BrianR
Pre-takeoff checklist
Every year around this time, the number of nurses calling in sick at the hospital where I work increases exponentially. Even accounting for the influenza and other seasonal illnesses, it's a dramatic increase over the baseline.
Many of them are surprisingly open about how they are "using up" their employer-provided sick time prior to year's end.
Now, to my way of thinking, sick time is for when you're, ummmm...sick. (I would include the need to stay home and care for a sick child in the acceptable use category.) But it seems the vast majority of nurses, under 40 years of age, view sick time as simply an entitlement, another form of paid time off to use as they see fit. And this is in an environment where they are already provided with standard, if not generous, paid time off in the form of vacation, holiday and personal time.
Meanwhile, these nurses are the first ones to run crying to their union reps if they think the hospital is trying to take advantage of them in any way. And yet, they feel no remorse over taking advantage of the hospital and costing it revenue and frustration in trying to replace them at the last minute.
Were I an administrator (I am in clinical practice), I would simply move to eliminate paid sick time...which some hospitals have done. But when I mention my observations to my administrative friends, they just roll their eyes, shrug and say, "Well, yeah, but what can you do?"
I was taught as a child that sick time was only used if you were ill enough to be hospitalized, or were lying next to the toilet vomiting, or had something horribly contagious. Otherwise, you sucked it up and showed up when you were scheduled. Until I entered the workforce, I just thought most people believed similarly.
Having spent my entire professional life in hospitals, I wonder if this phenomenon is as common in other industries? While I'm sure there are always a few people who will abuse benefits, I'll venture to say that 75% or more of the under-40 nurses at my hospital do this blatantly and repeatedly. Is this a nurse thing? A young person trait? Or, as I suspect, just another sign of the entitlement society so prevalent in the U.S.?
Many of them are surprisingly open about how they are "using up" their employer-provided sick time prior to year's end.
Now, to my way of thinking, sick time is for when you're, ummmm...sick. (I would include the need to stay home and care for a sick child in the acceptable use category.) But it seems the vast majority of nurses, under 40 years of age, view sick time as simply an entitlement, another form of paid time off to use as they see fit. And this is in an environment where they are already provided with standard, if not generous, paid time off in the form of vacation, holiday and personal time.
Meanwhile, these nurses are the first ones to run crying to their union reps if they think the hospital is trying to take advantage of them in any way. And yet, they feel no remorse over taking advantage of the hospital and costing it revenue and frustration in trying to replace them at the last minute.
Were I an administrator (I am in clinical practice), I would simply move to eliminate paid sick time...which some hospitals have done. But when I mention my observations to my administrative friends, they just roll their eyes, shrug and say, "Well, yeah, but what can you do?"
I was taught as a child that sick time was only used if you were ill enough to be hospitalized, or were lying next to the toilet vomiting, or had something horribly contagious. Otherwise, you sucked it up and showed up when you were scheduled. Until I entered the workforce, I just thought most people believed similarly.
Having spent my entire professional life in hospitals, I wonder if this phenomenon is as common in other industries? While I'm sure there are always a few people who will abuse benefits, I'll venture to say that 75% or more of the under-40 nurses at my hospital do this blatantly and repeatedly. Is this a nurse thing? A young person trait? Or, as I suspect, just another sign of the entitlement society so prevalent in the U.S.?