New Nurses! Post here, Lets get to know one another!

Nurses New Nurse

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Specializes in telemetry/med surg.

Hi~! My name is Beth and I am a brand new LVN. Just graduated from Angelina College in December. Took boards january 3rd and passed :o) Have already went through orientation, and computer training, and officially start work tomorrow.

I am an older new nurse lol, at 36. I have four kids, 2 girls and 2 boys ages 9-15. I am currently taking classes to start the RN transition program.

I am working on the med/surg telemetry unit. I signed up for nights! I am excited and scared and nervous! I would love to meet others starting out on this same journey to have someone to compare things with!

:D

my names michelle.....35 y/o new lpn here in las vegas....graduated may 2010 cant remember the date i passed my nclex.....i work IMC at a local hospital here in the vegas valley....love my city....plenty of hospitals, work, and night life.

Specializes in LTC.

My name is Dena, I graduated in June of 2010, I work at a LTC facility and love my job, I have a wonderful husband and three children ages 1, 3, and 6...I hope to go back to school and get my RN one day but am very happy with what I am doing right now. I live in Tulsa OK and never saw myself working in LTC I always wanted to do peds, but as it turns out I truely love LTC and find that I am really good at it. I get to know my residents on a personal level and that is very important to me..Don't be nervous about starting work, You will do great..remember you know this..

Hi My name Is Gina. I graduated nursing school in May 2010. And passed my RN boards in Oct. 2010. And just got my dream job. So I am nervous and excited. I am glad that I am not the only one going through this. Its great meeting you all and I hope we can also compare what we are going through. God Bless:)

Specializes in LTC.

Hi I'm Jessica and I just passed boards this past friday the 21st. I have a job lined up at the VA so hopefully this week will be getting the paperwork started. SOOOO nervous about actually starting! During my preceptorship I felt much more like a nurse and I was able to take care of a full patient load on my own but I have a feeling this first year is going to be really tough! It's nice to see others on here who are brand new as well.

Specializes in Medical and general practice now LTC.

Moved to the First Year After Nursing Licensure forum

Specializes in telemetry/med surg.

nice to meet you all!

Specializes in ED, acute care, home health, hospice.

Hi there! My name is Tessa, I graduated from RN school in June 2010, passed my NCLEX in July and am currently working at an LTC/Rehab facility. I have been working there for the past 6 months so I am not really a "new grad" anymore, but still in my first year. I will admit it was really tough at first but I have gotten the hang of it and can finish my med pass and tx with time to spare. It required a lot of accomodation to the time management I had developed in nursing school, but I really do enjoy my job and the residents I care for. I don't plan to be in LTC forever, but I am getting experience all the way from acute care to hospice patients. I know God gave me this opportunity for a reason, and I feel like I have made a difference, no matter how small, in some of the clients and families I have cared for. All the hell I went through in nursing school is finally feeling like it was worth it! :yeah:

Specializes in Urgent Care NP, Emergency Nursing, Camp Nursing.

It looks like this is an LPN party, but I'll chime in anyway.

I graduated from my masters-entry RN program the weekend before Thanksgiving, sat and passed the NCLEX-RN the second week of December, had a job interview a few days before New Years, and started working in the ED as a new grad last week. It's challenging, but I'm learning a lot, and I look forward to continually expanding my knowledge base with every new patient that walks through the door.

Specializes in LTC.

lol...I'm chiming in as well... I graduated from the RN program in May 2010. I recently started working in LTC, which i love. I enjoy getting to know the residence on a more deeper level than I would if I worked in a hospital. So milford232323 if you can give me any tips on how to be more organized and how to finish on time, i would appreciate it! :)

Specializes in Pediatrics, critical care, PICU.

Hi yall! My name is Juls, just graduated last month Dec. 2010, passed boards Jan. 14th, and started orientation Jan. 24th! I am super excited to start working in my dream job at the PICU and can't wait to grow and learn as a nurse :)

I'll chime in too! I graduated in July with my BSN, worked at a Rehab Hospital for 6 months. Just turned in my resignation letter :-) I will start at my dream hospital next week so I'm kind of nervous. The experience that I gained in the past 6 months will be valuable!

Tips to those who work LTC:

- Make sure you get a very good report from the previous shift.

- Stay calm.

- A good report will tell you this about each patient: Is patient alert or confused, fall risk, take pills whole or crush or G tube (always flush G tube before and after med), any tx required, when pt admitted and why, anything new or abnormal, any labs (i.e. PT/INR) u have to follow up on, who is the MD).

- You can't please everyone. Care for your patient and listen to them but also know your time management and limitations.

- Keep notes in your pocket so you don't forget when you need to give report or chart on patients.

- When you call MD, mention: patient's full name, background info, what happened to patients, what have you done, then what you suggest, or ask if MD needs to add new orders (ex: Hi Dr. XYZ, this is ABC. I'm calling regarding patient DEF. She was admitted last night after a TKR (total knee replacement). Her orders include Tylenol 650 mg and Norco 5/325 mg but pt still in pain, 10/10. Is there something we can add for pain meds? Btw, per patient, at the hospital, patient had 2 vicodin 5/500 mg q 4 h prn). Talk slowly and you will be in controlled. Some doctors can be mean when a nurse calls and does not have any info to provide.

- Help out your staff (CNA) when possible and they will help you. They can save you by reporting in a timely manner if anything different about your patients occurs.

- Take your break, eat, drink. It's a hard job and you'll get exhausted soon if you don't!

- If you have to stay OT, make sure your supervisor know. Ask about OT protocol and policy. Otherwise you will be disciplined and not paid.

That's it for now.

Best Wishes :-)

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