The nurse staffing crisis is an urgent pain point for the country’s more than 5 million nurses, for patients, and for the entire health care system. In the last year, nurses have taken action to de…
The 3 on, 4 days off, 4 days on, 3 days off cycle of 12 hour shifts is what I do as in-home health care for adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities!
And as a manager, I absolutely do get stuffed into covering 5 or more days. During the pandemic I was doing front half days (Sunday Monday Tuesday) back half nights (Wednesday Thursday Friday). And it’s hell!
They increased our pay to $15 an hour in my state as an emergency order so we could finally get some staff, but it’s impossible to get enough people and don’t even talk to me about quality…
but you’ll get called-in for mandatory ot on day one off of four; which then turns into a back-to-back. then for good measure, your last day off will be cut short as you’re called-in early.
12 hour shifts aren’t all that terrible, as long as you actually get off on time and are paid well for working the appropriate amount of time (whether that’s 3/4/4/3 or 5/2/2/5, or 2/2/3/2/2/3, or any other schedule that gets you close to the standard hours per week). I’ve done 12s for about a decade, and haven’t had any problems with it aside from occasionally running into schedule issues because it’s hard to predict what day you’ll be working/off without calculating which week of the pay period it is.
It all returns to how much work you have to do in those 12 hours. Having even a few minutes of downtime repeatedly throughout a shift has been going the way of the dodo, and that’s going back to the original point of poor pay and fewer people to do everything needed.
a friend used to be a nurse. still works in health care, but in admin instead. stable (and flexible) hours, better pay, and has been able to work from home since before wfh became a hotbed topic (several years before covid, due to space issues at the facility at the time).
Just a reminder that this isn’t caused by lack of nurses. This is caused by a lack of salary, and a lack of support staff being hired.
Don’t forget being treated like absolute shit by people who think browsing YouTube on the toilet is “doing research”.
Just like teachers.
I’m so tired. Just trying to get to Thanksgiving break at this point.
12 hour shifts certainly isn’t helping any either.
Knew some nurses that did 3 12s and then had 4 days off. Seems like it could be nice on one hand.
My neighbor works in the NICU. She does 3 12s. She then does two more for the overtime pay. I don’t think she’s the exception anymore.
It’s horrible to watch someone burnout just to support their family…
Until it ends up being 5 12s in a row becsuse they are understaffed…
This is me!
The 3 on, 4 days off, 4 days on, 3 days off cycle of 12 hour shifts is what I do as in-home health care for adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities!
And as a manager, I absolutely do get stuffed into covering 5 or more days. During the pandemic I was doing front half days (Sunday Monday Tuesday) back half nights (Wednesday Thursday Friday). And it’s hell!
They increased our pay to $15 an hour in my state as an emergency order so we could finally get some staff, but it’s impossible to get enough people and don’t even talk to me about quality…
TO $15/hr? Jesus, I hope you live in a low cost of living area.
I do but not low enough for this.
but you’ll get called-in for mandatory ot on day one off of four; which then turns into a back-to-back. then for good measure, your last day off will be cut short as you’re called-in early.
12 hour shifts aren’t all that terrible, as long as you actually get off on time and are paid well for working the appropriate amount of time (whether that’s 3/4/4/3 or 5/2/2/5, or 2/2/3/2/2/3, or any other schedule that gets you close to the standard hours per week). I’ve done 12s for about a decade, and haven’t had any problems with it aside from occasionally running into schedule issues because it’s hard to predict what day you’ll be working/off without calculating which week of the pay period it is.
It all returns to how much work you have to do in those 12 hours. Having even a few minutes of downtime repeatedly throughout a shift has been going the way of the dodo, and that’s going back to the original point of poor pay and fewer people to do everything needed.
100% correct. I am a nurse who hasn’t worked for 3 years because of childcare costs
a friend used to be a nurse. still works in health care, but in admin instead. stable (and flexible) hours, better pay, and has been able to work from home since before wfh became a hotbed topic (several years before covid, due to space issues at the facility at the time).