Nurses Helping Nurses
allnurses Network: Central | Jobs | Books | Newsletter
allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses
Home General News Blogs Articles Students Region Specialty Degrees F.A.Q.
Agency Nurses /

How much experience is good for a new agency nurse



Did You Know?
allnurses is the largest community for nurses on the web. We now have over 388,246 members! Join today to network with other nurses, laugh, share, and much more.

Mar 02, 2009 09:28 AM

How much experience is good for a new agency nurse

by RoyalNurse Premium Member

Hi everyone,

I started out as a new grad 1.5 years ago in a CVICU, have done a lot of post-op CABG patients, a moderate amount of general ICU patients (septic, vented, on drips), and feel fairly competent handling these types of patients. Recently, we've been getting telemetry patients, b/c the tele floor is constantly packed, and I feel pretty good with these too. But we only get 3 at the most.

I've been thinking about starting as an agency nurse in a huge, teaching hospital in a major city next to me on a telemetry floor on night shift. I've heard the ratio is 1:6-7.

I go to the orientation at this hospital next week, but I wanted to ask: How much experience do I need to think about doing this? Should I think about doing agency in an ICU? I'm worried about that b/c I work in a small community hospital that doesn't see dramatic stuff.

Thanks for any replies!


Share

Search Tags
None
Top

 
Advertisement
Sponsored Links
 
Reply
1 Comment
No. 1
from sewillia
Old Mar 04, 2009, 03:34 AM

Default Re: How much experience is good for a new agency nurse
It really depends on how comfortable you feel working in a different hospital and with different personalities. To be comfortable and confident as a travel nurse I would give it 2 years experience or more. I started out as a travel with 20years of experience and have been hired on a lot of travel contracts because of it. As long as you know your policy and procedures at the hospital and the role of the CNA and LPN, you shouldn't have a problem. Since the economy of the hospital across the US,a lot of hospitals have been cutting back on travel nurses and contracts. I would find if the Travel agency has a job for you before you resign. It's better to be safe and have a job then be sorry.
Top
 
Reply




Thread Tools


Who's Online
110 members
1,358 guests
1,468

0

Possible breakthrough regarding MS

29

16th Philly area hospital to stop delivering babies: Mercy...

6

Really interesting article on Indian open hearts

4

High-Tech Pump Does What Her Heart Can't

2

Air Force RN Force RN Found Not Guilty

12

Hospital Falters as Refuge for Illegal Immigrants

6

California Imposes Stricter Rules Regarding Drug Abuse In...

38

Are older nurses being forced out of the profession?

3

An outlook in California?

8

Australian surgeons successfully separate conjoined twins






Currently Reading This Page: 1 (0 members & 1 guests)

Interested in the hottest topics of the week? Subscribe to the Nurse-zine Newsletter.
Enter email address: