and was super confident about it .. up until I started doing my research 😩 now idk what I want to do .. I even thought about becoming a cardiovascular technologist ! Maybe it’s my lack of confidence 🤷🏽♀️🤦🏽♀️ But I’m praying for you 💜.. I’m tired of seeing nurses overworked & physically worn out ! Hopefully things change
@@Breeology_ exactly don't let these hardships ruin your dreams, if you really want it go for it, at the end of the day it's all about caring for patients in their worst times.
@@LaniWahine4I’m so sorry. As nurses we are just trying to spread awareness and this is just the reality of how things are especially post COVID. Continue your CNA program. Remember every profession will have there ups and downs no matter where you work. What you can do is visit local hospitals or places you would like to work at and get a feel of how the work environment is. Best of luck 🫶🙏🙌
@@LaniWahine4CNA is deep enough. It's worse than it used to be too. Leave yourself room to change directions and don't get beholden to the idea of staying in healthcare.
I left the hospital because of greed from management. It was no longer about how to take care of the patients, but all about how to save/make more money
Nurses and EVS need to unionize. EVS worker here. We are suffering too and see the devastation with unsafe nurse to patient ratio. I feel for yall. I finally spoke up about coworkers lack of care when it comes to how the rooms are being cleaned. I was met with excuses. Its disgusting how these managers really dont care. Good luck to us all.
@@Sammy-lh5wuenvironmental...they care for the rooms..the house...and to the EVS worker thank you! I'm friends with many and we work as a team in the ER..
You are absolutely right. I have been a nurse for 5 and half years and I’m really regretting the decision. Our hospital don’t even have a nurse aid and we have to also do the ADLs of pt. I am 31 and wanting to start a family so bad but the work load in the hospital make me stressed to even start a family. Im doing nights right now and taking toll in my body m.
100% agree! The most on point statement I ever heard. In my area my most favorite nurses and my most favorite doctors who are compassionate and you just want to help people and take care of them and they end up leaving my healthcare facility you know what they all said because of the people who run the facility is so greedy and they don't let you help the patient that they're going to a place that actually allows it and does it so they go to the bigger places.
32 years at the bedside! You speak my heart! Seen every thing you can imagine! Worked every department! Seen it done it! Never got back up! I’ll pray for you!
I left bedside a year ago. I feel some guilt, but it was literally physically killing me (I ended up hospitalized barely a month after leaving bedside). I work in case management now, and while I know I’m losing some of my skills - I was never great at IV insertions to begin with, but even the attempt now would be a stupid idea - my blood pressure and heart rate are normal again and I have the downtime I need for self-care. Kudos and much love to those who stay at the bedside. You’re braver and more resilient than me.
I work in the health care field. I am not a nurse, but after taking care of my mother in home 24/7 with my brother I couldn’t agree more with you. It is the greatest blessing, but taxing on the body. I also could not agree with you more when I hear you say how it has changed over the last few years. Hospital administrators and all the Covid restrictions caused us to lose incredible staff at our hospital. It was due in part to the Booster requirements and it is ridiculous. I have the utmost respect for all nurses and how hard they work. God bless you and God bless all nurses. We need you. Keep speaking out. 🙏
I do not recommend anyone go into nursing. Let the shortage get worse so ppl suffer and realize the importance of unions and legislation that will protect them and their families when they are at the mercy of the healthcare system.
Girl I have been a nurse since 2013. It is getting ROUGHHHHH. BURNOUT is real. It's getting hard to imagine myself doing this for much longer. If it is like this now, what will it be a few years from now. It is heartbreaking and sad.
I've been a nurse for 19yrs and the joy in it for me is threatened by...you said it, corporate policies that cut such serious corners and I find myself "tasking" which is not what I loved about my choice to be a nurse. Infact I left banking precisely to do something with a sense of purpose and I knew nursing was it. Everyone is so stressed at the bedside...going about it with pride is so difficult by precisely what you've said. NURSES CAN DO IT ALL.🙆🏾♀️
I agree! Things have changed so much. I am genuinely very unhappy and dread going to work. I will be leaving next year but something needs to happen or there will be a critical shortage soon!
I switched over to hospice (non profit company) and I’ve never been happier. I wish I could have made the move a long time ago. They actually have compassion for the pts and the staff. Not to mention working as a TDT is much better than in a hierarchical setting.
I’ve been a nurse for several years now and I’ve noticed that more unprofessional In attitude and work ethic people are joining the field. They are not joining because of empathy and compassion, but for the money ONLY, and those type of people make a caring nurse’s job HARDER😭😭😭
Where I live there are just not enough people applying so they kinda have to take everyone that they can get including the people with this attitude. It really sucks.
I couldn't express it more accurately. I'm glad to have discovered your channel. It's refreshing to connect with someone who is going through similar challenges as me. I frequently experience societal judgment for harboring these emotions, and your transparency not only reinforces my perspective but also provides a sense of validation and understanding.
I am currently working on my NP hoping to do more clinical work. I started nursing in the early 90s and it has changed so much. Thank you for doing these videos and being the voice of so many very exhausted and frustrated nurses. ❤
Scary. If me or my loved ones cannot get the care they need because Nurses cannot do their jobs then that is HORRIFYING. This effects EVERYONE. Everyone will be a patient in their lifetime!
Hospitals are getting more and more administrators (4 year business degree tools) who get paid more than all the doctors combined. Same with education systems getting extra admins who get paid more than all the teachers.
Probably foreign nurses tbh. People from certain countries are simply more acclimated to horrible work conditions and sending the money back home means a huge jump in quality of life for family.
I respect and love yall sooooooo much ❤ Thank you for ... just everything you do!! Words cant even begin to describe how needed nurses are in the world right now 😊 very little even make it out of college in the first place with a bachelor's. What you guys do on the day to day is NOT EASY and for that I yall all the respect in the world.
I was on life support for 3 months I wanna thank you for the job you do. I know how hard you work. The physical energy needed to do your job is nothing compared to the mental energy. Some people don't acknowledge that but I want you to know I do and I tell everyone when speaking about what happened to me. God bless you. Keep it up we need you. I think about the 2 nurses that were genuinely kind and loving to me literally everyday and it's been a year now. When my sister told me that the one nurse was with me the whole time I was in a coma I cried like a baby. She nursed me back to life for 5 months. 3 of them I was unconscious. I will forever love her with a love I have never had for anyone.
Thank you for speaking up. I e been a bedside nurse for 26 years and I’m at the end of my rope. This cannot keep going this way, we are breaking apart !!
Nurse K you ❤️ ❤️ are a beautiful person and nurse. my God keep you and bless you as you come into contact with the sick always remember ❤️ God have place you there 🙏 may God keep and bless everything and everyone you touch ❤️ 😍 💖 ❣️ 💕 💘 ❤️ 😍 💖 ❣️ 💕 💘
When Im in the hospital Im always so appreciative to all the nurses I have ... I try not to ask for anything ... I know a lot of the nurses at the hospital I go to ... I've had them tell me when they see my name on the list they fight over who takes care of me cause they know I won't be difficult and I'm quiet ...
Same! I was in the hospital twice this year and I tried to be as independent as possible. Luckily my dad is a nurse too so we didn’t have to bother the hospital nurses for every little thing. I had such wonderful nurses and I deeply appreciated everything they did.
New nurse here! Would love a video detailing how you’ve seen it change… I was an aide 10 years before getting my LPN in June 2023 and I’m simply…. Disturbed. And fearful for the future! The only people who can handle it are the bad nurses…. If you care you get attacked and hated on. People wouldn’t be out here playin w they karma if they really knew how healthcare is today! Prayers for your protection and strength sister 💜
Having had many serious medical issues over the last few years resulting in an obscene number of hospital stays, I just want to say that despite the grotesque level of corporate greed going on, y'all are so so so so appreciated by patients like myself. Hospital stays (especially long ones) are never fun, but y'all make it so much more bearable.
100% and this is one of the many reasons why I changed my major to a different career and I'm not a even a nurse! I would've up been, but decided to get out while I still can! I've been a CNA in healthcare for way top and decided for my mental health that I didn't want to pursue it anymore. Never looked back!
I just went back to work after two years on disability. Today was my first day orientation at a Ltc. Nurses and Cna jobs are stressful. I pray for everyone that does this job because it's not easy on so many levels.
I am a regular patient at hospitals due to my chronic illness. I always try and make sure all my nurses know they are appreciated ❤️ I draw a lot, and when I was visiting the same ward once every month I drew my nurses a card letting them know what a good job they were doing. Nurses are so important
I worked in a hospital for 8 months. NEVER again. That was horrible. Won't even consider LTC even though i enjoy working with elderly people. Considering doing something else. Graduated in 2022 and already burned out.
After 12 years it's time to try something new. As a therapist & Senior HR Staffer, I recommend direct care 5 years max. Your body is ready to move in a more calm, rewarding way to care for others or maybe a totally new career field. Nursing is not changing much - you have been forced to do alot with less for 12 years. You are now more aware of the greed!! Time to refresh.. and remember only you can change yourself.. others you can love and let be.
As much as I hate the "Unions", I firmly believe that nurses should have Nurses Union because of the simple fact of what you've stated here in your short vid. I've been an ICU RN for 26 yrs, imcu for 6yrs, and now work in an post surgery Observation Unit for 5yrs. To think that I could retire from this unit was great, during first year. Then covid happened and our unit is the only unit that is well staffed so upper management made us a secondary resource pool unit. What used to be every 3rd month of getting pulled, it's literally every week 1 - 2 days shift and night shift RNs get floated to the point where we're all stressed out. Getting floated to a unit where you're given the worst group of patients and rarely see an NCP/NA throughout your 12hr shift! One of our older nurse had a melt down when she came in and found out it was her turn to float! That was one very stressful day! And the gull of the Mgr from the receiving unit called and sounded angry because our nurse hadn't shown up to her floor! Had I answered that phone call, as I was night charge nurse, the conversation exchanged would've been very different between her and I. I'm so tired of nurses being used as a pawn and abused! As much as I would like to return to ICU nursing, I'm thinking of doing something else like specialty clinics. Let the board of directors take care of the patients and see how far they can go or what they can do!
I’ve recently stepped away from the bedside, I’m trying my hand at mental health, not the really acute level. I needed a break from everything you mentioned above.
I'm in the ER all the time (two rare autoimmunes and no way to stabilize it as of yet) I never give my nurses a hard time unless I'm physically having a siezure or POTS is freaking out. There's not enough staffing and there us not enough emotional and mental support for what they can/have go or gone through. They need more help.
It's a vocation. I think you truly have to be called to do this. Most of us will see more nurses from the time we are born until the time we pass away than any other stranger that will do anyrhing for us. Think of that. This young lady will impact thousands of lives in her career. I praise God there are young people that will answer the call to care for us, doing everything needed to heal us and make us comfortable. They save our lives.
I would never be a nurse but I appreciate all nurses that do their job. They work nurses extremely hard and are disrespected by most from family members of patients to cnas