Mad Mike
Well-known member
I have a lot of freshly minted nurses around me - a daughter, both sons dating nurses and 3 of my neices are nearly ready for final RN exams this year.I have nurse friends and they'd had it back in Sept-Oct...
OR Nurses getting re-assigned to COVID wards was not what they were expecting...and the added stress and promise that you won't get good $$ compensation in the near future means, well.. i can just find something else elsewhere if i'm this capped.
You know how some people say "if you don't like the job then find something else" well.. they're at the find something else stage
COVID was very difficult for every hospital nurse -- heavy PPE requirements, challenges with vacation scheduling, and constant pressure to do OT.
One of the biggest reasons emerg departments are overloaded is family doctors and walkin clinics are shifting loads to ERs. Hospitals are not efficient at managing sniffles, and booboos -- the paperwork, triage, examinations, and post-processing are the same for an elbow scrape and a broken arm. My daughter spent 2 years managing patient queues and flow in a busy ER, she tells me that despite staff educating patients that a walk-in or simple rest or cleanup of a scrape would be the best course of action, virtually all parents want to wait and get services from a doctor. She estimated at one point, 80% of the traffic were non-emergency cases.
Nurses are paid less, work more, and carry higher levels of responsibilities, than cops, paramedics, firefighters & teachers. On an hourly basis police, paramedics, and firefighters earn 50% more / hr, teachers are double. Many nurses leave public health care for private care -- it's easy to get 50% more, and specialized nurses can get 3x what they can make in a hospital.