Correctional Nursing with Criminal Record?

Specialties Correctional

Published

I tried to look for an answer to this question, but wasn't able to find anything. I've been trying to pursue career opportunities with the Florida DOC as a RN, but haven't been able to find anything at all. I do have a juvenile record, but no other blemishes on my record; my RN license also has no stipulations on it.

My question for those in the know is, is it possible for me to land a job in correctional nursing? If so, what should I be doing to further that goal?

Specializes in Hospice, corrections, psychiatry, rehab, LTC.

It may depend upon how extensive your record is, and what you were convicted of. Correctional agencies generally don't pay a lot of attention to juvenile records unless they involved violent crimes or drug offenses. Having a criminal record isn't an absolute exclusion, but it can make the path to employment more challenging, particularly in corrections.

It may depend upon how extensive your record is, and what you were convicted of. Correctional agencies generally don't pay a lot of attention to juvenile records unless they involved violent crimes or drug offenses. Having a criminal record isn't an absolute exclusion, but it can make the path to employment more challenging, particularly in corrections.

Thanks, the juvenile adjudication was for arson (nobody hurt, about $10k in property damage which I repaid in full); nothing else on the juvenile record, adult record is completely clean, and the juvenile adjudication occurred 11 years ago. I also just found out that the Florida DOC is now outsourcing all of its healthcare needs through private vendors, so I'm going to have to apply through them.

Specializes in retired from healthcare.

If you worked through the problems that brought you a criminal record then this might make you valuable as a correctional nurse.

They might be able to learn from someone with a criminal history about finding a pathway out.

I notice there are nurses and therapists with histories of their own mental breakdowns who are good with mental patients.

I hope the same thing might be true here.

Look up a local prison staffing place, and ask them flat out- from what I've been told personally, working jails/prisons is different, because the population (the patients) are not 'at risk', such as the elderly or children, so convictions that would prevent a hiring in the private sector are approached in a different view, partially because prisons are exploding, and finding willing nursing staff is not keeping pace.

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