This
is Not Your Mom’s (or Dad’s) Profession
by Donna Cardillo, RN, MA
Things
sure have changed in nursing and health care since I graduated
from nursing school 30-plus years ago. And just as equipment,
treatments, and procedures have changed, so too has the
way we educate students, how we recruit and retain nurses,
and how we support and manage nursing staff. And yet, I
still hear colleagues yearning for the way things used to
be, wondering why decades-old strategies aren’t working
anymore, and refusing to recognize the sweeping changes
before their eyes. As TV’s Dr. Phil would say, “Let’s
get real.” Let’s reminisce for a moment and
then take a hard look at the realities of the nursing profession
and the changing face of the RN.
The
workplace
Nostalgia:
People used to stay in the hospital for days at a time.
General post-op patients didn’t get out of bed for
three days — and only then to dangle their feet and
sit in chairs! Nurses had time to give back rubs, chat with
patients and families, and generally do what needed to get
done.
Reality
check: Only the sickest patients are hospitalized today.
On average, they’re older and have more multiple-system
problems than before. Length of stay is minimal no matter
what the diagnosis, resources are fewer, patient-to-nurse
ratios are up, and regulatory requirements are at an all-time
high. There’s more technology to manage and an abundance
of paperwork. This environment challenges the most experienced
nurses.
New
graduates can’t quickly and easily assimilate as in
days of yore, no matter how well-prepared they are. Comprehensive,
extended graduate orientation programs, mentors, preceptors,
and internships are required to support and nurture the
new nurse in today’s fast-paced, high-volume, high-acuity
settings. Managers and administrators who don’t recognize
and address this will experience higher-than-average turnover
and attrition rates.
The
workforce
Nostalgia:
Most new grads were young and naive. Physicians and senior
nursing staff could easily intimidate them. They had to
“pay their dues” by dedicating themselves to
their jobs — sometimes at the expense of family time,
health, and sanity.
Reality
check: New grads range in age from 20 to 70. They’re
better educated, more experienced, and interested in living
a balanced life. Sure, they have plenty to learn about nursing,
but they may know more than their supervisors do about technology,
finances, management, customer service, and team building.
If old-school RNs try to impose their values on them or
manage by bullying, many new nurses will leave.
Today’s
newbies have a much broader view of nursing than their predecessors.
They don’t feel compelled to stay on staffs that don’t
recognize their prior work experience and education, respect
them as a people with outside commitments, or address their
need for ongoing education, advancement opportunities, and
cooperative, participatory workplaces. You can accept that
this is the new face of nursing, or you can continue bad-mouthing
them — and watch them walk out the door.
The
need for education
Nostalgia:
Most nurses attended hospital-based diploma programs that
were light on college credits and heavy on clinical time.
When these students graduated, they were ready to manage
entire floors — at least under the watchful eye of
their instructors. And while some nurses did go on to further
their education, there was no strong need or encouragement
to do so.
Reality
check: While it’s easy to blame schools for not doing
their job, students more than ever must learn in the same
amount of time as (or less than) students in the past. Because
so much care is delivered outside the hospital today, students
need to have practical experience in alternative treatment
settings, as well as in hospitals. Because of advances in
nursing and medical science, there is much more to learn
about treatments, procedures, drugs, and therapies, including
complementary and alternative methodologies. Because of
an increasingly competitive job market and a need for nurses
to be on a par with other licensed health care professionals
educationally, more college-credit courses are required
in all programs, and the pressure is on to get advanced
degrees.
It’s
time to wake up and smell the Betadine. You can stay stuck
in the past and whine and complain about the good old days,
or you can recognize the changes, find ways to adapt, and
move forward. Change is never easy, but without it, there
is no progress.
Copyright
Nursing Spectrum Nurse Wire (www.nursingspectrum.com).
All rights reserved. Used with permission.
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