My hairdresser made a comment that I hear from a lot of people who are not in health care.
"I don't know how you do a full 12-hour shift when it's life-and-death work. I mean, I have long days working too, but cutting and styling hair isn't life and death. I just can't understand how you do it."
I smiled and shrugged, as I usually do.
"Thanks for recognizing that. I don't know. We get used to it, and we have a certain flow at work, even when it gets crazy. Plus, it cuts down on the number of days I have to commute to work since I get so many hours in in one day."
I had so much more to say, but that wasn't the place for it. This is.
It's true that at our core, we nurses are just wired to do this kind of work and we can push through it beyond a standard eight-hour workday. It also works well for consistency in ICU patient care to only have one changeover of the patient's nurse from one 12-hour day shift to the incoming 12-hour night shift. We have generally found ways to ride the waves of an especially high census mixed with especially sick patients, typically followed by at least a brief respite before the next wave.
All that being said, I wrote a lot during prepandemic days about how hard the work was, and now it is curious and sobering to me to look back and feel that nursing was so much easier just two or three years ago.
Nursing at a tipping point. At this current point in time, however, nursing and its role in our wild pandemic-stricken world seem to be reaching a tipping point that we've never quite found ourselves in before. A profession that was already facing a shortage is seeing a new exodus that appears to be only just beginning as nurses burned out from the pandemic are leaving the bedside all over the country.
Those of us who remain at the bedside are physically, emotionally, and mentally spent. We are deeply concerned about compromise in the quality of care we can provide when we as a profession are running on short (and shortening) staff and fumes. We are deeply concerned about our own well-being and longevity. We wrestle with a new kind of moral distress because of the barriers and politicization impeding progress in recovery from this COVID pandemic.
The immediate obvious solution would be to recruit more nurses to fill the gaps, but health care organizations and nursing schools have long known that this is much easier said than done. Now, as the work has become so much more difficult, with still more new waves of COVID patients, cracks in the system leading to larger fissures, and posttraumatic stress disorder from the collective experience of it all, we teeter precariously at this tipping point and look with some trepidation at the cliff we hope to avoid toppling over.
What nurses need right now. I would venture to say that what nurses need at this point includes at least the following:
* Concrete recognition of the work we do, beyond words of empathy or appreciation and beyond token gifts like pins and tote bags, which don't actually make our work or lives more manageable (hello, extraordinary cost of living in Los Angeles). To put it bluntly, we want better compensation to recognize and reflect the highly specialized, intensely stressful, and irreplaceable work we do at the bedside.
* Management and administration on all levels showing us-again not only in word but in action and policy-that they truly respect our voices when we express what we need in order to do our work safely and sanely.
* Respect from the general public when we voice our expertise (and our despair) about health and preventable illness-particularly around COVID exposure risk and vaccine safety and effectiveness.
* Ultimately, a revamping of the health care system through the proactive move of governmental authorities to address deficiencies in the system highlighted by the pandemic.
What concerns me the most for myself and my colleagues nationwide is that our hope for the above feels shaky at best, but the need for it has never felt more urgent.
What nurses everywhere are saying and feeling. This is not intended to be a criticism of my personal workplace, but rather a lament for what I see and hear from nurses everywhere. Additionally, this is not meant to be a doomsday post, but rather a plea and call to action from those who have power to change the above:
Administrators, policy makers, and you, the general public.
Please. We are so weary but we want to keep our heart for this profession. We want to keep our heart for you and your loved ones when you land in our hospitals. But we are hurting and we cannot continue this way. It simply is not sustainable, and the reasons it feels unsustainable go far beyond the fact that we do life-and-death work for 12-hour shifts at a time.
Please. Listen to us. Do your part.