Hi, I'm Lucy, a producer with Opinion Video. When I first started hearing about a nursing shortage, I thought that I understood why that was happening: Burned-out nurses were finally succumbing to exhaustion after a two-year battle with the virus. But after reaching out to over 50 nurses I learned I was wrong. In reality Covid had just exacerbated a problem that existed long before the pandemic. in our video, five of the nurses I spoke with explain in their own words how corporate greed has created a critical shortage of bedside nurses, and what can be done to solve this crisis. I'd love to know what you thought of our film, and answer questions about how we reported and produced it. Leave your comments below
@SolaceEasy2 жыл бұрын
Another argument for a socialized medicine option.
@blurycode2 жыл бұрын
@@SolaceEasy What's wrong with a universal healthcare system? Why do you guys take so much pride in going bankrupt for healthcare services in the US? It should be available to all and considered a right, not a privilege, no?
@j.alejandroquiroz65412 жыл бұрын
Can we dig into the hospital's financial to investigate this further?
@MA-zg2pz2 жыл бұрын
@@blurycode many Americans agree with you. It is the Republican Party who has convinced its base that universal healthcare is gov over reach and they scare them saying it’s socialism ( which conservative Americans equate to communism and maybe losing their precious guns somehow). The Republican Party has also preyed on their sense of pride saying “if you need help from the government you’re weak and not hard working”. It’s embarrassing. My family thinks universal healthcare is terrifying 🤦🏼♀️ because they won’t stop watching Fox News.
@renegade440402 жыл бұрын
$300 million a day was spent in Afghanistan over the course of 20 years. Billions and billions and billions of dollars was just spent by the telecommunications companies to purchase invisible radio frequencies. Nearly 800 billion dollars was put aside for the military budget in America for one year. One year!
@dwilson6769 Жыл бұрын
" there's not a shortage of nurses there's just a shortage of nurses willing to work under those conditions." Well stated.
@myrnagarrett6312 Жыл бұрын
Where I live we do have using and doctor shortages. Many have retired most here retire at 65. We had people get covid and decided that they have just hD enough. Jobs are are plentiful and maybe it is a good time to change carreers. We have I ivetsal health care so people do not hesitate to go to emergency instead of clinics. Dollars are being put into health care for training of nursing. So far I have not heard of a use of staff.
@davidxavi1848 Жыл бұрын
We need to limit the number of nurses becoming NP's. It's dangerous and contributes to the nursing staffing shortage.
@dwilson6769 Жыл бұрын
@@davidxavi1848 then prove it. Sounds like a communist caste system move to not allow someone to advance beyond their service 🙄. Are you going to make someone flipping burgers remain in that position as well?
@davidxavi1848 Жыл бұрын
@@dwilson6769 prove what? If you want to make medical decisions, go to medical school and actually learn the stuff instead of going to an online NP diploma mill. It's a danger to patients.
@ssuwandi3240 Жыл бұрын
Well this is the area where immigration has to fill in. So stop complaining when you see more foreign workers.
@scottwomack89052 жыл бұрын
Every time you hear about a worker shortage (be it fast food, nurses, teachers, IT, etc.) know that there really isn't a shortage. It's always due to horrible working conditions.
@abad-enoughdude._.39192 жыл бұрын
Lol don't know if I'd go that far. It depends on alot of things. Teachers for example, it depends on the area. In New York there are too many unemployed teachers because the districts can't afford to pay their salaries. In a place like the Carolinas, communities are growing so fast that they can't fill the jobs fast enough.
@KaoruSugimura2 жыл бұрын
No, there is a shortage of workers. I'm not sure what you've been smoking but birthrates are on the decline and have been for years now. The U.S. is almost at the critical 1.4 (last check was at 1.5) per woman. 2.0 is a stable working economy and anything less is a net negative to the future of that economy. Though, this doesn't take into account those who are born with disabilities. So, more realistically a net positive would need to be 2.1 or higher for continuous growth and for people to replace those who are leaving or then needing to retire. As the work-life of the average person is expected to be 20-60 and a retirement at 61-100+ (in a healthy economy). Meaning there needs to be a constant supply of able bodies to replace them, otherwise people have to work beyond 60 in an attempt to keep the economy functioning. Problem is that this is only a short term solution and will still lead to a failing economy if birthrates don't increase. It's why China is only one step away from kidnapping women and making breeding farms at this point. They realize their one child policy has done immense damage to the future of their economy. Meanwhile in the U.S. they are still pushing for abortion rights when the primary age range for women having kids is between 16-24, the age at which most would say it was a mistake and would more likely choose abortion as they don't yet have their lives worked out, a stable job, a home etc. tl;dr: We are screwed.
@abad-enoughdude._.39192 жыл бұрын
@@KaoruSugimura you are correct. Until we turn to a culture of life, we will not prosper.
@nursegaines35192 жыл бұрын
Correct
@treyshaffer2 жыл бұрын
@@KaoruSugimura This is not a fact driven opinion. US total fertility rate is currently 1.7. What you also don't consider is that more women are working than ever before, and with less children to take care of, so the dependency ratio of working US adults to eldery/children in the US is at one of its lowest points in history.
@PennyTovar2 жыл бұрын
Nurse here ✋🏽I love my job. But if you think hospitals are bad, wait til you hear about Skilled Nursing Facilities (nursing homes). The working conditions are incredibly unsafe for everyone.
@jociamponelli10082 жыл бұрын
Is that the same as a nursing home?
@batshevabecher58482 жыл бұрын
@@jociamponelli1008 yep. I worked in one as an OT, and can attest to the fact that most nursing homes are severely understaffed with nurses. They work so so hard and really are pushed past their humane limit
@stephmerloz2 жыл бұрын
Im a skilled nursing facility one LPN can have up to 35 patients. An RN may oversee up to 99 per shift. And usually it’s severely understaffed
@42634842 жыл бұрын
I've heard this from many of my CNA, LPN and RN friends! Nursing homes too!
@jociamponelli10082 жыл бұрын
@@batshevabecher5848 I’m really struggling, our family is thinking of having a family member settle into a nursing home but it is so hard. The expense and the quality of care just don’t match up, even if the resident is in great health.
@larissawhitt9922 Жыл бұрын
I think it’s honestly nuts that nurses and doctors work 12+ hour shifts. How is that safe for anyone?
@davidxavi1848 Жыл бұрын
It's worse for doctors. Nurses work 12 hour shifts three times per week. Doctors work 12 hours shifts 6-7 days per week.
@kirty9880 Жыл бұрын
I work 16 a day 😅
@davidxavi1848 Жыл бұрын
@@kirty9880 yeah plenty of nurses choose the work for overtime pay. how many shifts per week on average?
@thomasdoyle9748 Жыл бұрын
Dont know how my dad did it without caffeine. Said it made his fingers shake. No one wants a shaky surgeon! When my father in law was having surgery my mother in law was happy that it was in the morning because the doctor would be fresh. I did not say a word. He or she could have been up all night!
@RR-kz4hq Жыл бұрын
@@iusbucktig that's not healthy and isn't something to promote to others ultimately 😕 my cult used to say "you can sleep when your dead" to justify child labor and 20 hour days.
@Jen-Chapin2 жыл бұрын
I have been a nurse for 15 years and left the bedside because the staffing levels were incomprehensible. Expected to care for 9-10 patients on an acute care floor. You feel like you can’t give the care that patients deserve and it takes a huge toll on your mental health. It’s also not safe at all.
@pipitameruje2 жыл бұрын
That's stretching it as a patient per doctor ratio, let alone as patient per nurse! I'm a doctor, we had our bad patches over the last two years, but one thing we got was for the hospitals to hire more nurses. With 3 to 4 patients per nurse, we doctors can cover 15 patients, even 20 if needed be, but without nurses? People die. The hospital didn't like it when we pointed it out, but patients died more from the lack of nurses than from the lack of doctors in the darkest days of last year. They sure didn't like it, but they barely hired any new doctors while hiring about 100 new nurses for the entire place.
@Threemore6502 жыл бұрын
@@pipitameruje you get only 3 - 4 patients!? What do you do all day?
@pipitameruje2 жыл бұрын
@@Threemore650 I don't. In ideal settings, the nurses I work with do. Usually, nurses get 6 patients. This isn't in the US, but I assure you that they do plenty. During the worst days of the pandemic, we really pushed for the 3 to 4 patients per nurse ratio, as doctors, because we could be stretched very thin, but our nurses never failed us. I could arrive at the hospital and ask "which one of yours needs my attention first?". Each nurse would let me know, and I could prioritise patients out of my mixed assortment of about 20. That's five nurses that, although tired just like me, could be my eyes and hands while I took care of too many patients altogether. They spent more time with them, they knew them better and I trusted them entirely. If I got a call about Mr X with Nurse Y half way through my rounds, I knew it was serious, I could drop what I was doing, sort it and then pick up where I'd left. I made it through week after week of twice as many patients as I should have (I was an intern) because of my nurses. I don't know where you live, but here (Portugal, in Europe) our nurses carry the hospitals on their shoulders.
@Threemore6502 жыл бұрын
@@pipitameruje I was an NHS nurse back in the day when two of us were expected to deal with a ward of 30 patients. I was often alone on night duty too... as a second year RN student! But I suppose in those days there were fewer machines to deal with. Manners have also taken a steep decline on both sides. Imho. The ‘nurses’ who pumped my paralysed husband’s abdominal cavity with so much pink gloop that his heart and lungs had no more room to work were, in addition to being incompetent, extraordinarily uncaring. They ignored me when I persistently asked about the loose duodenal feeding tube. They roughly flipped him back and forth whilst discussing their mortgages... in front of me! Staggering to witness such callousness towards a man who hadn’t even had time to come to terms with his awful condition.... which the ward sister had cruelly whispered into his ear after I told her that I would be the one to tell him. I had to employ someone to come in and give him food whilst I couldn’t be there because they would rather just change the food bag than be bothered. Despite his having undergone an op to put in a titanium plate specifically so he could sit up a bit and eat normally. So there’s two sides to every story. Btw... we would in my day, I hope, have died of shame before we made a TikTok of us dancing during a pandemic. I left the profession I loved because the bitchiness of a female hierarchy was intolerable to me. They’re not all saints.
@Porpentein2 жыл бұрын
@@Threemore650 Please stick to one argument and support it thoughtfully. You are all over the place, which makes the fact that you are picking on this nurse for having a lighter patient load incredibly infuriating.
@MrChicky12022 жыл бұрын
The worst part is, even if severely understaffed, the nurse is still liable for any and all incidents.
@jackiegalvin55032 жыл бұрын
Thank you for posting this comment!!
@vivian65192 жыл бұрын
Exactly !! Couldn’t agree more. And nurses receive all sorts of punishments and criticism from management in addition to all these dangerous working conditions.
@rnhim20722 жыл бұрын
And even if you walk out without taking the assignment in the first place, you could get charged with patient abandonment and stripped of your license.
@catholicfemininity21262 жыл бұрын
Yep, it's why I said, 'screw this.'
@cathyphillips91202 жыл бұрын
Facilities should have "Accept Assignment under Duress" forms. I filled out many forms when I was understaffed. It took the liability off.
@ubahootah2 жыл бұрын
As soon as they said 'flex staffing' my heart dropped. I work for a big retail company and they do the exact same thing, even the same phrase. I can't believe they're implementing it in HOSPITALS of all places. The level of corporate greed is at an all time high and yet there are people who still believe that it's laziness driving the great resignation - no! It's the refusal to get exploited and say enough is enough. The US needs something or someone to relieve this huge amount of tension, I don't think it's going to turn out pretty otherwise...
@Gallagherfreak1002 жыл бұрын
Some companies are having to "make nice" now to retain what employees they have left. I know this is literally killing them. Many companies I worked for had a strong anti employee attitude, compounded by layers of hatchet men, always looking for the slightest problem, often imaginary, so they could come down on an individual or unit, for more production and less compensation. Often the phrase was heard "you're lucky to have a job". I'm retired. but, take grim satisfaction in seeing the tables turned.
@transitionsnc2 жыл бұрын
They do flex staffing all the time in hospitals.
@islandbirdw2 жыл бұрын
Because it’s the stockholders and administrators they hire to “implement” strategies to maximize their profit margin that is priority 1, NOT DECENT CARE. Notice I didn’t say quality? BC quality care hasn’t happened in America for decades. They take profits for strangers more important than the well-being of patients their families and the professionals who are tasked to care for them. Sad situation in American healthcare.
@transitionsnc2 жыл бұрын
@@islandbirdw I worked in U.S. Healthcare for 20 years and I 100% agree with you.
@tangomango84742 жыл бұрын
This is late stage capitalism. We need to take back power and we do that with solidarity. There has never been a middle class. There always was and will always be 2 classes, the rich and the working class. Solidarity amongst the working class is how we fight back the exploitation. unionize and vote
@bradburke8232 Жыл бұрын
Very informative. When they mentioned the 25 million dollars spent in one state to defeat a ballot measure that would've created a staff/patient ratio law, I couldn't help but to think "I wonder how many nurses salaries could be paid with that 25 million..."
@src3360 Жыл бұрын
Exactly. I quit working as a nurse in 2016. The stress was just not worth it. And if we screw up the blame is on us and they will take away our license...
@gertrudelaronge6864 Жыл бұрын
Union busting tactics.
@Mia-ei4mh Жыл бұрын
Same with a 500 million useless statue which will do nothing
@sumarew Жыл бұрын
Exactly
@marvinmartin4692 Жыл бұрын
My same thoughts!
@OldTooly2 жыл бұрын
When my wife was in a terrible way in the hospital I had to step outside the room for a second only to find a nurse crying in the hall. I held her, (years before covid) and asked her what was so terribly wrong. She had 15 minutes left on her shift and three more patients to see and there was absolutely no overtime allowed and she didn't know what to do. A few years later at another hospital, my wife seriously ill again with flesh eating bacteria on her entire leg, the nurse came running into the room saying she had to be to xray immediately but the wound required a special dressing before she could be moved that takes a bit of work. She pulled back the sheets and I had already done the complete wrapping (many times throughout the day due to massive fluid leakage) and the nurse cried out loud and hugged me. I too had no idea how terrible hospitals are treating the staff. And this was 10 and 15 years ago. This is the immoral and criminal behavior of the profiteers who have crossed all borders of decency and compassion. No corporate profits are worth even a single life. God help us all if this is allowed to continue.
@sarahcolombo15472 жыл бұрын
Thank you from a retired nurse. We've been saying this for decades now---and being told we are simply inefficient. Surveyors also no longer actually survey the care provided, they sit in the office with adm and look at data...what we say goes unheard, It is just as bad, sometimes worse, in long term care and skilled nursing, any facility really. It is all for profit. Nurse's aide are at the bottom...understaffed and paid so poorly they may qualify for benefits at full time.
@TSWARD-xb9rk2 жыл бұрын
I’m so sorry your wife and yourself have had this experience.
@TSWARD-xb9rk2 жыл бұрын
@Sarah Colombo Cna / nurses aides are the most undervalued. Totally agree. And, many have taught me so many things.
@brendasue32012 жыл бұрын
And the elites have used Covid to make millions as well instead of letting the information out that there ARE therapeutics that work and can keep many people out of the hospital and out of the furneral home! CRIMINAL!!!! Alll for the almighty dollar!!!!
@alexia35522 жыл бұрын
“Immoral and criminal behavior of the profiteers who have crossed all borders of decency and compassion.” You said that so well. I hope everyone can read your comment, it adds a lot to understand the situation.
@ladyylomonroe2 жыл бұрын
Being a nurse, knowing this is so true. America Healthcare System sucks. I’ve even change my career direction because I am tired. Prayers for all my nurse colleagues 🤍
@williamsmith65752 жыл бұрын
It's not just America and its particular healthcare system. In Canada nurses are overworked and there is a shortage of them.
@ladyylomonroe2 жыл бұрын
@@williamsmith6575 that’s true global healthcare is just really in a challenging state at this time.
@tummyfungus2 жыл бұрын
I'll forever be beyond grateful for our healthcare workers, you all deserve so much more. ❤️
@majaturner90662 жыл бұрын
In 1974 the WHO said they felt there were 90% too many humans. What do you think they meant?
@roymaddocks31842 жыл бұрын
@@williamsmith6575 true, but because they are public sector, there is more accountability to citizens about fairness and patient outcomes
@johnkaplun96192 жыл бұрын
My dad was an air traffic controller in NYC and he explained to me that before the national strike in the the 80s controllers were not allowed to say they couldn't take anymore airplanes and were just forced to handle as much traffic as was thrown at them. Now, they are allowed to halt traffic they are responsible for whenever they feel they're maxed out. A similar kind of massive rule change is clearly need in hospital administration.
@mnkwazi2 жыл бұрын
@John Kaplun. I agree, however there are an army of lobbyists ready to prevent putting the interests of human/worker safety over the excessive profits of a few.
@rkan22 жыл бұрын
The difference is air traffic controlling isn't really a profit seeking business but a government service... Hospitals are a government service in many countries but in the US only in some parts of the military pretty much.
@Justin-hn9uv2 жыл бұрын
The problem is nurses are often reluctant to strike because they fear it puts patients at risk. They are in a position their opponents happily exploit.
@mnkwazi2 жыл бұрын
@@Justin-hn9uv You are probably right. I have been in jobs in which I was constantly in these dilemmas.
@Helfirehydratrans6 ай бұрын
Sounds similar to what they expect nurses to do they give short staff nurses expect one nurse to the job of three And still, they have the audacity to under pay them and refuse overtime
@ryankerns1460 Жыл бұрын
Became a nurse in 2016. My wife and daughter are nurses. The amount of corruption, waste, incompetence and greed is astounding. I and my wife are looking for different fields away from nursing.
@marvinmartin4692 Жыл бұрын
For profit healthcare is immoral!
@homedoghappiness Жыл бұрын
Would be nice if we had more people on the ground working towards healthcare reform and its education to recruit more people to work towards healthcare reform. We need to redirect the value of profits to the value of HUMANITY and MENTAL HEALTH for ALL.
@jercasgav Жыл бұрын
@@homedoghappiness The reins of control are in government, the big insurance companies, and hospital admin uppers. None of them have healthcare backgrounds usually, but they dictate how the job gets done on the ground and dictate to nurses and doctors. Go after these big entities first. A healthcare worker, heck even a strike of an entire hospital does nothing to put a dent in this crap that comes from above. Healthcare needs to be controlled by the providers and patients, not the pencil pushers and govt.
@homedoghappiness Жыл бұрын
@@jercasgav yes!! Agreed!! What are your thoughts about private hospitals? Are they still influenced by the gov, and if so, how? I still think the (main) culprit is the mindset of putting profits before people.
@jercasgav Жыл бұрын
@@homedoghappiness private hospitals are a dying breed but are still very much controlled by the govt. Medicare sets the rules for reimbursement and thus private insurance follows so therefore, there's your govt control. Mandates like JCAHO are also across the board. You are absolutely right though, profits before people is a huge problem. I work in a non profit hospital now and there is a vast difference than that of a for profit chain. It's mainly how the employees are treated from what I've seen. For profit hospitals are happy to drop an employee at the drop of a hat.
@kiearacelina2 жыл бұрын
“Servant Servant, get me some coffee” one patients kept yelling at me & then I even got spat on 🤦🏽♀️ So when he said “ The H is for hospital, not hotel” than really hit the nail on the head for me. This video was really needed. I don’t think enough people actually understand what our role is and how much we go through in the field.
@slothypunk2 жыл бұрын
Why do you want it to get it easier? Screw getting easier! I got paid double because you want it easy! I say get it harder eh? I want more money and get it harder and harder every day! The harder it gets, the more RN don't want to work! The more RN don't want to work... the more leg up I can negotiate to the said "greedy" hospital! Gets it?
@DrCruel2 жыл бұрын
Beg pardon? You mean it's OK to treat workers in a hotel like garbage?
@Danielle-go3pu2 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid I remember there used to be CNA‘s/aides in the hospital setting as well, at least where I lived. They were the ones that got your drinks and all the other stuff that wasn’t medical related
@jamuraisack55032 жыл бұрын
Nobody called you "Servant". Lol
@slothypunk2 жыл бұрын
@@jamuraisack5503 but in it's original form, nurse and doctor is a servant. She just doesn't like it the patient treat them like a lowly servant, but in reality, she is there to serve and nothing else!
@UMVELINQANGI2 жыл бұрын
This is both heartbreaking and disturbing. I had no idea things were this bad. Much love to these health care professionals. They are awesome.
@s.p.baughman78852 жыл бұрын
I just went back and have over 30 patients to one Nurse [me] ..Already I feel stressed...I was taking care of one patient in home care before now back to this....Hoping I get another home care case ...Been a Nurse a long long time...You have to be really good with multi -tasking....
@dotnb2 жыл бұрын
They are. We don't deserve them.
@greggarcia62942 жыл бұрын
It's really not. Those healthcare "professionals" played along with the entire scam-demic since Day One, yet when the vaccine mandates arrived to bite them in the butt, they decided to no longer follow "the rules" of the hospital and tucked tail. If these "professionals" were speaking out against the millions of patients murdered by being placed on ventilators, forced to mask up, denied visitors, etc. etc. they would have a point, but that isn't the case here.
@emuriddle93642 жыл бұрын
This is why I ignore people who say: "It happens everywhere." We know that. And it's still not acceptable either way. So, let's stop justifying it. And start finding ways to resolve this.
@regisnyder2 жыл бұрын
@@s.p.baughman7885 praying God continues to give you strength because you are urgently needed. Thank you.
@imSLO-2 жыл бұрын
“To maximize profit, hospitals….” That right there is the problem.
@cconroy16772 жыл бұрын
Meanwhile who’s willing to take paycuts? Seems like we all want profits, don’t care about whether the deal works for everyone.
@magnolia86262 жыл бұрын
Exactly!
@catholiccrusader53282 жыл бұрын
Money is the one true god in the world. It's all about greed.
@trentp1512 жыл бұрын
That's interesting because Government Obamacare Subsidies are $500 per month per person. That guarantees that healthcare for the average person must cost at least $500 per month per person. That standard was set by GOVERNMENT. The problem was that government got involved. The quote you mentioned "to maximize profits" was NYT propaganda meant to push you further into mindset that the problem is that everyone is greedy, when the very people pushing that narrative to you ARE THE GREEDY SOBS THAT YOU DESPISE!
@ilenastarbreeze49782 жыл бұрын
@@trentp151 fun fact the most my health care can cost me is 120 bucks a month and thats if im making 50k or more. At some point it becomes free because you know canadian medical
@napa-7429 Жыл бұрын
I am a nursing student. No one in my cohort wants to become a bedside nurse and if they do, they only want to do it for 2 years max. We all want to specialize and leave the bedside as soon as possible. It’s crazy how no one wants to do bedside anymore due to the abuse that nurses face. It’s really saddens me because patients need our help. But I have to take care of my mental and physical well being first before I can help others.
@lasvegasnevada7514 Жыл бұрын
Too bad for our LPN program. Those of us who were former CNAs and that are good with patients and hands-on labs are the one flanking the course work exams and those who aren’t so good on both handling patients and hands-on nursing lab were the one doing good on the exams. We understand the materials but it was just the NCLEx style questions that were having trouble with. Majority of these good nursing students are only excellent by the books and exams but other than that, none of them knows how to handle skills in the nursing real world
@melissahuneke2842 Жыл бұрын
It's not necessarily true, I am a student now. I was a PCT on med surg and EMT, I average over 90% on exams. You just have to do more practice questions to get used to the style and know exactly what they are asking you. And TBH, I have more of the opposite problem because not having a real patient in front of me makes me not think about anything other than seeing a plastic dummy (assessing plastic instead of flesh, bones and organs) so I have to really focus to pretend like it's real lol @@lasvegasnevada7514
@piamishelle11 ай бұрын
@@lasvegasnevada7514im currently on the same boat, its really unfortunate
@nolamedgirl10 ай бұрын
@@lasvegasnevada7514 nclex questions aren't hard; i don't want someone caring for others that can't even do nclex level questions
@Helfirehydratrans6 ай бұрын
Maybe if people were paid more, they would be willing to deal with more But you know where all the pay increases are going to administration Administration is over paid because they get to decide how much they get And then they decide how much the nurses get in if they want more money they will fire a couple of first year nurses just so they have less staff to pay Administration expects nurses to do the job of two people. Some of them expect you to do the job of three or four people like how are you supposed to be at for places at the exact same time when you’re expected to have a minimum of 10 people in the hospital and there’s only like five nurses and two doctor And you need a minimum of 10 nurses and five doctors Administration is greedy, destroying our medical industry
@kondor999992 жыл бұрын
I’ve been a psychiatrist for 20 years and this is what drove me away from working in hospitals: Constant pressure to understaff inpatient units. If our census went down even for a few hours, they’d immediately start sending nurses home. Later, when we got slammed, we’d be horribly understaffed. Some of the places I worked even had a grid which directly linked the number of nurses on staff to how big the administrators bonus would be (less staff = more bonus). Obviously this nonsense should be illegal, and belongs on a used car lot, not in a hospital.
@blondieb66732 жыл бұрын
THIS is exactly what the problem is with understaffing. More staff= smaller BONUSES.
@michaeld48612 жыл бұрын
Jesus that's absolutely horrifying . The greed of these people is beyond disgusting!
@alexia35522 жыл бұрын
Administrators should be paid less than nurses and that’s that on that. They just steal so much money because their grubby hands can get on it first
@talljib2 жыл бұрын
I worked in the hotel industry for years and they use the same tactics with staff and management
@myrnajay27852 жыл бұрын
Man that's disgusting! Corporate America!
@rebeccam20602 жыл бұрын
OMG this is the first video I’ve seen that FINALLY summarizes how I’ve been feeling as a frontline nurse!!!!! Everything else I have seen posted on social media or by media outlets does exactly that - blames the pandemic as being the sole reason for exhausting the nurses. NOT TRUE! We signed up for patient care, and by this point in the pandemic, we should be able to do this! What we DID NOT sign up for are dangerous patient ratios and limited medical supplies all because of corporate greed! Thank you for finally shining a light on this!
@Phil4Jesus2 жыл бұрын
Yep.
@louf71782 жыл бұрын
This is what is called a rude awakening. Things aren't what your entitled fantasyland think it is. Did you not think this is what the attempt of "flattening the curve" was about?
@louf71782 жыл бұрын
@@Fishmans Um, yes, flattening of the curve was exactly what that was about - spreading out the load.
@user-ly6xk6cb9b2 жыл бұрын
Yess there REALLY needs to be some change omggggg
@damienholland81032 жыл бұрын
@@louf7178 Your initial response doesn't even make any sense because: 1. She's a nurse so unless she's an anti-vaxx nurse she's not in fantasyland. That's her job and she knows the reality. 2. Flattening the curve was simply a concept about masking, distancing, and vaccinating to reduce the hospital / death count numbers. That has absolutely no connection with what she said. She's talking about understaffing.
@terrysmith48312 жыл бұрын
I have been in the hospital five times. The last time was five years ago after a near fatal head on collision caused by a junkie. My nurses kept me alive for nine days in the CCU untill I was stable enough for major thoracic surgery. I'm alive today because of my nurses, they are angels and they deserve to be treated with the respect they fully derseve.
@ColocasiaCorm2 жыл бұрын
What does them being an addict add to your story?
@peacefulrobin43692 жыл бұрын
@@ColocasiaCorm driving with an altered mental status is illegal and dramatically increase people endangerment and fatalities. Terry smith was an example of what can happen no matter how careful u are when others do action such as.
@eclectictomboy68732 жыл бұрын
@@peacefulrobin4369 Thank you ! I don't know why that needs explaining unless it hits a nerve. Unbelievable. Wonder how he would feel if he lost a loved one because of an addict.
@dhiguera132 жыл бұрын
@@ColocasiaCorm thank you john mayer fan.
@delawareperformancetrainin3072 жыл бұрын
Blame it on the Democrats and Biden. Plandemic and Unconstitutional mandate that fired millions of essential workers and nurses
@kimayaknight7180 Жыл бұрын
Very informative thanks for sharing. I quit my job as an RN last two years ago after almost 17 years in the field. It was not an easy decision, but life is too short to dread going to work everyday. No amount of money can buy real happiness, but friends I'm not asking you to resign from your job or abandon your business but be wise!
@phillawson5785 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing your story. I don't really like my job but I love what it provides for me and my family. This pandemic has people rethinking working.
@eiraantoinette6793 Жыл бұрын
Hello ma'am what do you do now and how did you plan yourself before quitting?
@kimayaknight7180 Жыл бұрын
right now I run my own business and While I was still in service I planned towards early retirement, making about 2k weekly from my retirement investment portfolio trying so much to build more side hustles and extra income
@eiraantoinette6793 Жыл бұрын
wow impressive you're making quite a fortune speaking of investing I have heard many people talk about it but I don't really know how to start and make a good investment, can you explain?
@kimayaknight7180 Жыл бұрын
there's a lot of investing options but my best advice get a professional lead you into profitable one that's exactly what I did
@Leelz2472 жыл бұрын
The nurses are the ones giving really skilled care and honestly saving lives. I value them incredibly whenever I'm a patient, and I'm outraged that hospitals treat them like they are disposable.
@ingothitrust52482 жыл бұрын
Well, that extends to the general public too. We get treated like we're slaves to them when they are admitted, and this was before the pandemic, and now because of the anti-vax/Q'Anon/my freedom comes first movement, a lot of you have taken your anger and frustrations out on us....... It gets harder each day trying to convince ourselves that not all of our patients are going to behave like that when they come to us for help, but you guys have such unrealistic expectations when coming to the hospital. Like the one of nurses said, the H stands for Hospital, NOT Hotel.
@cpgone2 жыл бұрын
@@ingothitrust5248 True... People expect perfect outcomes from a hospital... Aint gonna happen
@FoodRecipes1082 жыл бұрын
I think privatization in health and education is the worst thing
@heatherfraughton73192 жыл бұрын
They really do too. They would rather us experienced nurses just leave, because they can pay new nurses less. But pretty soon you have entire floors run by all new nurses... and it shows in the mortality rate.
@mikeshalinsky47772 жыл бұрын
The nurse talking about the patient soiled in urine. I can’t tell you how many car rides home I’ve cried because of this. Something so simple as helping someone to the bathroom and I just couldn’t do it because I was too busy. It breaks you down after awhile and makes you feel like a bad person.
@Abidjan-weekly2 жыл бұрын
One of my patients managed to pull a bedpan from under her full of bloody feces and threw it across the room. Poop and everything else was everywhere. When I walked in after taking report, her answer to my hello was, “I called so many times and my back was hurting from that thing under me….I still need to be cleaned up.” Thank god her HH was normal…..the previous nurse didn’t even know she was having bloody stool.
@starburst90532 жыл бұрын
Thank u for saying this, I was feeling like a bad person just this past week I couldn't get my work done and I'm crying in front of my co workers feeling insane
@homedoghappiness Жыл бұрын
It's not the nurses' fault. We all know that. It's the criminal system of valuing profits over people, patients and nurses alike.
@Micah-6.8 Жыл бұрын
It never made me feel like a bad person because I know I would have done it if I could have. It just made a angry for being put in that situation in the first place and mistrustful of administration. Unfortunately, it's the patients who suffer most. Other jobs can be found but if someone is sick or injured then they are pretty much stuck in the situation. It's like if they want good patient outcomes, then stop setting up the place for failure and hire some people.
@reldam88 Жыл бұрын
Maybe you feel like a bad person because a good person would refuse to accept a paycheck from a predatory medical system that monetizes the sickness, suffering, and death of human beings. It's called "blood money" everywhere outside the medical industry and the good people have quit already.
@jamiegutierrez13212 жыл бұрын
I graduated from nursing school in the fall of 2019, shortly after, I started my career working in a Pediatric Intensive Care Unit. As a new nurse, I was given assignments that went beyond my level of experience simply because I was another licensed professional who was legally allowed to take care of patients. After working in these environments, I became extremely anxious and at times letting that anxiety fog my critical thinking. Making a mistake is a nurses worst fear, not only because it’ll affect you as a nurse personally and professionally, but could possibly harm the patients that you care for.
@Amanda-gv3jh2 жыл бұрын
I worked 6 months....new career path for me.....as soon as my 6 weeks was up I was up to 5 patients and 1 aid on the floor so we had to do tech job for 4 of the 5 because it was only 2 rns on floor 1 aid......and we were min 20 min from any rapid teams because of our old building location.....absolutely made my anxiety increase so severely and the distrust I have in healthcare runs deeper than it ever did.....its sad
@ViveLaIsrael2 жыл бұрын
I definitely did things I wasn't supposed to do back when I was nursing in the early 2000s, but it had to be done and their was no one else available to do it. Thankfully, there were no negative results, but nurses have to be doctors all the time.
@Sarah-re7cg2 жыл бұрын
It’s like they’re setting you up for failure. This is horrifying.
@carabethel46142 жыл бұрын
I start in the PICU as a new grad nurse in february…. any advice? 😅
@Amanda-gv3jh2 жыл бұрын
@@carabethel4614 just get mentally ready
@CaraMarie13 Жыл бұрын
One of the things that i struggled the most in the first years as a social worker was the open acknowledgement and acceptance of burying us with a high caseload. Like it was so normalized and joked about. Like social workers can do great work in the lives of the people we touch but the amount of work that we are given makes us practically useless.
@brandonburum8279 Жыл бұрын
My limited experiences with hospital social workers has been awful. I had an elderly relative be admitted (various cancer treatments during covid protocols) who also had dementia and kept changing her mind about what treatments she would accept, reject, or imagine. In a short amount of time, we were unable to reach this relative, and even her primary care doc couldn’t (or wouldn’t?) get to her. Instead of letting me (or other relatives) talk to this relative on the phone or visit in person, we kept getting social workers on the phone. Or, we would try to stop by in person to sort out what was happening, only to be sidetracked by social workers. Couldn’t even get basic information that this relative’s health directive said we were supposed to get. Obviously, hospitals use administrators and social workers as buffers and for delay tactics… which is not exactly social work.
@isisbalico6684 Жыл бұрын
This is why I withdrew from my MSW program. Normalized overload and abuse. Even as a student I could see us being conditioned to accept these subpar work conditions. A snake eating it’s tail.
@montanagal6958 Жыл бұрын
Our hospital fired the NICU social service director...
@bow_wow_wow Жыл бұрын
Welcome to planet Earth. Everybody has too much work to do. It's called labor costs.
@mdiego20162 жыл бұрын
My mom has been trying to convince me to get into nursing for the past year and this is exactly why I couldn’t do it. I’m not physically, mentally or emotionally strong enough to deal with this in all honesty. These nurses deserve better and I really hope things change because they are doing a job that we all need to survive in society.
@AwsumCherry2 жыл бұрын
Don’t do it. This video hit the nail on the head, our healthcare system is built like a business, not focused on saving lives. Patients and staff become numbers on a spreadsheet and the fallout is heartbreaking.
@coca14922 жыл бұрын
If you truly want to do it, there are so many other nursing venues, the hospital is not the only place where nurses work. I love it I don’t regret it at all
@dunkdamonk2 жыл бұрын
It's not gonna change. And fyi this is the new corporate way of doing things. This is everywhere. It's a manufactured labor crisis. And then they get to blame it on the workers. When in reality it's not that people don't want to work, it's that most work is getting closer to endentured servitude
@rms46212 жыл бұрын
Dont do it
@coca14922 жыл бұрын
@@dunkdamonk I love my job, they go above and beyond, I couldn’t be more happy. I love my patients. But hey that’s just me I guess everyone is not that lucky. Next I’m thinking about being a aesthetics nurse, can’t wait
@cqbarnieify2 жыл бұрын
As an RN of 34 years who left the profession, I can attest to the fact that hospitals have been putting patients lives in danger for years by understaffing on shifts. This is true no matter if the hospital is for profit or non-profit. This must change!
@pjm69392 жыл бұрын
'comonalitys btween koof 91 and raydiation ingury' please read and understand this review. Thank you.
@seizethedaytime2 жыл бұрын
Why would non-profit hospitals do it? I believe you but I'm trying to understand the situation and understand what motivates it.
@medahenderson30552 жыл бұрын
For profit healthcare only works for the CEOs and Directors ...not sure how is nurses can join together and CHANGE the forced neglect and corruption inside the system , but we NEED to figure it out and get it done!!! ALL of us deserve better situations...too many giving our all and still it's a huge chance taking risk situation every day at work...it's truly terrifying sometimes
@medahenderson30552 жыл бұрын
Seize the daytime, all of healthcare in the US is pre set for a "profit" system...so even if a hospital isn't necessarily paying for huge board salaries, it still has aspects within them that require a large usage of money...like pharmaceuticals/equipment/insurance, and our wonderful government is just waiting to find a loophole to stop payment for some service provided 1 year earlier...that's why we have MOUNTAINS of paperwork that must be done to ensure that it looks like care was done even if it's just on paper...so many DONs /managers don't care how it gets done, just make sure the paperwork says it was completed...(I know this because I worked in nursing management for 1 yr, and saw a lot of dirty manipulation)...all I really know it the system needs to be OVERHAULED
@pjm69392 жыл бұрын
@@medahenderson3055 Find the source of the radiation, shut it down, Covid ends. Simple as that. Instead they have everyone chasing their tales with the 'gain of function' Wuhan nonsense. It is radiation sickness! Everyone is too compartmentalized to ever see the truth and put a stop to it.
@TSWARD-xb9rk2 жыл бұрын
This was an issue in every aspect of Nursing. For decades. I worked Home Health. For years and I WAS REPRIMANDED MANY TIMES for, refusing to take over a certain amount of patients. YEARS PRIOR TO COVID. Then you are labeled insubordinate. Because, I refused to put my patients lives in danger because, my supervisor ( the company REALLY) wanted to see increased $$$$$$$$. However, if something is missed or you do not have enough time to provide QUALITY CARE, YOU will be the person to lose your license. THE EMPLOYER / COMPANIES/ HOSPITALS who, are PUSHING too many patients on you will let it all roll into the Nurse.
@MA-zg2pz2 жыл бұрын
Wow this is 💔. Thank you for doing the right thing!
@MA-zg2pz2 жыл бұрын
@rscmrcmd You are not an authority on nurses day to day job because you have been to the hospital once. you realize your experience is just as Anecdotal as this movie right?
@allieren2 жыл бұрын
This. 100%.
@transitionsnc2 жыл бұрын
100%
@guysumpthin29742 жыл бұрын
Ever since “medical became publicly traded” and “allowed to advertise” (president nixon) , the system is overall of no value to society (the total sum of positives + negatives)
@fringes475 Жыл бұрын
I've been only a nurse for 14 years and I want to quit today. This is the only job that i went home with a shiner and concussion and was told by the manager that it's just part of our job. In the hospital, i was taking care of 6-8 patients. In the nursing home, I'm responsible for 30-40 patients.
@caravanlifenz Жыл бұрын
Sorry to hear that - it's unthinkably horrible and it's not something young people are told about when they sign up for nursing school. I once met a lovely Christian girl who was about to start nursing school (she said God wanted her to do it), and my first thought was whether she'd be prepared to be called the F and C word by angry, drunk patients and junkies. She thought she'd be reading bedtime stories to sick kids.
@bluetickbeagles116 Жыл бұрын
@@caravanlifenz gotta love the naïve that Christianity breeds 🙄🙄
@gigi930111 ай бұрын
When I first became an RN in '96 a man tried to strangle me with a towel while I was putting his shoes on for him. In what other profession is this allowed? I'm currently not working as a nurse and doubt that I'll ever go back. I'd rather wait tables and drive uber/lyft to make the same or more money with better working conditions and more control over my environment. I see it has been a while since your comment so I hope you are in a better work situation now
@1saamor89711 ай бұрын
I'm a Christian and I def didn't expect this. But I'm still gonna go be a nurse. I know I'm needed still because there are others who leave. @@caravanlifenz
@changedforever212 жыл бұрын
As a nurse I have no words to express how true this is. I've been the nurse crying on the way home because I couldn't handle another day of risking my patients' lives, I couldn't handle the corporate greed that was focused on "customer satisfaction" and would punish us when patients abused us because they weren't satisfied with their experience. We are tired, demoralized and done.
@pjm69392 жыл бұрын
'comonalitys btween koof 91 and raydiation ingury' please read and understand this review.
@cataclysmicat95512 жыл бұрын
@@pjm6939 what
@mtn17932 жыл бұрын
@Sincere Yeah. The useless and endless administrators who also pull profits/ fundings away from where they need to be used.
@aflowerthatbloomsinadversity2 жыл бұрын
My nursing director once yelled at me for “not filling out my new admission’s whiteboard”… I had just come out of a different patient’s room, who was dying, and had to perform CPR, bring the patient back, and transfer to ICU… so, how was I going to greet my new patient?? I asked her this. Her response??? “Manage your time better!” Oh, sorry, I’ll just tell my patients they can’t die when I’m getting a new patient. That makes sense.
@mtn17932 жыл бұрын
@@aflowerthatbloomsinadversity Management top heavy = overpaid, lazy and most of all stupid. MBAs are destroying our lives!
@janetttyminski72952 жыл бұрын
I’ve worked 25 years as a nurse. While on night shift in a critical care unit at a university med center, there were only 3 ICU beds open in the ENTIRE hospital. All 3 open beds were in my 8 bed cardiac ICU. We started out the night with 5 patients, so we were staffed with 3 nurses for the night. We pointed out to the nursing supervisor that we would almost certainly get admissions, as the only major hospital in the city. We were told, “We can NOT staff for what MIGHT happen.” During the night we admitted 3 POST-CODE patients! These pts were highly unstable & required 1 to 1 nursing care. It was a nightmare shift with 3 nurses dealing with 3 pts, who were actively trying to DIE. There was no way we could help each other. Our five stable pts got virtually NO CARE during that night. Administration’s response to our distress: “You handled the situation. No one died.” My response: “I QUIT.”
@Belovelyava2 жыл бұрын
Hold your head high! You did the right thing!
@lisam24962 жыл бұрын
I do not blame you for a moment. It's unfair to patients and to nurses to staff so poorly.
@StephenYuan2 жыл бұрын
A truly impossible situation.
@danger261022 жыл бұрын
25 years as a nurse and you have problem dealing for one night?
@janetg.2 жыл бұрын
@@danger26102 She probably many more nights like that, but that really stuck out as the straw that broke the camels back. Been there too!
@kathyw73032 жыл бұрын
I retired early as an RN for this exact reason. I convinced my daugher NOT to go into nursing because of this - she is a speech therapist now and very happy with her career
@lotusgrl4442 жыл бұрын
My son receives speech therapy...Im forever grateful to the profession!
@timp88432 жыл бұрын
We need more speech therapists. Thank you and your Daughter
@cheyj144 Жыл бұрын
My heart goes out to all the nurses out there. Ya know the ones that have a heart for humanity and wiped butts for years as a cna just to be spread thin by hospital admins. Don’t let them take advantage of your love for people. I know I couldn’t do that, so I commend you for everything you do.
@judyh3707 Жыл бұрын
They're not "letting" this happen
@emrej25272 жыл бұрын
I will never forget during my orientation at my first nursing job out of school the administrator said “nurses are our biggest expense”. Hospitals look at nurses as an “expense” that’s what we are to them. What is a hospital without its nurses? I would like to see them go a day with no nurses… an hour… how about just 15 minutes with no nurses.
@foxinasweater23008 ай бұрын
I work in a nursing home and it's wild to me how admin treats staff like a burden and expense and not the #1 asset that keeps them in business
@MaJeSTiCz05 ай бұрын
They would shut down
@Mohankumar-cy2cm4 ай бұрын
Doctors can be replaced by AI or robots. A nurse cannot be replaced by a machine or technology. But that administrator never realises that basic thing. That is the tragedy.
@porchsinging48742 ай бұрын
How about calling us their biggest revenue maintainers? When you get a HUGE return on that expense, it's not really a drain - THEY PROFIT OFF US AND THEIR CEOs GET FAT!
@superstrada68472 жыл бұрын
I have been and still am a cardiologist. Started private practice 1995. What you are seeing here is true. I have seen the entire, slow and steady, change from stand alone hospitals to multi-billion dollar corporate hospital chains. These corporations are using the inherent dedication and oath of nurses, doctors (all staff) to their advantage. Corporate care is policy driven at the expense of its own care givers. My patient load is at max and every minute of the day is packed with "just one more patient." This has gone too far, risky. During the pandemic I found it disgusting and patronizing for a hospital corporation to industrialize the saying; "HEROS WORK HERE." What they were really saying was; "SUCKERS WORK HERE."
@ashvandal56972 жыл бұрын
This is the real truth.
@unndunn12 жыл бұрын
Well said. I’ve been an RN since 1988 and an advanced practice psych NP since 1993. It’s getting worse and worse. The last hospital I worked at didn’t even have a medical director or nursing director.
@kathleennoble72362 жыл бұрын
The primary goal of Obamacare was to wipe out private physician's practices & hospitals. I didn't realize that was necessary to maximize the death of the New World Order's Scamdemic.
@AdrilovessJesus2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!! Suckers is what we are to them!
@michellej56162 жыл бұрын
Don't forget that administration and CMS are watching your patient satisfaction scores, too, doctor.😜
@camthemanis2kool2 жыл бұрын
My girlfriend used to work in the emergency room. Recently, the hospital was purchased by a venture capital firm. ALL ER doctors working there 10+ years were fired because “they were paid too much”. Doctors who had saved lives in the hospital for 30 years were fired or forced to take a 80% pay cut. Who replaced these doctors? New college grads with no experience. Fatalities in the emergency room increased 4x. There is a lawsuit in San Diego about this currently.
@ayoitsindigo17602 жыл бұрын
Their greed will be the downfall 🤦🏻♀️ so sorry
@conkerlive1012 жыл бұрын
Yeah but the CEO got a sweet new golf course in his back yard so all those needless deaths were worth it. He's gotta keep up with his short game after all.
@jackpow20042 жыл бұрын
B.S….no way new college grads with no experience replaced veteran doctors and surgeons. That has to be pure fiction.
@dnrmoore41242 жыл бұрын
@@jackpow2004 don't drink to much of that merica Kool aid
@jjmurphey882 жыл бұрын
And the younger people are less empathetic!
@mistyvaughn5558 Жыл бұрын
Hospitals in the US are a joke!!! I’ve been an RN for over 20 yrs. If the general public knew what went on behind those doors they would stay home! The conditions we are forced to work under would be considered torture in any other field.
@montanagal6958 Жыл бұрын
medical experimentation
@privatecitizen12466 ай бұрын
Oh no, they would not... Who do you think is responsible for the national healthcare assault numbers??? PATIENTS. 3 nurses in the US get assaulted EVERY HOUR. By today's LOSER PATIENTS.
@tourmii2 жыл бұрын
I always wanted to be a nurse, my entire life. Glad I was too broke to go to school for it cause these past 2 years completely changed my mind about it. They’re “sooooo important” but are completely disrespected and neglected. Good job america.
@Grace-ou2yg2 жыл бұрын
If you don't mind me asking, what sort of job are you interested in instead?
@amedori182 жыл бұрын
RN here. Don’t ever entertain joining the profession. If I had to go back, I wouldn’t do it again. Never been so disrespected by the healthcare system.
@vaunniethayer14842 жыл бұрын
I worked as a speech therapist for 23 years in a public school. Loved it until my workload became so unbearable . What hurt more than anything was not being able to give my students all the time and care they deserved. Retired earlier than I wanted to for the sake of my health, felt heartbroken. Greed is at the bottom of so many evils in this world.
@cpgone2 жыл бұрын
U should of worked for free then... all this "for profit" demonetization is laughable. That said , this country should have medicare for all.
@shalmaratrethewey96182 жыл бұрын
@@cstuartdc I work12 hour shifts and prefer them. Most nurses I know do as well. The biggest problem with 8 hour shifts is the 3-11 shift. It is really hard to staff. Only people without children will work them. If you have school age children you would only get to spend 2 days a week with them. The problem isn't the 12 hours it's having to work extra shifts because there aren't enough staff or having to stay late to catch up on charting you didn't have time for. I worked at a hospital that the staff badges recorded whenever you were in the room. I used to joke if they could just record audio while I was there I wouldn't need to be stuck at a computer. I always call out medications as I open them so if patients have questions or concerns they can say so as I open them. My meds would then be charted as well. The only problem would be the patient with 15 pills that listens as I carefully call the med name, dose and what it's prescribed for and wait til I have all of them in the cup, look at them then ask "which one of the white ones is the fluid pill? I don't want to take that one." as I mentality face palm.
@camillehill87952 жыл бұрын
Speech therapist overload!!!....how about being a teacher workload compared to speech therapist …Teachers with 150 students , report cards, parent conferences, accountable for test scores, having mainstreamed students and required to have a separate lesson plan for each, bus duty, lunch duty, recess duty, PTA meetings. When a speech therapist was absent the classroom teacher had the student for that time period. When a speech therapist's student was absent the speech therapist had free time at that time slot. None of the speech therapist at the 10 different schools I have worked at had any of the above.
@MelissaR7842 жыл бұрын
@@cpgone Health and Human Resources controls our hospitals. Have a family full of nurses who've all retired or left the profession since ACA has been fully implemented.
@LulaMae212 жыл бұрын
@@MelissaR784 The problems in nursing pre-date the ACA by many, many years.
@MrsC482 жыл бұрын
I was in the hospital for 3 weeks on bed rest with my son. The nurses always commented that I was the easiest patient because I never asked for anything. I knew they were busy and overworked and didn't want to bother them. During that 3 weeks and then my son in the NICU for 8 weeks, all of the nurses were wonderful. All of them. The patience and understanding and support we received from the nurses, I will never forget. Nurses are special people, treat them with respect!
@trishquinliven Жыл бұрын
I started in nursing in 1966 as a nurse’s aide, then LPN, then RN. This has been going on since I started. Why is greed allowed to do so much harm?
@veronica112234 Жыл бұрын
We live in a capitalist economy. Profit first. So so so sad.
@thersten Жыл бұрын
@@veronica112234 also nursing is primarily dominated by women. You can tell this country doesn't respect women from watching the 2016 election.
@marvinmartin4692 Жыл бұрын
People voting for gop! That’s how it started! And continues!
@homedoghappiness Жыл бұрын
Because our economy is based on capitalism. We're taught that greed and profits are good instead of treating people humanely and looking at the much bigger picture than the short term benefits of profits.
@haruhisuzumiya6650 Жыл бұрын
Greed is the mind virus destroying industries
@Petruskinhap9722 жыл бұрын
I am so glad this is FINALLY coming to light. I have been a nurse for 10 years. I had nightmares almost every night, severe anxiety before going into work. I thought I was just weak. The truth is we were all feeling it. We were abused from all sides. Yelled at and sometimes physically abused by patients, forced to work severely understaffed, have management gaslighting us, calling us at 5am begging us to come into work on our days off, belittling us. I left and I am now a nurse care manager working from home. Something needs to be done asap. It’s a felony to attack a bus driver in NYC, but if a patient attacks a nurse, management asks us to write incident reports on what we did wrong. There needs to be staff limits and laws in place to protect us. We are not hero. We are human . We need to be treated as such or the future of bedside nursing is not looking too great. They are offering us all this money begging us to come to work and most of us who left would NEVER go back to bedside.
@lilajane32 жыл бұрын
I am a retired nurse and I would have anxiety about the workload and wether I could manage to struggle through it before every shift for 40 years. What other profession does this happen to?
@seebarry40682 жыл бұрын
I’d got to a point where I would pull over in the car and throw up on my way to start my shift at the private hospital I worked.
@karenpennington50732 жыл бұрын
Absolutely! I would have a feeling of dread and cramping in the pit of my stomach walking into the hospital,every experienced nurse had the same symptoms! Other than law enforcement officers ,firemen,I can’t think of another profession that does this to your sprit and body!
@roymaddocks31842 жыл бұрын
Violence against health care workers is unacceptable
@karenpennington50732 жыл бұрын
Evorider 36 You are so correct! Forgive me for that oversight. Our soldiers made America!
@amyconway90352 жыл бұрын
My mother desperately tried to find a way out of nursing during her 30-year career. I lost track of how many hobbies she tried to turn into a business as her ticket out. She called nursing The Golden Handcuff. She made six figures, but hated her job. I wish I had taken her attempts to leave more seriously, now I am a nurse who dreams of a way out.
@kimhrubesch61432 жыл бұрын
I am there. RN for 25 years at bedside. When Covid hit, I quit my job. I was going to do medical transcription from home because I had some experience with technical writing. When that didn't work, I did travel nursing. I love taking care of patients, I really do. Leaving nursing is harder than one thinks, because I didn't choose a career that is enjoyable AND pays well. I live in a small town and there aren't many options.
@renehinojosa19622 жыл бұрын
I left the RT profession for a public school teaching job at a time when teaching was awesome. Then the education field became heavily politicized so I left for the lesser of the two evils after 8 years. I had a ticket out of the medical profession for sure but ended up at another profession that became even worse. If you must choose wisely, don't make the same mistake I did and get a teaching job. It'll be the even worse, trust me on that.
@iNeedSleep142 жыл бұрын
@@kimhrubesch6143 nursing doesn't pay well?
@purplegirl80362 жыл бұрын
Is there a way for nurses to start something together? Or maybe you guys Cody get under a doctor? It’s time to start voting for some new laws.
@matilda44062 жыл бұрын
@@renehinojosa1962 Aaawwwh !! Thank you for the warning, much appreciated.
@beckyp89142 жыл бұрын
I’ve been a critical care nurse for 16 yrs and this video is on point. The corporate greed is outrageous…. Understaffed and under paid we are as medical professionals.
@jorgegiacchetti87192 жыл бұрын
hello, i'm Jorge, a pilot from Lima peru, working with LATAM airline. i came across your page here through the utube suggestion for me so i thought to write to you. where are you from? Write me when you can and do have a nice day and may God bless you.
@derekdempsey8506 Жыл бұрын
Your length of service is irrelevant in your comment
@fidelisetverus Жыл бұрын
Why is her length of service irrelevant with what she had to say?
@CTA-- Жыл бұрын
Nurses aren't underpaid yall need to get a grip for real. Nurses are just as greedy as the corporations that rule them.
@annstewart619411 ай бұрын
They don't care. They know the problem. I was a CNA for 15years. 1 aide on the floor with 40 people. You do the math. They choose money over life.
@MadKitty1023 күн бұрын
Of course it's rough - health care or long term care or hospital care - money is the priority = maximum profit , like anything or anywhere else. One way to maximize profit is to minimize payroll. If it can be done ... if it can be gotten away with , then it'll be done.
@alenegonebad12592 жыл бұрын
100 percent true. I left hospital nursing 8 years ago and would never go back. It was an abusive, horrible environment.
@flagirl332 жыл бұрын
It really is.. It was an extreme eye opening experience for me when I worked in a hospital. I was a PCT, planning on eventually going for my RN.. After 9 months of being in that brutal environment, not even making $13/hr, I went back to manufacturing and have never regretted it.
@jseahmed24322 жыл бұрын
My wife got Abuse everyday for 25 yrs to the point of almost dyeing their at JMH in Miami from a stroke .
@will_the_don2 жыл бұрын
What do you do now? I’m a nurse and not sure how much longer I can hold out
@flagirl332 жыл бұрын
@@will_the_don As someone who at one point wanted to become a nurse, on one hand I'm glad I didn't and on the other, sad that the profession that people worked very hard to get, are being driven out by such a toxic environment..
@yulianagonzalez24282 жыл бұрын
I’m sorry for you. Thanks God you aren’t there anymore
@Tatlone2 жыл бұрын
As a teacher I feel you. You're called a hero only so they can demand heroic levels of patience and resiliency when they could easily make it manageable and livable. People shouldn't have to be heroes to exist in a job. I can't pray enough for you all in healthcare.
@michellej56162 жыл бұрын
Don't you wanna throat punch everybody who calls you a hero but doesn't want nurses/teachers to be paid a living wage? Maybe that's just me.
@Questionablexfun2 жыл бұрын
This ☝🏻
@danarzechula37692 жыл бұрын
I'm going to quote you on that. People should not have to be heroes to exist in any job
@bigtv34282 жыл бұрын
Your only a hero until their done with you. Then you never did enough for the company. Or you could of done better etc. its insane.
@Tatlone2 жыл бұрын
@@michellej5616 It's not just you. We just feel compelled to value our oppressive jobs too much to act on that urge.
@djdowning25612 жыл бұрын
As an ex ER Nurse who left the profession 18 years ago I’m ashamed that our hospitals still practice the same staffing BS as when I was at the bedside. Best advice I ever gave people was to live at your loved ones bedside to make sure they are getting the care they need. With COVID, it’s a broken model
@hmarie24942 жыл бұрын
Sad for those who don't have an advocate to sit at their bedside. Covid really made that impossible as well.
@meowzy24392 жыл бұрын
insane. edit: not talking about you, the conditions. lol. drs, nurses, and staff should be trustworthy. not somebody that your family needs to be wary of. to the point of them having to guard you. them being there to make sure you even get some water, let alone more complicated things.
@katlinville88072 жыл бұрын
We did with my father.. I knew though because I was in school to be an HCA.. sad. The nurses dreaded our room because we wanted the best for them. I tried always getting flowers and gift cards for my nurses afterwards but it isn’t enough. As a patient’s family, we could still see all the the nurses struggling. Hospitals need reform, bad.
@meowzy24392 жыл бұрын
@@katlinville8807 why did they dread your room if you were treating them well?
@michellej56162 жыл бұрын
And when we don't allow family to be at the bedside anymore because of Covid...you see what happens.
@10kjavonne59 Жыл бұрын
This is not just hospital settings it’s in nursing homes mental health wards correctional facilities and even home health care agencies.
@Jes.Because Жыл бұрын
Yes! I'm a Therapist and it's getting overwhelming with agencies putting more and more clients on us and saying we just can't find people or my favorite, "We're saving lives, you can't leave your clients." Gaslighting at it finest.
@leilanigreenwood5064 Жыл бұрын
I know about Nursing Homes and the overwhelming patient load and always working short staffed
@amd9592 Жыл бұрын
Home Health Agencies, as an HHA, some patients complain we do nothing, want us to Mop, Sweep, cook for entire families, laundry, clean the mess of others who are cooking, all in one shift, and we get verbal abuse, some physically abused and get bullied by both Coordinators and the Patients, and other Home health aides. Light housekeeping is not cleaning years of gunk that came before us, yet Coordinators don't even treat us with respect, and Agencies do not quantify or define lighthousekeeping when some of those same agencies have Housekeepers with their own salaries and not just HHA's or PCAs. At least Nurses are in the public setting with other nurses who they can talk about the things that happen to them while on shift.. while HHAs have to be alone on their shifts and if any physical thing happens, we are on our own, once 4 P.M or the weekends appear there isn't any kind of help or anyone backing us up. I feel it's the lack of awareness to humanity that is the root of the problem, and the greed of healthcare in general, not just in Hospital settings.
@orbs10622 жыл бұрын
Atlanta here. Retired psychologist. On 3/1/20, at the beginning of Covid, I suffered a heart attack. Every single nurse, doctor, health aide and every tech was ABSOLUTELY wonderful. I worked in trauma for years. Don't mistreat your healthcare workers, they are your lifeline. I would like to say thank you to all the people who saved my life and all those I will never meet, who care for and save other people every day. You're wonderful. ❤️
@AdmoreMethod2 жыл бұрын
We (meaning those patients whose lives have been saved by these amazing heroes) need to stand up and FIGHT for these nurses and doctors who FOUGHT for us during our most trying time.
@nutsackmania2 жыл бұрын
@@AdmoreMethod lol ok spaz
@marshahowes87562 жыл бұрын
As some who had 2 discs obliterated by a patient assault in 2000, I can only imagine what the assaults are like now. After 4 surgeries, I went back to work for about 6 years then had to seek SSD. I stand behind all the nurses and ancillary staff, in this time of COVID. NO one deserves to be assaulted....fullstop
@greggarcia62942 жыл бұрын
An unfortunate experience, but believe it or not, from a statistical standpoint, hospital staff are more likely to assault or unlawfully imprison patients than the other way around.
@terry63lee2 жыл бұрын
speaking from experience on both accounts: one time kicked in the head by an unruly patient so hard that i thought that i'd been kicked in the head by a mule. i was dizzy for hours and probably received a concussion but because we were understaffed, i went ahead and toughed it out because i had one hundred diapers to change that night!!
@marshahowes87562 жыл бұрын
@@terry63lee I hear you on that. Been there too. This injury however was a result of a pt. pushing me over the side rails, backwards. He was mad cause the girls got him up and sat him in a chair, putting the bed in high position and rails up. It was on a hospice unit at the VA and he passed 3 days later(head and neck CA) I hope you are doing well now
@terry63lee2 жыл бұрын
@@marshahowes8756 thankyou for all of your work you did. and many prayers for you
@marshahowes87562 жыл бұрын
@@terry63leethe same goes for you. I personally am grateful to be retired and now on much needed disability. However, I do miss it. If you're still in the profession...stay safe
@redhedhik-chik25102 жыл бұрын
Nurse here 32 yrs. This made me cry. I've left my shift so heartbroken I literally could not talk. Some of my nursing yrs were spent working in prison where there were 1 to 2 nurses per 1500 inmates. Ty for producing the truth.
@kittenmittens4387 Жыл бұрын
Great documentary! When I was an LPN, many people were shocked when I tried to explain that there is no nurse shortage in the US. It's literally a shortage of positions caused by corporate greed. This is not a problem isolated to hospitals. There are RN graduates who have to move to towns 3-4hrs away just to find full time jobs. I had no problem leaving the medical industry and never looked back. Some of my patients cried because I was caring and good at my job. But the level of corporate greed I faced daily was absolutely demeaning and disgusting. Patients are nothing more than assembly line products to bill insurance. If you spend too much time on a critical patient who needs more care than others, then you are a liability. Meanwhile you are still accountable for the care of patients, even if the medical directors/staffers make it literally impossible to administer treatment safely. They will throw you under the bus without hesitation. One NP left because the company wanted to make her signature into a stamp so that other employees could simply sign off on things for her. They weren't interested in hiring other doctors or NPs to take on the load. Just finding more shortcuts.
@homedoghappiness Жыл бұрын
Why does capitalism say that greed is good?
@homedoghappiness Жыл бұрын
The system is rigged against the people who actually want to help people and benefits people who want to hurt people for the sake of profits. What to do now?
@katherinechadwick828 Жыл бұрын
Very well stated “patients are assembly line items to bill insurance.” That is perfectly stated!!! Also, Insurance reimbursements dictate the “level of care” patients receive. This includes whether or not they see a doctor or a mid level, how long they wait for an appointment and how long it takes to schedule surgery. Corporate greed has created a two tiered customer service line that’s looks a lot like coach verses first class. And providers are nothing more than the machines private equity firms invest in to produce $$$ to line someone else’s pockets! Why it is legal for private practices and hospitals to sell to PE firms is baffling!!! It goes against all medicine and nursing are supposed to stand for. How is reducing a person’s right to treatment based on their insurance plan doing no harm? How is not accepting Medicare fair and justified? Doctors have been bought and so have many midlevels in private practice but at least the doctors received HUGE cash payouts when they signed over their rights.
@Deana_A Жыл бұрын
This is true I work in a nursing home and every patient that dies they just fill the bed smh
@abbasabdeali3239 Жыл бұрын
@@homedoghappiness my question too...what to do in d face of organised crime greed and indifference?? Maybe care on a one to one basis....
@Alexa-lj4bm2 жыл бұрын
Another good point to touch on is what the hospitals pay the nurses. I have been a nurse for six years, you will be working in unsafe conditions for your patients and your license. I know of a few hospitals that wouldn’t even give nurses a 1% raise the year of 2020. When COVID initially spread through the country, each nurse was terrified in COVID rooms. Most doctors wouldn’t even go into them. While we were out of N95 masks, being told it’s okay to wear a bandanna, hospitals couldn’t even care to give a 50 cent raise of compensation. I worked as a nurse in PA and was living paycheck to paycheck and each year in the newspaper we saw that the CEO would be walking away with millions. Hospitals have the money to pay nurses they chose to leave them understaffed and underpaid.
@davidanalyst6712 жыл бұрын
I agree with you. HOSPITALS PAY TOO MUCH TO NURSES. TWO YEARS AND A CERT DOESNT EARN YOU 70K in ANY OTHER FIELD IN ANY COUNTRY ON ANY PLANET. HOSPITALS CHARGE TOO MUCH AS WELL. THE ENTIRE USA MEDICAL SYSTEM IS ALL A BUNCH OF SCHEMING MARTIN SHKRELIS
@Kimmie42442 жыл бұрын
@@davidanalyst671 People have no idea what nurses are going through. No amount is ever enough for what they do!!!
@augustacorns2 жыл бұрын
@@davidanalyst671 Most hospitals require a four-year degree. If nurses have a two-year degree, it is not a certificate. If you had any idea what nurses do, you would never say what you said. I hope you’re never in a position to have a nurse be the one saving your life.
@erickanew2 жыл бұрын
Or you reached the max. Just hard to believe everyone is at the max rate so no one gets raises
@erickanew2 жыл бұрын
@@davidanalyst671 lol 2 years is an associate degree and you have to take a licensure. I have a bachelor's degree. I get 123G a year we should get more than that. Life in danger constantly, covid, prisoners, tb, etc
@TheTREVOR622 жыл бұрын
I'm an ICU nurse from Massachusetts and this video really encompasses what nurses are going through. I quit my job in December of last year and left for a travel position because I figured if I was going to suffer, at least I should be compensated properly. There is NO nursing shortage, only a shortage of nurses willing to work at the bedside. Why? because of the unrealistic, ridiculous, and dangerous expectations placed on nurses at the bedside. An impossible amount of multitasking, an absurd amount of documentation in place to protect hospitals from lawsuits, and a lack of support staff. It's unbelievable that my main goal in my career is to somehow position myself financially to leave my profession.
@johnberry28772 жыл бұрын
Multitasking is supposed to be some kind of asset. Or, that’s what we are told. However, it is an invitation to disaster. The human brain is designed to focus efficiently on one thing at a time. Nursing is a multitasking 💩show.
@dianaahuche8802 жыл бұрын
@@johnberry2877 Thanks for that knowledge... the human brain is designed to focus on one task at a time. Very important for me, I use my brain a lot and thought I should train it to do so much, and it hurst. So, thanks!
@dianaahuche8802 жыл бұрын
Oh no, sorry to hear that. Stay strong and transcend that negative effects/energy 💜
@Step1-go2 жыл бұрын
all in crypto bro!
@BlackGirlLovesAnime62 жыл бұрын
@Danger Mouse and that’s when the hospitals will take this seriously
@MR-zq5gt2 жыл бұрын
I don’t even have words .. I am a nurse and I’ll tell you what .. nursing school never prepared me for the near constant verbal abuse, physical abuse, and sexual abuse I receive from patients not to mention the god-awful staffing they nobody seems to care to fix… and sadly the one doctor on our unit who advocated tirelessly for us -even writing the chief of nursing etc warning them that morale was low and that staffing was egregious and something needed to be done got fired bc the other MDs felt threatened by his advocating for us nurses ..
@jhariette2 жыл бұрын
I true!!!
@gigigigi94792 жыл бұрын
Slave profession
@flakgun1532 жыл бұрын
Countries with universal healthcare have way fewer nurses per Capita...
@ItsWorkingTogetherForMyGood2 жыл бұрын
This hits home
@pysq82 жыл бұрын
Yes, the whole system is sick... And it makes it unnecessarily hard to fit in the health or care in healthcare.
@melmel8907 Жыл бұрын
THANK YOU! There is NOT a shortage of nurses. There never had been. There IS. a shortage of hospitals willing to train and staff nurses! #TRUTH
@kweeksw2 жыл бұрын
Started crying while watching this because right now my staff to nurse ratio is 14:1 and sometimes I don't see a patient for hours if they're not actively dying. It feels like I only have time to throw pills at my people and run to the next. Sometimes an entire day goes where no nurse is on the schedule at all and we're having to be begged to come in on our days off, having to weigh our own health vs our patients, and calculate if we can even give decent care after 50 hours a week. Every day I see the girls I went to nursing school with post on Facebook that they're quitting the profession. And every day I get told we're getting another admit despite my CNA being out sick with covid and me being 2 hours behind on the morning med pass. But somehow I have to get it all done because if not me, who will?
@user-4642 жыл бұрын
And of course.... you have to get it ALL done on time or YOU will be written up..
@lisaeischens23522 жыл бұрын
The dreaded word Admission!!They throw this at you when you’re already buried in work only to have to go through everything involved in admitting someone. Do your nurse managers help with this? When you’re passing meds there is no time to admit someone by yourself. These places just abuse the staff to no end and wonder why people quit. The last LTC place I worked as CNM had 16 LPN’s quit and I went on medical leave after only 6 months and never worked again. They will push you to the breaking point. I hope that you’re able to ask for help or make a complaint if there’s no help. Then when the state comes in for surveys, all the big wigs stay and help answer lights that they never do normally and blame the staff for deficiencies when they have to cut corners or the work would never get done.
@banzy53872 жыл бұрын
OMG that is horrible 😢
@andykishore2 жыл бұрын
This whole video feels tense in a good way.
@Zizzyyzz2 жыл бұрын
If it's an impossible situation, get *OUT!*
@sysmixy3352 жыл бұрын
This is honestly the most stressful situation you can be in. You want to leave your job because its driving you crazy, but you can’t in a moral sense because it’d be contributing to the understaffing problem, your stressed fellow nurses who are facing the same exact dilemmas as you, and the withering of patients.
@elonever.2.0712 жыл бұрын
That is exactly what these narcissistic administrators are counting on.
@ahenwaa51332 жыл бұрын
If a nurse left their job, they would just hire someone to replace them. The problem is not nurses leaving, the problem is that they won't hire more than the maximum number the hospital has decided on, so the cycle continues, a new nurse comes in, gets burned out eventually and leaves. They don't care about nurses leaving, there's always one ready to replace them. It's that notion of, "if you don't like your job, you can leave"
@elonever.2.0712 жыл бұрын
@@ahenwaa5133 This is true and because people converse more than they ever did through social media they are getting wise to the game and in time will strategize their way to better working conditions. My friend has a girlfriend that just graduated from nursing a while back and got a job at a senior facility. Her manager tried to push her past her limits and she threatened to quit and eventually did. They called her up a few months later and she negotiated more money and told them up front that she has a social life, kids and will not be pushed past her comfort zone. So far it seems to be working.
@elonever.2.0712 жыл бұрын
@@sysmixy335 It is my friend's girl friend and yea she is ballsy. And that is what it takes. If they know that you are overly empathetic they will grind you right into the ground.
@mysticalstylings24562 жыл бұрын
At my facility, we can't staff our community clinics yet our CEO makes over 8 million a yr... we're a not for profit
@haleyhand23412 жыл бұрын
This is heartbreaking. Our country is failing everyone so hard. I don’t know how people can treat their nurses so poorly.
@amamamamamama972 жыл бұрын
As someone from Asia who worked in healthcare let me say, this is a global issue. Corporate greed and extreme capitalism has taken over making the working conditions terrible for everyone else
@jayr10022 жыл бұрын
Our country is failing because these nurses want easy life. Look everyone else in world. Look in China and india, the nurses work much harder and for less money.
@geneanthony34212 жыл бұрын
@@jayr1002 Nurses do not have an easy life and China or India are not places to aspire to. Nurses do get paid well and good for them.
@d.e.b.b57882 жыл бұрын
Oh, that's easy! MONEY. And who is going to get it. Managers decide, not doctors or nurses. Guess who makes out the best? Managers, owners, and stock holders, NOT patients. That's how it happens; greed. In America, healthcare is a business first and only. They only pretend to care about patients with all the surveys and lying. Then they send any nurse home once they meet the minimum number for their staffing.
@d.e.b.b57882 жыл бұрын
@@jayr1002 So if it's so easy, why don't you do it?
@elainepalmer7979 Жыл бұрын
As a nurse who has been away from bedside nursing for over 15 yrs, this is difficult to watch. I pray for my colleagues and encourage each of you to protect you!
@queens65832 жыл бұрын
I am a critical care nurse with 43 years of ICU experience. I retired 4 months before covid hit and I thank god everyday that I did. There has ALWAYS been staff shortages and horrible nurse:patient ratio's. Nurses make up the bulk of a hospital's budget and without us nurses the hospital cannot function. It is always the first budget to be cut when the hospital claims to be in the "red. It is a well documented fact that a patients outcome in the ICU is directly related to the nursing care received. Less nurses = increased mortality. Nurses are ALWAYS understaffed and we are told to do the best we can, but if something does go wrong we are the first ones hung out to dry. Nurses are the ones that are expected to do the jobs that no one else wants to do whether it's cleaning a bed, floor, fixing equipment malfunctions, transport patients. I have even used my own money to run across the street to the deli because the cafeteria is closed and a patient is hungry. Perhaps the management at the top need to take a pay cut and less financial perks. When the CEO or CFO retire they get the best healthcare insurance, stock options and generous bonuses. Every nursing contract we fight for includes fighting for better nurse:pt. ratios and nothing ever changes or improves and I've been doing this for 43 years. I see and hear what my fellow nurses are going through with covid and it breaks my heart. Nurses want to give excellent nursing care, it's why we chose nursing. Covid has killed many of us and made even more sick. We are verbally and physically abused and there is no other industry that this would be tolerated. If a nurse were to talk back to a patient or their family who are abusive we would be reprimanded by a supervisor or even fired. Things need to change and maybe the government needs to do something to force hospitals to change.
@p1nesap2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for 43 years of service. That's a lot.
@shawnaweesner37592 жыл бұрын
You think hospitals are bad now, wait until the government gets involved!
@shawnaweesner37592 жыл бұрын
If you think things are bad now, wait until the government gets involved!
@iashakezula2 жыл бұрын
43 years in CCU , you are a trooper. I will not survive in that unit .
@mariefc85042 жыл бұрын
Well said. The medical system is broken, changes have to be made. The question is, will they?
@tw70862 жыл бұрын
Nurse practitioner I talked to yesterday said, "This is a money hungry admin issue, not a health issue." when speaking about the pandemic.
@jseahmed24322 жыл бұрын
@SCW very true and with less care and after three days , you are released and close to broke .
@gregbridges19272 жыл бұрын
My girlfriend is a nurse here in Australia same thing happens here to. Top heavy administration no boots on the ground? Politicians getting pay rises and putting nurses doctors cleaners the list goes on and on out of work they must be held accountable for crimes against humanity. My Hart goes to all you had working careing poeple.🌠
@The_Eastbound_Hyena2 жыл бұрын
@SCW that was one of the most anecdotal pieces of tripe I've read in a long time. There's no admin problem because your "two friends" were (allegedly) the most noble creatures ever to walk the floor of a hospital? Please.
@gregbridges19272 жыл бұрын
@SCW sorry I was wrong with administration i ment director and you are truly right in wat you are saying 💯
@maritesmcdonald49552 жыл бұрын
Totally agree. A lot of people are blinded from all the lies of the government and the media.
@GirlNextMeow2 жыл бұрын
I just became a nurse in 2019 and I'm already scared that I made a very bad mistake in my career direction. Constantly understaffed, patients always dying because there aren't enough of us there, feeling like it's your fault even though you know it's really not, administrator's making you feel like it's your fault anyway. Safe staffing ratios are possible. Very possible. But the greed of these companies won't allow it.
@victoriaaish2 жыл бұрын
I just graduated from nursing school and I am feeling that way now. I experienced understaffing during my capstone course. I can't imagine working on that Med Surg unit. They were pushing me to apply once I obtain my license. I told them in all honesty that I will not because I refuse to be burnt out as a new nurse.
@deborahdean88672 жыл бұрын
The system is crashing, so hang on, changes will happen . Just remember to stay faithful to your nursing principles. Try changing to nursing homes for experience. It might be better. Check for jobs at clinics, nursing homes .
@shellieh6852 жыл бұрын
You can also try specialty nursing, out-patient, schools, private duty, psych, etc. Conditions are better, but the pay is way less. I have done all those things. I still go to facilities to keep my skills sharp, but I reduced my hours to part time as it was just too much & caused health problems when I was full time. Hang in there, find your niche, patients still need us, but you need to take care of yourself so that you can continue to take care of others. God bless!
@LulaMae212 жыл бұрын
Don't be afraid to look for a better position, or try something new-- there's lots of travel opportunities right now if you have the skill set! Don't let your job cause you to hate nursing, burn out, etc. Your health (mental/physical/emotional/spiritual) comes first.
@ilublushizn2 жыл бұрын
An education in health sciences is never a bad mistake, it will be helpful in living life, whatever direction you choose. Corporate greed is hard to dodge but you may possibly find a job where both your patient's health and your self-care are sustainable. All the best.
@jill6979 Жыл бұрын
Okay, next part of this conversation.... How can WE as patients (consumers) help hold them accountable? Can we demand nurses without overage patient count for our own safety? If we all do more of this, will they listen? I just stopped nursing school, as I am horrified at the view on the horizon.
@ciello___8307 Жыл бұрын
As the video showed- vote for laws/propositions that put actual limits on patients per nurse- hold the hospitals accountable!
@scootergirl3662 Жыл бұрын
@@ciello___8307 Yes, that’s part of it. But we shouldn’t wait until laws get past to do anything about it. I think they have a point. For me personally, whenever I am in a situation where I know I am dealing with an understaffed place, I am just as understanding and flexible as possible
@marvinmartin4692 Жыл бұрын
Yeah good luck with that!
@gojohnnygo2773 Жыл бұрын
Be patient and respectful. Understand that if we aren’t seeing you often it’s because someone else is worse off. And if you’re not doing well and we’re still not seeing you, still means someone else is worse off but now you’re suffering more and something can be missed. All these issues apply to doctors and providers as well and they’re just as burnt out and stressed from patient loads. Hospitals DO NOT CARE about you or anyone except money. If you complain to them about staffing they WILL ASK US WHY WE ARENT DOING OUR JOB. Their immediate reaction is to pull the assigned staff to that patient into HR and interrogate until they decide who told the patient that staffing ratios aren’t safe and reprimand them. Laws won’t be passed. More lives will be lost, maybe someone you love. Health care is and will continue to collapse dividing us further so we continue fighting eachother instead of the fractured and faltered governments and execs.
@americandissident9062 Жыл бұрын
Patients can’t do anything in the hospital about it. Call your reps and tell them you want laws that dictate higher pay and better staffing ratios.
@calicocritterscrafts8862 жыл бұрын
Please remember that the loss of these knowledgeable nurses means a loss of passed on knowledge to us nursing students. CARE WILL SUFFER!
@crazycatladyjo26882 жыл бұрын
Amen.
@Zizzyyzz2 жыл бұрын
@Les ArEnA good number of the "less experienced" nurses will hightail it out of the profession after they realize it's not what tv shows glamorize it to be.
@trainablemonkey99122 жыл бұрын
Are you saying nursing school does not adequately train you to do the job?
@SincerelyLexy2 жыл бұрын
That’s exactly what’s happening. The seasoned nurses are retiring or getting clinic jobs and then you have a floor staffed with new-grads and higher incidences… it’s a shame.
@formerfundienowfree42352 жыл бұрын
@@trainablemonkey9912 nursing school is a learner’s permit. The real learning starts at the bedside. Everything is REALLY specialized now.
@GRACE123ROXS7112 жыл бұрын
As an Australian nurse-to-be, it is heartbreaking to learn that there are no restrictions on nurse:patient allocations. In our public hospitals, AM and PM shifts are 1:4 and night shifts are 1:6-8. Nursing is a tough, tough gig, and having no regulations sounds like a nightmare. It is devastating to see so many nurses considering walking away due to highly unethical management. Sending love to all my US nurses, you are all so brilliant
@no_decaf2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@BrittneyTukums2 жыл бұрын
You should switch careers now. I wouldnt wish nursing upon my worst enemy. Hospital nursing at least. You will see, unfortunately.
@cheryll95802 жыл бұрын
don't do it
@linanicolia13632 жыл бұрын
The smart ones are leaving.......
@alexalexides89472 жыл бұрын
All healthcare in the US is unethical. They can once again put you in prison for being unable to pay what some corporate chain hospital bills you for, well, usually not very much.
@akirebara2 жыл бұрын
I wonder if some of the Filipino nurses they tried to talk to for this video was pressured to not say anything. I know for a fact that some of my Filipino friends are pressured not only by the management but also by their own families. Filipino culture tends to say "keep your head down, don't complain, and just keep working." And it's so sad.
@My_Garmonbozia2 жыл бұрын
I absolutely believe they declined being involved in this video. My family is Filipino and being half Filipino, I see the divide in the way my family or friends of family are treated in the healthcare industry because of the pervasive culture that sometimes follows Filipinos across the sea. Filipinos, or, much like any immigrant looking to give themselves and their families a better life in their transition to the US, may often find themselves shying away from the idea of conflict despite it being in their best interest. The idea of maintaining subservience to a behemoth like the healthcare industry is shocking and all too close for comfort to me. The fear of being homeless and unable to care for one's family absolutely plays in the mind of many immigrant workers in the Healthcare industry. It is time for a change.
@akirebara2 жыл бұрын
@@My_Garmonbozia It's so hard when even your family will just say "Just pray to god to make it better." I feel you on this. I'm not in the healthcare industry but whenever I talk about my bosses putting so much work on me, this is their go-to reply. Or the other "Be thankful that you have this job, there are millions in the Philippines that would not complain if they were in your position."
@spankyharland98452 жыл бұрын
so true, I work with many Filipino nurses and I can see the abuse management inflicts on them and they just don't complain and take it as part of their job description. Some of our nurse managers go to nazi nursing administration training....they are horrible managers.
@sab-nm9di2 жыл бұрын
we family in the Philippines that always need money so we have no choice but to work even if it means getting constantly walked on by management. i hear many cases of filipino maids in the middle east who stay through abuse because they need the money. some even died.
@nedsbc91042 жыл бұрын
Catholic position on C-19 vax kzbin.info/www/bejne/j2mqYX2ofLSXrqc
@brendamann6106 Жыл бұрын
It’s not just nurse to patient ratios but the work of lifting and moving them for care. One nurse can’t move a 150-200 pound + patient. If they are small with fractures they need more than one person to give care. The administration included aides in with the staffing ratios. We were left with more patients, to help each other we had to go away from our patients to help. I was a nurse 40 years. I remember how much better it was before the corporate model and profits, market shares became the goal.
@marvinmartin4692 Жыл бұрын
That’s the core of the problem!!!
@domingoguerrero37532 жыл бұрын
I have held several tech positions in hospitals for almost 40 years, and what these nurses are saying is absolutely true.
@MrJhchrist2 жыл бұрын
Were the tech positions chronically undestaffed?
@aqualane12 жыл бұрын
As a Psych nurse, patients can punch you in the face with no real consequences. And the patients know it.
@wannabecarguy2 жыл бұрын
One of our local hospitals. The CEO took home 30 million in 3 years. Scripps.
@johnthompson94092 жыл бұрын
Hi Lucy, I have been a nurse in the ER setting for nearly 20 years. Everything stated in your interview is factually correct. I have m-a-n-y stories from both a civilian RN’s perspective and now as an active duty nurse in the Air Force. Covid wasn’t the problem. It made the problem worse. The greed is out of control. The staff negligence absolutely affects care delivery at the patients bedside. It’s greed of money, power, prestige, accreditations and reimbursements. Understand that ALL specialties i.e providers, pharmacy, ancillary are impacted in the same manner as your interview highlights.
@valeriegadsden78982 жыл бұрын
AMEN!!!
@TheSarahJane332 жыл бұрын
I’m not a nurse, but I said this about why nurses are leaving at the beginning of the pandemic. All kinds of nasty things were said to me and I couldn’t believe people got so upset over the truth. The media has made people rabid.
@vicwei43022 жыл бұрын
Covid uncovered what has been going on for decades, I have had my pinch, punch, jab stories too. I started working back when even the doctors would disrespect and yell at the nurses. We nurse because we want to alleviate our fellow human suffering.
@valeriegadsden78982 жыл бұрын
@@vicwei4302 👏🏽💯
@chris_iapetus2 жыл бұрын
I cannot imagine not treating these incredible people with anything other than total respect. They save lives EVERY DAY. They also have to deal with people dying EVERY DAY. Thank you to the nurses all across this world. We do not deserve you.
@greggarcia62942 жыл бұрын
They really do not. You're more likely to die of medical malpractice (usually due to a long ER waiting time or incompetent nurses) than you are from acute illness.
@chris_iapetus2 жыл бұрын
@@greggarcia6294 You think a long waiting time is the nurses' fault? No, that's the fault of everyone who refuses to support paying a reasonable portion of everyone's taxes to fund having adequate medical services for a civilized society. Medical error is the same problem. When the system doesn't have adequate funds to pay for enough staff, existing staff must work so long & so hard, they begin to lose effectiveness AS ANY LIVING BEING WOULD. The solution is to recognize that everyone needs medical services, so everyone should contribute.
@swiftkarma44362 жыл бұрын
@@chris_iapetus thank you. The ignorance is astounding but then again it's not.
@Nyx_Room2 жыл бұрын
You should check out the way Care givers and CNAs get treated... Worse than nurses. 😂 practically slaves.
@kaycoats83442 жыл бұрын
@@Nyx_Room I can believe it. And underpaid too I bet.
@lorrainewilhelm65558 ай бұрын
This video is spot on. I've been a nurse for 53 years. The changes in medicine/nursing are heartbreaking.
@kathyhansen28202 жыл бұрын
My husband passed away 7 years ago. It was during his prolonged illness that I came to realize what angels nurses are. Thank you angels, for your incredibly hard work and compassion.
@brookem2252 жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry for your loss. Prayed for you, that Jesus will continue to care for and comfort you.
@fuckbankers2 жыл бұрын
They don't like being called angels as it's rather patronising. They want to be respected as human beings who need less stress and better pay.
@BenJamnCampbell2 жыл бұрын
My best friend and brother who was an RN in Ohio who deceased in 2021. He was a great nurse. Staffing shortages were exposed greatly when the pandemic hit here. There were times he would see 16 patients in one shift and then have to pick up a second shift. I recall his wife saying he was just getting stretched so thin. He turned to sleep aides to help him get through with little to no sleep. Then the stress of the pandemic started. He started seeing more patients die than what he was ever trained to deal with. It ate him alive. When he went to the hospital admin, for help, he was denied leave. To an extent, I understand why time off was denied during a pandemic. Yet I don't understand why a hospital would deny leave or sick time to one of their nurses that they saw was struggling. He committed suicide in October of 21.
@Junosmom28282 жыл бұрын
I’m so sorry for your loss 🙏
@Utube_user_00012 жыл бұрын
So sorry.
@abigailloar9562 жыл бұрын
Wow that is heavy. I am so sorry to you and his wife
@Armanii27952 жыл бұрын
this isnt a suicide this is a murder. sorry for your loss
@jlpickles72 жыл бұрын
I’m so sorry he was unable to get the help he asked for. Praying you you and your family. He was a true hero.
@chuck719011 ай бұрын
Former nurse of 13 years here. Nothing will change anytime soon. I haven't practiced for almost 6 years now and all I see are things getting worse. I am terrified for my family and for myself for when they get sick and have to go to the hospital. America has a third world healthcare system in many parts of the country.
@chelseas41182 жыл бұрын
I was a ICU RN for 13 years and I quit at the beginning of the pandemic because Kaiser initially told nurses they would fire them if they wore masks to work because it would scare the patients. I was DONE! You take so much abuse as a nurse from everyone. Your coworkers, patients, families, management… the list goes on. I would feel guilty taking my breaks and lunch. I would leave every day feeling like I messed something up because I was so busy and stressed throughout the day. I’ve had glasses thrown at me, called all sorts of names, yelled at, spit at, pinched. It’s just too much. I couldn’t do it anymore. I was exhausted. There was one day when I was flexed between 8 different assignments in one day. I will never go back to nursing unless I’m absolutely desperate.
@josh_75692 жыл бұрын
I used to do security at Kaiser San Jose during thefirst year of Covid and I remember them telling staff that. Ridiculous how a workplace would sacrifice worker health along with their families to save face and retain profits (I mean clients 😂)
@broadcastdiva12 жыл бұрын
ER Nurse. We were also told in the beginning not to wear masks because it will scare the patients.
@kaleibigelow76112 жыл бұрын
My mother is a case manager, used to just be an RN. She has been in close contact with Covid patients on so many occasions, came home feeling not well, and she’d be at work the next day. They don’t care if you come in with a cough, sore throat, anything goes. She has come home in tears because she watches so many people die a day. Just a week ago she came home telling me just as she was talking to a patients family about his recovery, he seized up and died in front of them. All while she is saying she herself doesn’t feel good. I’m at home nursing my RN mother because she doesn’t have the time to take care of herself in or outside of work. She’s exhausted and just a human, so I bring her water and help her get to bed, make sure she gets her meds before falling asleep. She is a superhero, just overworked, overwhelmed with competition in a sexist and toxic environment. I’ve told her for years “be a traveling nurse” because she’s qualified. More money, less permanent stress. But she never took that advice and I can see the wear and tear of nursing on her face. Since Covid peaked, I’ve watched my mother crumble at every foundation and still pick herself back up for work the next day. If you have been a nurse in the past or you are now, you are the beating heart of society, and I can’t thank you enough for working where you’re not always appreciated or even acknowledged for your hard work. It gets overshadowed by the bad every time.
@haleyhand23412 жыл бұрын
@@kaleibigelow7611 much love to your mother and you. I hope she finds peace soon❤️
@cheryll95802 жыл бұрын
the abuse is horrible.. from patients families, stressed out coworkers and THE EMPLOYER who creates these poor conditions
@celestialslayer39852 жыл бұрын
Worked during Covid as CNA when it first started , I was eager and happy I thought this was definitely my calling , They overwhelmed me, the patients and the company . The wife of a patient would treat me as a maid , I was there to take care of her husband 😒 ,then my manager told me they couldn’t give me PPE when my client poops all over herself and rubbing it in (she had Alzheimer’s ) they told me to bring extra clothes and wash it !!😡 I legit stopped picking up the phone and found a new job 😂
@lisaeischens23522 жыл бұрын
I can’t imagine being a new healthcare worker during this pandemic. It’s hard enough during “normal “ times. Every job I had I basically was thrown in to figure it out on my own. The sink or swim model that they so love. We need to start demanding change. If everyone walked off the jobs they would be screwed but when your a nurse they can charge you with abandonment of your patients so they have us by the balls. They would let you work 24 hours a day 7 days a week and still be asking for more. It’s bad and has been bad for my entire life. Started in 1990-2012.
@YeshuaKingMessiah2 жыл бұрын
@@lisaeischens2352 so DONT Go Into Work That’s how u walk off the job
@LeeHawkinsPhoto2 жыл бұрын
@@lisaeischens2352 I hate how they use the law and your own compassion against you. These hospitals deserve to deal with the labor uprising they’re causing. At some point the nurses will run out of patience because they can never catch up to all their patients.
@kharden82312 жыл бұрын
40 years as a RN here, retired in 2018 to pursue art EXACTLY for the reasons cited in this video. I started working in a hospital at 16, graduated from nursing school at 22 and have worked in trauma 1 ICU, acute rehab, visiting home health and nursing home in positions from nursing assistant (before CNA was a thing) to Chief Nursing Officer/VP Quality and Administrator. I never forgot what we really do and literally fought with CEOs and Board of Directors to ensure adequate staffing. The 1st responsibility is listed as ensuring safe patient care in CMS regulations for a Chief Nursing Officer. I believed in that responsibility and tried to live it. In the end, I realized healthcare is just another business out to make money and the lobbying groups are more powerful than the AMA. Wake up America!!!! What you are led to believe by the industry is blatantly false - please listen to these nurses. Your life depends on it, if not today then tomorrow 💗
@Phil4Jesus2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for fighting the fight. You're a rare CNO
@ajsdfk2 жыл бұрын
I highly doubt you "literally fought with CEOs and Board of Directors." Are you writing this from jail?
@jayare68042 жыл бұрын
@@ajsdfk don't think she meant physically fought with. but yes, nurses often go the extra mile to advocate for their patients and co-workers, which can include bringing grievances before and fighting with CEOs, administrators, etc.
@Phil4Jesus2 жыл бұрын
@@ajsdfk The definition of fighting is not limited to a physical alteration
@neenah4027 Жыл бұрын
I was an RN for 46 years, and then an NP for 27. I still have nightmares about hospital nursing in the 80s and 90s which is when I left. I wake up and think that someone forgot to tell me in report that I had a patient, and they went without care for 8 hours. We have been understaffed for a long time. Yes, you may make $120/hour but the hospital is still saving money because you are doing the work of at least 3 people.
@precisionwresonance Жыл бұрын
46 + 27 = 73 years of working as a nurse. The earliest age to become an RN in the late 1800s was about 18y/o. If you became an RN at, let's say, a VERY YOUNG AGE of 18, that would mean you are currently 91 years old and typing this on KZbin. Which I am just not buying.
@myramyra2 Жыл бұрын
Lol I think she is including the RN years in NP years because an NP is still an RN
@precisionwresonance Жыл бұрын
@@myramyra2 but she writes, "and then"
@melissahuneke2842 Жыл бұрын
This is a comments section on KZbin, people misspeak or misword things all the time. It's really weird that you care about correcting something nobody else cares about. Nobody is getting paid or graded so just, "Let it go, let it go....." @@precisionwresonance
@precisionwresonance Жыл бұрын
73 years is a long time to be an RN that still cruises youtube @@melissahuneke2842
@azerlynno2 жыл бұрын
I’m a new grad and only lasted 6 months in the hospital setting. The expectation on nurses is ridiculous, unrealistic, and incredibly dangerous. I could not give good care to that many patients. I didn’t want to stick around and wait for a tragedy to happen on my watch. Nurses deserve a break to eat.
@lazy_lonnie2 жыл бұрын
Hi there, I graduate in the spring with my bsn. Do you care to elaborate? What type of unit did you work on? Day or night shift? What are you gonna do next? Sorry if I seem nosy, I’m just anxious about working at the bedside and possibly regretting my career choice.
@4747-u2r2 жыл бұрын
6 months tho ..
@azerlynno2 жыл бұрын
@@lazy_lonnie no worries! I worked on a med/surg unit day shift. I work in a different hospital on med/surg as an aide for 3 years and loved it. I think all hospitals are in rough conditions right now but the one I worked at as a nurse was exceptionally busy and I almost never got a lunch break, and because joint commission was coming we couldn’t have drinks out so I almost never had time to drink water. It never hurts to try and if you can’t stand it find something different! There are so many options. I’m a private home health nurse now and it’s much better for me and my unborn baby. Best of luck finding the right place for you! 😊
@stuff20472 жыл бұрын
And pee!
@TeamMadcrew2 жыл бұрын
@@lazy_lonnie there are many career choices for nurses. the hospital is only an option. this pandemic has elevated the need for nurses in clinics.
@TheHonestPeanut2 жыл бұрын
The fact that people question nurses stories of employer abuse and aggressively embrace a blatantly corrupt healthcare system is breathtaking.
@valesth49032 жыл бұрын
It brings me such joy that the workplace abuse is getting attention. It is a normal part of so many jobs to be verbally, if not physically or sexually abused. I know this is true for service industry, not being important for basic functioning of the society but as I'm nearing 30 I'm seeing the backbone of any society(medical staff keeping us alive, teaching staff enabling us a better future, physical workers brining food and basic goods to us...) getting similar treatment and it's blowing my mind.
@gigigigi94792 жыл бұрын
Employer abuse in nursing is rampant
@PeeplePerson2 жыл бұрын
Linus Highhorse suits you better.
@msrmsr13092 жыл бұрын
Not surprised
@TSWARD-xb9rk2 жыл бұрын
Truth
@ravenstylea22 жыл бұрын
As a nursing home employee, this is very accurate.
@Gwyllgi2 жыл бұрын
@Dean F. my 54 yo father and I have agreed he'd rather rot on my couch than be in a nursing home
@Piano-hx4tc2 жыл бұрын
my mom was contracted 8 hours but literally charted for hours after work because of the amount of patients that she had. 50 all on her own. She left and has never been happier. I hope others do so too. SO many are treated so unfairly
@slcRN19712 жыл бұрын
@@Piano-hx4tc : yes, the charting (especially when all hand written) did take up a lot of time. In the early 1970s and onward, we charted actually less than as each decade went by. That whole ‘if it wasn’t charted, it wasn’t done’ attitude (from attorneys) only kept increasing the amount of charting that had to be done before leaving your shift. There was even a time when we were told to ‘clock-out’ to chart, because of ‘NO OVERTIME’. When I and the other staff had no time to chart until AFTER reporting to the next shift, we had to drag ourselves out of there ....... once it was done (and we prayed that we hadn’t neglected to mention something important). Yes, there were many times over those decades, that I either sat in my car and cried before driving home or cried once I was at home.
@lisam24962 жыл бұрын
@@Piano-hx4tc I just saw an article in a newspaper about an ICU Nurse who cared for COVID patients the pat 2 years and quit.. found his way doing this loves and has never been happier. He encouraged other to do the same if they've had enough. People hear these kinds of stories and think about leaving.
@Amandapuhlease Жыл бұрын
My job gave me 3 critical patients - 1 w DKA Q1 ACCU checks, Q4 labs (no lab techs. Lab took 4 hours to result critical labs. Pt went into Vtach for a minute. K was 7 not like we would know), 1 patient had to get a stat CT because of mental status change, the other non compliant, the other with chest pain all of a sudden. No techs around to help. So I had to get a EKG myself until someone in the hospital could help me get a “stat” CT. Yeah right. Not to mention I’m breastfeeding and no one’s around to watch my patients so I can pump for 15 minutes so I leave with engorged throbbing boobs. If my family was in a hospital I would be turning them, bathing them, cleaning them up myself. These nurses do not have time and things DO get missed.
@RR-kz4hq Жыл бұрын
That is awful and especially that you weren't able to pump I am so sorry. People don't understand that can seriously affect your breastfeeding!
@user-pl1hz8pu1p2 жыл бұрын
I have been a nurse for over 25 years. I truly loved bedside nursing. What I dislike is how nurses are expected to do their job, and do the work of CNA, pharmacy, doctors, housekeeping, respiratory therapists work all while keeping up with our patients. The expectations are beyond unrealistic. There are nurses that work all day with no break. We are lucky if we get 30 minutes without our phone going off every 20 seconds. Patient's families can be so mean to us. We sacrifice our health and well being for strangers that no longer appreciate us and the hard work that we do for their loved ones. There is a huge nursing shortage. It will affect all of us one way or another eventually, but by then there won't be bedside nurses to take care of you when you get sick. Don't say we didn't warn you.
@cheryljones71872 жыл бұрын
I feel the same way it’s a nightmare I’m retired and the effects of being a nurse still haunt me daily
@user-pl1hz8pu1p2 жыл бұрын
@@cheryljones7187 the smount of work and the amount of disrespect we endure is unbelievable
@cheryljones71872 жыл бұрын
@@user-pl1hz8pu1p I totally understand I was a nurse since 1974 retired 2 yrs ago I have PTSD from the trauma resulting from working in home care hospitals and insurance companies
@DiscoStuIII2 жыл бұрын
@Troyphy They said they're understaffing the hospitals intentionally. Cut the population in half with the same system and the problem still exists
@jmoody5462 жыл бұрын
Well let’s be clear cna workers also go thru the same thing plus personal care aids
@sleepinonmezzz53742 жыл бұрын
Sounds pretty synonymous with what I've been reading about the labor market in general. There isn't an actual labor shortage in most fields; people are just fed up with the conditions they're being forced under. Love for all the nurses out there
@jareddelosreyes44192 жыл бұрын
True but when nurses make mistakes people die.
@sammyn5492 жыл бұрын
I had to leave my position due to the onset of unbearable depression and anxiety in June 2021. I have been an RN for 22 years, and I am now the patient. We nurses so desperately need legislation to protect our patients, and we need to be heard about our concerns surrounding patient safety. I shouldn’t feel that I am a failure because my hospital administration won’t listen to me and my colleagues about terrible staffing conditions.
@ivanvarela32152 жыл бұрын
Well, get that ball rolling. Wish you guys Luck!
@user-pl1hz8pu1p2 жыл бұрын
Same here. RN for over 25 years. I have NEVER seen it this bad
@evelynlust27472 жыл бұрын
You certainly shouldn't feel like you are a failure. Make a long list of all your accomplishments; that is just a start. God bless you.
@michellej56162 жыл бұрын
Love to you for your 22 years and thousands of patients you have personally cared for in that time.
@cheryljones71872 жыл бұрын
You can’t get good legislation when the the hospitals are still murdering the patients,
@katyertle32 жыл бұрын
Can’t wait to leave bedside. I’m so sick of poor working conditions, abuse from patients and their families, and not feeling like I can give the care that is needed.
@theDeadliestPants2 жыл бұрын
I have never felt so validated. Those situations the nurses describe in the video: about patients crying to them, patients belittling, cursing, physically assaulting them....those have all happened to me and my coworkers. We are continually stretched to our limits and then asked to do more by our employers. We all love our job, but we don't love being seen as a resource, as a commodity, or as a bargaining chip.
@damienholland81032 жыл бұрын
It's because we live in a vulture capitalist society. Hopefully my state (California) will be the first state to succeed with universal healthcare (taxpayer funded / centralized). Some things in society are more valuable than simple profit.
@sarahloftus33672 жыл бұрын
As a teacher, I deeply empathize.
@jonnaborosky88362 жыл бұрын
I'm a retired nurse. I did research on the implications of the shortage of bedside nurses, in a graduate course. It's too much to share here, but the basics were that patient deaths go up, nosocomial infection rates go up, patient falls go up, medication errors go up, the hospital rate of lawsuits from injured patients goes up as well as the number of lawsuits over wrongful deaths. Nurses leave the bedside...and the profession. Nothing good or positive at all, for nurses, hospitals or patients, happens when hospitals lower nursing staff. I think I recall the stat that
@alexgreham78652 жыл бұрын
Hello 👋 how are you doing today
@tanyasteers48022 жыл бұрын
The health care system in this country is horrible another thing if everyone had heath insurance the beds would be full of people getting the care needed bottom line would increase. The whole system needs help from the systems on the computer to politicians making a buck its all bs
@vumba13312 жыл бұрын
That's the problem when you financialise everything. Worked for an American company years ago, treated me badly, everything had to be in their favour with no reward for the work well done, so I left. The incompetance and stupidity from management was incredible. Company went into bankruptcy 20 years later, completely screwed.
@BobRooney2902 жыл бұрын
@@vumba1331 nice! i learned my lesson the hard way as well. managers know how to psychologically attack you to keep you there under their abuse in their toxic workplace. i learned to spot this within a week or two of working at a new job. NEVER stick around. its YOUR health!
@vumba13312 жыл бұрын
@@BobRooney290 Right on! Had that a couple of years ago and after a month at a new job, I could see it going only one way. Arrived in the morning to start work, the attitude started right away, so I picked up my lunch and walked out. They shouted that I couldn't do that, I said watch me. My mental and physical health is worth more then their business.
@highviibin88862 жыл бұрын
I received a copy of billing information that was charged to my medical insurance...I was in the ER for a few hours. I asked for Tylenol for headache...the charged insurance $500 for Tylenol they never actually gave to me. Hospitals are greedy....nurses are so needed and deserve all the LOVE AND RESPECT FOR ALL THEY DO!
@zeitgeistx52392 жыл бұрын
The out of pocket price listed for the ED I work at is $3200 just to walk in before we do any work on you. $3,200 is just the facility charge. Welcome to American health care.
@olivervandebeer74922 жыл бұрын
They can bill 20k for a Tylenol but will never collect it, Hospitals have a contract with health ins co and only pay so much..
@happycook673724 күн бұрын
I was charged $550 for a urine pregnancy test in the ER which they insisted on doing even though I had all my female organs removed for cancer! I was there for what turned out to be food poisoning. Same hospital I had the cancer surgery at. This is greed.
@saraxdouglas8577 Жыл бұрын
Oh yes I can completely verify what is being said in this video........just the other night I was left on a unit with 28 patients I had 1 nurse helping me but she had her duties of making sure the patients were getting their meds in a timely fashion. It's not just hospitals but rehabilitation facilities like I work at. ✝️❤️☮️🙏🇺🇸
@ismackbeezys Жыл бұрын
LTC patient ratios are Fn crazy. It’s unbelievable. Idk how you do it
@vicwei43022 жыл бұрын
Nurse here, I earned my RN in 1971. I left the hospital setting over 30 years ago when I saw patient safety being ditched to favor the hospital's bottom line. I was done with going to work every day for fear of losing my license because of substandard care due to unsafe staff to patient ratios.
@SoulfulMole2 жыл бұрын
I think the term "moral injury" cuts closer to the bone than "burnout." These are human services being corrupted by a corporate model that operates by unspoken values that undermine the integrity of what it is that we actually do when we take care of our fellow human beings who are ill. It is critically important that we put more focus on the fact this is a problem of institutions that are hurting individuals, rather than merely a problem of individuals hurting. Nurses aren't burning out; they're being burned, systematically.
@jayjama472 жыл бұрын
Well put Evan.
@elfredawright2 жыл бұрын
That my friend, is the best term to use to describe this madness in nursing.
@ruthbates95492 жыл бұрын
What you just said is true for teachers too. Faustinian bargain.
@alaysiakayebutler62992 жыл бұрын
You hit it square, it's injury, and the echelons know; what they want, they do, it pays off, and it's the opposite of the profession's purposes!!!
@triciag33112 жыл бұрын
This is so beautifully said.
@lovexperfusion2 жыл бұрын
As a healthcare worker, we’re seeing this all across the board. Shortage of physicians, nurses and other ancillary staff. The pandemic has really exacerbated what already is a broken health care system. It was just the last straw that broke the camel’s back and people just “woke up” and said enough is enough.
@quintessenceSL2 жыл бұрын
I know nurses who are reusing N95s from two YEARS ago because administration is to cheap to buy PPE.
@jack-of-all-trades12342 жыл бұрын
Hospital greed. Like hospitals receiving a financial incentive from our meddling government to grossly inflate the number of Covid cases that they have? This fact confirmed to be true both by the current as well as former CDC directors.
@jack-of-all-trades12342 жыл бұрын
Headline: CDC director Robert Redfield admits hospitals, medical folks have ‘perverse incentive’ to falsely count Covid deaths Headline: CDC Director Walensky: 75% Of Covid Deaths Had At Least 4 Comorbidities Headline: "CDC Director Rochelle Walensky finally admitted that “many, many hospitals” were counting COVID deaths to include cases that were not COVID deaths."
@jack-of-all-trades12342 жыл бұрын
Shortage of staff? Some of us still remember nurses posting TikTok dance videos during the height of the Covid hysteria. Then there were nurse layoffs during the peak of the Covid panic. After that large numbers of nurses were fired for not being vaccinated. It doesn't take a Rhodes scholar to see that something isn't quite adding up in this equation.
@salyoutubepremium77342 жыл бұрын
It’s called the healthcare silver tsunami. Many healthcare professionals are coming up in retirement soon. COVID has exacerbated the issue right now but there are several well known factors that are contributing to the shortage. One is the lack of nursing faculty to churn graduates out.
@bardnightingale Жыл бұрын
Was a hospital nurse for 16 years, last 5 were in the ER. I've been peed on, had poo thrown at me, been cussed out, attacked ... but also met amazing people, gave life and hope to patients at their wits end and celebrated patient milestones with frequent flyers who were now part of the hospital family. I MISS being an ER nurse, I miss the patient care. The thought of going back to the hateful system of the hospital where managers are determined to make you work a skeleton crew, where management is focused on positive patient reviews but isn't concerned about the patient. One hospital I worked at said they couldn't hire more staff until we met QUOTA!?!?! The people running healthcare don't care about their staff or the patients. I left due to health reasons in 2020 but now, everytime I try to apply for a hospital position, I get physically ill. I MISS taking care of patients, the good, the bad , they were mine. But the thought of going back to that environment, leaves me cold. I am one of thousands of nurses that have left the system ... a system that was always broken. We have 4 nursing schools in the area of the hospital that was on a hiring freeze. Nurses often have to drive hours a way to find a job. The whole concept of a nursing shortage is a joke. Long before covid, hospitals began treating healthcare like a factory where you force emplyees to work super short-staffed and then, when you do finally hire people, you don't hire as many as left.
@pogmothoin71642 жыл бұрын
I've been a cop for over 18 years. The first thing I learned out of the academy was never give a nurse a ticket.
@ChristysChannelYall2 жыл бұрын
God bless you! I am from a very warm climate and was working as a nurse in upstate NY. I finally got off of a double shift that wound up being 18 hours long. I started driving to my apartment and ran into what is called Lake Effect snow. I could not see at all and was trying to get the rest of the way home. A wonderful cop pulled me over just as I unknowingly veered off the road and was in the oncoming traffic side. He escorted me the rest of the way home. I have much respect for you all!
@DeniSoars2 жыл бұрын
I don't know if I am tired or what - but your statement just made me tear up. Theres 2 amazing coworkers of mine that I know have gotten pulled over after 13-14 hr night shift and the officer mercifully let them go. I am not saying this should be a standard- it's just so incredibly kind
@nelybe0012 жыл бұрын
I can state this as true...RN myself just got off didn't realize how fast I was going, long night. He let me go.. thank you
@leahgary11072 жыл бұрын
I love your screen name. It's Gaelic for kiss my derriere. 😉 By the way, thank you for your service. If nobody has ever said that to you, they should have.
@carolinegunn38102 жыл бұрын
I wish all cops were like you.
@jlpickles72 жыл бұрын
This hits the nail right on the head. This is my reality in healthcare every single day. Thank you for bringing a voice to this very critical, literally life-and-death, issue.
@dianaahuche8802 жыл бұрын
So sorry you people have to go through that 💜
@hammyham48822 жыл бұрын
I worked as a CNA right out of highschool. It only took one year to realize how bad it is for both nurses and cnas. I’d have 20 patients a shift. Be expected to bathe, change, feed, turn, and take vitals twice a shift for each and every one. I quit. It’s inhumane for both the workers and patients.
@sharainewing2 жыл бұрын
I agree 100%
@delawareperformancetrainin3072 жыл бұрын
Blame it on the Democrats and Biden. Plandemic and Unconstitutional mandate that fired millions of essential workers and nurses
@chuckdeuces9112 жыл бұрын
So what do you women all want? You want to stay at home and be a home maker now? Try working in a manufacturing facility 12 hours a day doing real work... you're lazy and entitled what do you expect with a lazy certificate?
@chuckdeuces9112 жыл бұрын
You quit and it got 100% worse for everyone who was already living inhumanely... nice, way to be responsible
@dionysusnow2 жыл бұрын
@@delawareperformancetrainin307 BOT
@Ninang363 Жыл бұрын
I am a hospital RN for 31 years in NYC. Both of my daughters are hospital nurses. So far one of my granddaughters is in college and on track to go into Neurology as an MD. I have other family members in the profession. My mother was a hospital nurse. I feel these stories to my core. I agree with all that is said here. I can retire at 65 in 5 years and I cannot wait to do so. I COULD retire in 2 years but I am hoping to make it to 65 for pension reasons. If I could retire with financial security tomorrow I would. But I do not know how long I can go at this level of short staffing. I am burnt