Let it be known that nursing saps your empathetic energy faster than any other customer service job. The main reason being that it’s just another customer service job (in the US)
My heart goes out to the good nurses. Putting up with people in general is incredibly draining, especially when they’re acting out while you’re trying to help them.
and in the ways that’s it’s not customer service focused it’s so focused on flowsheets and tracking metrics that you have to constantly consciously remind yourself that the human in front of you isn’t just an object that you’re doing things to. It gets to a point that you’re wiping people’s genitals with the same efficiency as you’ll wipe down the bed when they’re done with it and some patients can tolerate that well enough but then every once in a while you get someone with sexual trauma. And that’s just one example.
No, it’s not a tipped position. Not really supposed to accept gifts either (flowers/treats for the team are sometimes given but never supposed to be an individual gift of any real value.)
Let it be known that nursing saps your empathetic energy faster than any other customer service job. The main reason being that it’s just another customer service job (in the US)
My heart goes out to the good nurses. Putting up with people in general is incredibly draining, especially when they’re acting out while you’re trying to help them.
👆
and in the ways that’s it’s not customer service focused it’s so focused on flowsheets and tracking metrics that you have to constantly consciously remind yourself that the human in front of you isn’t just an object that you’re doing things to. It gets to a point that you’re wiping people’s genitals with the same efficiency as you’ll wipe down the bed when they’re done with it and some patients can tolerate that well enough but then every once in a while you get someone with sexual trauma. And that’s just one example.
Genuinely curious: do you tip your nurses in the US?
No, it’s not a tipped position. Not really supposed to accept gifts either (flowers/treats for the team are sometimes given but never supposed to be an individual gift of any real value.)