Originally Posted by NurseCherlove
CCU nurses....
Pease tell me why you love working in the CCU vs. other areas of nursing - why is CCU YOUR niche?
Is it something special about these kinds of patients, the intricacy of the work, both?
I have an interview on Monday and believe this may very well be my niche, but of course I don't know yet.
Also, what's the next step after CCU nursing (if there is one)...CCRN? CMC? Teach ACLS? Just curious.
What do you specifically like about this subset of patients?
Thanks so much in advance for your feedback!
Personally, I like CCU because I love all things cardiac. However, if one doesn't like cardiac or doesn't understand it, then they would probably be miserable. Alot of it is routine and we have lots of chronic pts, and sometimes its not always as exciting or dramatic as, say for example, trauma. However with a cardiac pt, sometimes they can go bad without warning, so you always have to stay on your toes. Sometimes the work can be intricate, especially if you are trying to balance the right amount of several IV medications. It can be frustrating to see the same noncompliant pts over and over, and I find myself doing alot of teaching (don't smoke, don't do cocaine, eat right, exercise, yada yada yada).
In my unit, as well as many other CCU's that I know of, there is also a fair amount of overflow from other ICU's. We often get trauma, neuro, and lots of medical pts - in addition to our cardiac population. This seems to happen more often in our CCU than any of the other ICU's. Alot of ppl I work with complain about this, but I feel it makes me a better nurse bc it helps me to kinda be a jack-of-all-trades, and I enjoy the variety.
As far as CCRN, you can achieve that status in any ICU in which you decide to work. However, alot of the test focuses on cardiac. CMC is a subspecialty of CCRN that focuses almost solely on cardiac, hence the name Cardiac Medicine Certification.
Personally speaking, I don't know if there is really a "next step" for me, unless I wanted to be a manager or educator or go to CRNA school. None of those ideas sound good to me, and the last thing I would want is to be stuck at a desk job, making new rules and policies and more paperwork

I guess I'm happy where I'm at in life. This is it for me. I hope I'm always involved in bedside nursing, especially cardiac nursing.
Hope this helps
Jim