Re: How do I apply to a job in Critical Care.
I agree with most of the advice other posters offered. Honestly, any work you can get to develop your clinical skills and improve your experience at this point is a great thing. As another poster offered, try an IMCU position if it become available. While it's not technically critical care, you will be getting patients coming directly out of the ICU. For that reason, you will get some experience with how a patient transitions out of critical care and what to expect when that happens. In addition, you'll get a wide variety of illnesses and conditions which will only serve you well in the long-run. You'll also develop time management (I'm sorry--I know that's the time-old cliched benefit everyone espouses regarding any kind of med-surg) because you'll have multiple patients; by the time you're ready to break into ICU you'll be more than ready to handle 2 patients. And on most IMCU's (or at least the ones I've seen) they have about 4 or maybe 5 patients, as opposed to the gaggle of them you'll get on a regular med-surg floor.
Be patient with yourself. Being a grad is hard
regardless of what unit you're on (believe me, I'm swimming in it right now), but any experience you gain at this point will do you well in the long-run. After a year, start looking to transition into ICU. Good luck!
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