Re: Hospital CNAs~ Tell me what your shift is like
I work in a psychiatric hospital. It's a state facility, and I work in the forensics part (criminally insane population). Depending on which unit (maximum, medium, or minimum) security I might have to do things like transport a patient to an appointment, help set up for a meal and serve it, supervise showers, take census count for two of the seven or eight hours I work, play a board game or two with a patient, let a patient into the supply room to get towels or toothpaste or something. In max, I might be expected to sit in a chair on a 1:1 where I have to maintain visual contact with someone for an hour to insure they don't commit suicide or hurt someone else.
It's not hard, and none of the CNA skills I learned in school really apply. I know this isn't very helpful if you're looking for typical hospital experiences. But psychiatric hospitals do exist, and they do employ CNAs. The primary expectation of a CNA in a psych hospital is to be therapeutic and to model behavior. I think it's the greatest job ever because the pay is huge comparatively speaking. The main requirement is that you have compassion and understanding for people who are mentally ill. I'd rather see someone improve their ability to cope with reality than watch a wound heal, but that's just me.
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