Why Working Just Three Days A Week As A Nurse Is Utterly Exhausting


 
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By Brie Gowen

I was sitting at my computer screen, entering orders for a physician, and trying not to forget what he had said since I had neglected to write it down. I was charting my note, mentally taking inventory of all the tasks I had accomplished and problems I had identified and reported. My eyes felt gritty and my mentation frazzled. I glanced at the time on my computer screen and was taken aback that seven hours had flown by so quickly. Then I realized with dread that I hadn’t documented a single thing on my other patient. I was so behind!

And as my sand-filled eyes started to water in the frigid air of my surgical ICU I realized I was beat. I was exhausted. Yet I had not been working all week. It was my first day on shift in two weeks! I knew, though, that nursing wasn’t so much exhausting because of the hours worked, but rather the work that was performed.

Yes, 12 hour shifts actually turn into 13 and sometimes 14 hour shifts, and by golly yes, that makes for a supremely long day! But you only have to do that for three days, right? Maybe four. The rest of the week you’re free and off jet-setting the country, leaving a trail of money in your wake as you go.

Yeah, right.

More like curled up under the covers in a dark room, recovering from a mental and emotional hangover much worse than one caused by the cheapest of Tequila.

As I sat at my computer screen fighting my mental and physical fatigue I knew the reason I was utterly exhausted, and although by most career standards my day should be coming to an end, it wasn’t even my lengthy shift still looming that made me want to wave my white flag of surrender. My patient was critically ill, and as such I had not stopped.

I remember in high school I ran track. Never one for speed, I was more of an endurance runner, and as a long-distance runner I can recall the trip around the half-mile track. After so many loops you’d get to a point where you were done. You were finished, in your mind and rubbery legs, and you felt certain you could go no further. You’d strive for that line up ahead that marked the finish, head down, legs pumping, and when you got there you’d realize you still had one more lap to go. One more lap, you’d whisper encouragingly to self, and by sheer adrenaline you would continue.

That’s kinda how nursing is. You go and go and go. You fight and fight and fight. You rush and rush and rush. And just when you think you may be done, you are not. The next shoe drops, the next set of vital signs plummet, the next patient falls, the next train wreck codes. On, and on, and on.

In few other fields will you find that the moment you hit the wall does not matter. Like a soldier into battle (and as a veteran I think I can speak on this), a nurse holds life and death on the line, so when your brain becomes fried and your body becomes weary, you just keep marching to the drumbeat of beeping IV pumps, shrieking monitor alarms, and persistently cruel call lights.

Nursing is exhausting for so many reasons, but the biggest being the task at hand. You work within the confines of time, pushing the limits to complete an enormous workload with minimal support staff available, all the while carrying a small library of knowledge within your overloaded brain, realizing that an error on your part could be detrimental.

You complete one job and another comes along, and much like an assembly line worker in a factory you keep going to prevent the great machine of healthcare from going on the fritz. Yet you also know if your machine stops so does someone’s heart, and if that’s not mentally draining then I don’t know what is.

So even one full day as a nurse, especially on a tough day, can seem akin to purgatory. That’s not to say that being a nurse is similar to torture, but anyone who’s begged the time clock to bring along the next shift knows exactly what I mean. You see, when you’ve mentally thought your way through keeping someone alive as long as your fizzled out mind can handle then a ten hour break away from the bedside seems like a much needed respite.

And yes, even working “just” three days a week is utterly exhausting.


 
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COMMENTS

  • Susan Van Bibber

    April 25, 2016 05:29 20

    As I read your article, several questions come to my mind. Are you alone caring for your critical patients? In my institution, we operate as a team. While the nurse may lead the team, we have the expertise of physician(s), respiratory therapist(s), laboratory, charge nurse(s), nurse mananager(s), nursing assistant(s), etc. (Please forgive me if I have left anyone out.) We don\\\'t operate alone. We have many resources and teamwork is one of the things I like about nursing. Second, what did you do on your two weeks off that you find yourself so exhausted in the middle of your first 12 hour shift. As healthcare providers, we should spend some of our downtime taking care of ourselves. If you are a young nurse, my advice to you is to learn to take care of yourself during your downtime. You cannot care for others until you have first cared for yourself, at least not as effectively as you would like. I can\\\'t decide if your article is concerned with 12 hour shifts. That is not really clear, but if it is about the demands of a 12 hour day, would you be among the nurses that would cry foul if 12 hour shifts were eliminated. While 12 hour shifts are convenient for many people, there has always been a concern that perhaps 12 hour shifts are not in the best interest of our patients. I believe that the patient\\\'s needs come first so if 12 hour shifts are too exhausting for you or you find that your mental acuity is affected, perhaps you should seek employment that does not require a 12 hour day. Again, I believe you need to be in control of your career choices. Perhaps the message you want us to take away from your article is that nursing is challenging. That is true. No matter what specialty of nursing you choose, and believe me they are all specialties, nursing is a tough but very rewarding career choice. I chose this career over 40 years ago. I have seen many changes in nursing in those 40 years (including the advent of 12 hour shifts.) Don\\\'t let exhaustion burn you out, find other great nurses around you who can help you set limits so you can take care of yourself and go on taking great care of your patients. Finally, let me take a moment to thank you for your service and wish you the best in your career future.

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