In this blog, I will be sharing my journey from bedside nursing to embracing telehealth — a shift that brought balance and growth into my nursing career.Â
Picture this: It’s 6:45, and you just arrived for yet another shift at the hospital. You step into to the unit while it’s pulsing with activity—beeping monitors, call lights, and nurses’ chatter attending to patient’s needs. Â
You receive the bedside shift report and then proceed to see your first patient for your assessment: room 315. Admitted with a diagnosis of COPD exacerbation, Mr. Johnson, always jovial, now struggles to catch a breath. It’s a reminder of the unpredictable nature of health; one minute, you guys are chatting about his grandkids, and the next, you’re racing against time. Â
Oh, but that’s not the only race you run. Beds fill up faster than housekeeping can clean them, and the unspoken mantra is ‘do more with less.’ Amidst the organized chaos, you’re not just the nurse, you’re also the shoulders patients lean on for comfort, education, and reassurance. Â
There’s no pause button in this marathon. Lunch breaks become a mystery, and bathroom trips are a luxury. The clock ticks, but time seems irrelevant as you navigate through every hurdle. The nurse’s station seems like the headquarters of this organized chaos. Â
Within the buzz, every tick of the clock echoes the relentless pressure to juggle it all — medications, documentation, assessments, calls to doctors, and everything in between — while the clock races and charts pile up. Moments meant for documentation are swallowed by urgent calls, new admissions, and the endless tango of bedside care. Â
Eventually, the shift ends, but your marathon continues. You walk out of the hospital, with a backache and burning feet, only to realize that another challenge awaits you at home: the academic hustle of a nurse practitioner student.Â
Upon entering your home, a supposed haven becomes a battleground between fatigue and a mental checklist of pending assignments. The weight of your shift still lingers while you stare blankly at your laptop filled with exam deadlines, upcoming papers, and pharmacology SOAP notes. Each word on the page becomes a blurred maze, and focus becomes a distant friend. You check your grades and once again notice you’re barely passing due to the bare minimum work you can give. It was in this constant maze of bedside chaos and academic aspirations — a deep realization came to settle: To flourish as a nurse and thrive in education, you must seek balance.Â
If you’re a nurse who resonates or empathizes with this narrative, then you’re in the right place! Let’s dive into four essential reasons I quit bedside nursing, followed by tips on why I quit and what I learned along the way.Â
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