Workforce Readiness | Page 11

For years, polls have shown that Americans view nurses as having the highest honesty and ethical standards of all professions—not only among healthcare professions, such as doctors, pharmacists, and dentists—but all major professions. Given this overwhelming admiration for nurses, why don’t more people gravitate toward the calling? Why do we continue to see nurses leaving the profession in growing numbers? F ive years from now, according to the American Nursing Association (Sullivan, 2014), the U.S. will require an estimated one million additional nurses to care for a growing elderly population and to replace retiring nurses. Hospitals will be especially affected by this shortage as nurses leave the inpatient setting for the lighter demands of outpatient care. While conventional wisdom regarding a shortage of nurses might tell us to explore educational requirements, compensation issues, or the scheduling demands of shift work, darker issues lurk just beyond public awareness. We need look no further than reports about nurses leaving the profession over high stress and burnout, bullying and incivility, and workplace violence. Healthcare workers in general are at risk for illnesses, injuries, and fatalities because of long hours, changing shifts, physically demanding tasks, violence, and exposure to infectious diseases and hazardous chemicals, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (Dressner, 2017). These same statistics reveal that a worker in healthcare and social assistance is nearly five times more likely to be the victim of a nonfatal assault or violent act than the average worker across all industries combined. While these facts may not have a statistically proven correlation with the projected shortage of nurses, they require a closer look. High Stress and Burnout Kronos Inc. recently conducted a survey of 257 nurses, finding that 98% of nurses in the U.S. say their work is physically and mentally exhausting, and 90% have considered leaving their jobs to find something offering better work-life balance (Safety+Health, 2017). The leading causes mentioned were excessive workloads, the inability to take breaks, even for meals, and a lack of sleep between shifts. Just over a quarter of nurses said they have called in sick just so they could stay home and sleep. A seasoned ER nurse recalls working 7/7 many years ago: “You needed to be superhuman to work those hours, and it took a full 24 hours to recover mentally and physically. I really messed up my brain rhythms. My personality changed, and I became depressed. Now I’m exhausted after working four 12-hour shifts. ER work requires you to brainwash yourself to stay immune to exhaustion.” Exhaustion is just one part of the problem. Frustration with the number of job requirements that are not patient-facing is another stressor for nurses. A nurse interviewed for this article describes it this way: “The amount of charting a nurse has to do outweighs the face-to-face interaction with patients. If a patient complains of pain, for example, the nurse not only has to go into the charting system to chart the pain, but open the MAR to check on medications, then chart on those meds in both the MAR and in the computer system, then in the chart. I understand that correct documentation needs to be completed to ensure appropriate use of narcotics. However, the mass confusion and repeated charting in multiple and redundant systems takes up time. Charting in general is redundant, repetitive, and takes away from [direct] patient care,” she says. In her view, the reasons for the amount of paperwork are “legal or political.” She recalls staying after the end of shifts to complete paperwork to ensure her duties did not fall to the next shift and to avoid write-ups from her supervisors. HealthStream.com/contact • 800.521.0574 • 11