It is not just the maternity wards that are having these problems. It's hospital wide, probably worse on the general wards. This is why I am leaving nursing forever and never looking back and it is a shame because I'm a hell of a good nurse. I know a lot of midwives who feel the same way. Would you like going to work and working like a dog for 12 hours with no break of any kind only to have a patient you were responsible for have a stillbirth because you couldn't be ten places at once? How does that feel at the end of the day?
I wouldn't go back into nursing for a 50 million pound pay packet. The shortages are a result of a retention problem of staff, it's not a recruitment problem. And let me tell you, the hospital managers love it when they are running the ward short staffed. They save money. They aren't interested better staffing. They will leave one RN alone on the ward for 20 patients, send her new critical admissions CONSTANTLY, and refuse to get agency it because they don't want to pay for it.
Then of course, if anything happens its the nurses fault. I have been alone on the ward with 20 patients, 10 of whom were so sick that they needed my constant presence and constant monitering. If one would have died due to the fact that I wasn't with him because I was in the next room trying stop another patient from crashing and dying, it would have been entirely my fault and I would have been held responsible. The managers who refuse to pay for extra staff would have got off scot free. These are not isolated incidents, I was put into these kinds of situations almost everyday when I went to work. And no, the docs are usually not on the wards to help. The most I get out of them is a phone order for something useless after I have spent three hours paging them.
These kinds of scenarios are occuring frequently and are causing a mass exodus of nurses and midwives from the profession due to fear. I don't want to be the defendent in a wrongful death lawsuit because I cannot be two places at once thank you very much. I also cannot STAND watching patients suffer. When my cancer patient waited over an hour for pain medicine to be given because I was alone on the ward again and had 2 cardiac arrests back to back I wanted to shoot myself.
I was on the ward 12 hours that day, with no lunch, bathroom, or drink break, breaking my back and still could not get around to people fast enough or for long enough to make them feel as if someone gave a damn. That is devastating to me because I care a lot about every patient that I take care of. :\\\'(
I am moaning and rambling so I will stop. My point is that it is the mass exodus of nurses due to fear and frustration and that is what is causing some of the problems people are experiencing on maternity and other wards. The hospitals are loving it because they hate paying our salaries. Things are not going to improve until the hospitals are forced to be serious about staffing. They may be saying that they are recruiting and blah blah blah but they are full of it. They love keeping the wards open and open to admissions and meeting targets with a skeleton staff on. $$$$$