Wednesday, February 17, 2016

Want to keep ER nurses from leaving? Focus on patient safety instead of satisfaction.

I have been an emergency physician for 12 years.  I have had the opportunity to learn from and try to emulate an impressive number of amazing clinical physicians.  These doctors seemed god-like at first, but as my training and career progressed, I realized that they were mostly teaching me through their own experiences.

One of my favorite teachers had a humbling saying:  “Good judgment comes from experience.  Experience comes from bad judgment.”  It was his way of trying to get me (and all of the residents) to learn the lessons of his own mistakes.  Experience is an incredible teacher — perhaps the best teacher of all.

In almost a decade at my current job in a busy suburban ED, I have watched countless talented and experienced ER nurses come and go.  At first, I asked them why they were leaving.  Now, I ask them why they stayed as long as they did.  Over the years, our ED has seen a drastic increase in acuity, a steady increase in volume, and a decrease in staffing levels.  Is it any wonder that nurses leave after a few years in that environment?  The phenomenon isn’t unexpected at all.  It isn’t an unsolved mystery.

An ER is a great place for a new nurse to start working, provided he has good preceptorship.  One can learn an incredible amount, develop competency and confidence with various types of patients, as well as become a member of the team in a busy American emergency department.  There is great satisfaction in becoming competent; not long ago, I experienced that thrill as a physician.  But competency only sustains a worker for so long.  The hours, the demands, the endless negative reinforcement, the dwindling support, the feeling that one is not meeting one’s own standard when it comes to patient care, all wear each and every nurse down.  They wear down so much that they leave to work somewhere else.  All of them do: every single one.  I have seen seemingly unbreakable people with seemingly unbreakable spirits leave because their spirits were broken.

Read More: Want to keep ER nurses from leaving? Focus on patient safety instead of satisfaction by Thomas Paine.