2 issues:

I work transporting patients on beds from the ER to whatever ward or department they need to be brought to for their explorations. While I was moving a senile patient on a bed to radiology, a doctor approached me telling me I need to find a bed because they’re out of beds and an emergency was coming. I told her that’s not my job and that I’ve already brought in beds to the ER, even though that’s not my job. She kept pestering me with it, I told her my job is to transport patients and to contact my manager if she has complains. I also told her I had 3 patients to transport after the senile one and asked her if I should stop those assignments and look for beds for her first. She started accusing me of disrespecting her and asked if I know who she is. I told her I have things to do and proceeded to work.

Where I work this happens quite often: there are 2 doctors who believe everyone around her is their servant and must stop at once doing his job to assist them. Looking for beds is not in my job description.

The other issue is with some ER nurses. I’m a RN, worked in this same ER as a nurse but no longer work bedside (and will never work bedside again). Sometimes my job moving patients is quiet, meaning 40 minutes with not a single patient to be brought anywhere but suddenly I can get 4 assignments at once (and somehow doctors expect me to do them all simultaneously). Some nurses seem to believe those 40 minutes waiting for an assignment should count as my pause, because I was sitting. 2 are particularly vocal about it, painting me as a lazy person and they talk a lot with the other nurses.

When I have nothing to do I have a seat, read, learn, drink coffee, sometimes I write haikus or eat, telling the charge to inform me if she needs me to transport anyone. I also do my pauses, 30 min straight, something several nurses seem to resent: When I worked the ER as a nurse I never had a 30 minute pause, but several 3 to 7 minute breaks that summed together counted as your complete pause, the smokers would get longer pauses. I no longer want to do that shit and want my 30 minute pause, a stipulated in the contract.

If I cannot leave the workplace, if I cannot listen to music or sleep, if I have to stay in the ER waiting for my next assignment, I’m not on my break, am I?

I believe no matter what to many of my coworkers I’m gonna be the asshole: by establishing these boundaries (I want my daily 30 minute pause, I want to do ONLY my job) I’m the only one in the ER doing something the rest don’t do: establish boundaries. And that’s very noticeable. It won’t matter what’s in the contract: these 2 people have already decided I’m lazy, don’t waste time badmouthing me and I’ve decided they are happy to be exploited and I’m not gonna go the extra mile for any job.

Do I escalate?

  • ricesoup@lemmy.mlOP
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    7 hours ago

    “I don’t have the authority to do what you’re asking and you have more authority in asking the admins to do it than I do”

    I can see this working with the medical side of nursing like setting lines up, administering medicines, explaining basic anatomy to patients, explaining what happens afterwards, things I’ve done in emergencies (not my job but will do it anyway because it’s an emergency).

    Does this also work with the grunt, demanding physical work nobody wants to do? Several times the ER nurses want me to clean rooms or to go to a ward 900 yards away to find an empty bed (not my job and don’t want to do it). It’s not that’s difficult to do, it’s simply very tiring because I already walk 9 miles per day and having to walk more makes my legs ache, some beds are old and heavy, a growing number of patients are heavier as well, it’s not simply transporting patients, but mobilizing them to their new bed or placing them on the CT or MRT table, some of them can’t walk on their own, others fight you, others are scared and you have to talk to them like they were 5 year olds…

    What Im not doing, like pseudonym here suggest, is doing 2 jobs being paid just for 1, being a full fledged RN when I have nothing to do and transporting patients when somebody needs to be transported. How entitled I am, aren’t I?

    yours is a great answer btw.

    • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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      6 hours ago

      For physical labor no one wants to do, you can finesse your response to be less “not my job” and more “I have other tasks I need to do now as part of my job”. It may sound similar, but one is making it so that you are determining what is and isn’t your responsibility and the other is pushing that decision on someone else.

      Someone else hired you to push people around. You can’t override your boss, so you need to focus on the work they give you and take the breaks you can on their time table. A nurse may have deserved status, but unless the chain of command runs through them, you got to follow the chain.

      • ricesoup@lemmy.mlOP
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        4 hours ago

        “I have other tasks I need to do now as part of my job”

        I already do this when I actually have other things to do, but sometimes they see me sitting and reading and they start looking for things for me to do that ain’t my job.