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I'm in... with one year experience



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  #61  
Old Mar 01, 2008, 06:17 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Re: I'm in... with one year experience

lol but seriously, grats dude. i'd personally but more weight on what the board of admissions thinks than a couple of haters on an internet forum.

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  #62  
Old Mar 02, 2008, 12:20 AM
neurogeek (Female)
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Re: I'm in... with one year experience

Originally Posted by magno79 View Post
Armynse,
You have very quickly become quit the expert on the CRNA profession. Per your profile, you have 4.5 years of experience under your belt yet you write like so many of the old, should not be working any more, nurses that lumber through the ICU. Attempting to limit a potentially very successful (and must be threating) young nurse.
Magno79
I would love to heare your definition of how many years experience qualifies you to become a "old, should not be working any more, nurses that lumber through the ICU." Would that be 5, 10, 15, 20 or more? Or could it be that, just like there are great nurses & poor nurses with minimal experience, there are also great nurses & poor nurses with multiple years experience? I have to say I, being what you probably consider a FOSSIL in the ICU, found your comment a tad condescending toward more experienced nurses. Perhaps your feel threatened by those of who have managed to stick with the profession so long. I am well aware that there are many nurses in the unit who are only there to earn that all-might-dollar, just as there are nurses who are only there to do the minimal amount necessary before they move onto bigger & better things, etc. But please realize that many of us "elderly" ICU nurses have put a lot of time & effort into becoming experts in our field. Many of us are widely published, lecture at conferences, have our services requested to be expert witnesses at trials, etc. because of amount of time we have put into our field that has allowed us to become recognized by our peers & other in the medical profession. So now, if I can get my old rickety bones to cooperate I will take my sad, old, tired, LUMBERING rear out for a night run.


Last edited by sirI : Mar 02, 2008 at 10:24 AM.
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  #63  
Old Mar 02, 2008, 12:44 AM
Ventjock's Avatar
Ventjock (Male)
Neb Jockey
Join Date: Dec 2003
Re: I'm in... with one year experience

Originally Posted by mcubed45 View Post
Dear Mr Gump:

We regret to inform you that at this time you have been declined for acceptance into our anesthesia program due to your lack of 6th sense. This requirement is clearly listed in our pre-requisites. Without this mandatory skill you will fail. Please feel free to apply again, 3 years 2 months 17 days and 16 hours from now, when you have aquired your 6th sense.

-Sincerely
Board of Admissions concerned only with years of experience
QUALITY over quantity...

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  #64  
Old Mar 02, 2008, 05:55 AM
traumaRUs's Avatar
Administrator
Join Date: Jan 2001
Re: I'm in... with one year experience

Hey guys - lets debate the topic not each other. I like the sentiment that it is quality over quantity. Everyone is an individual.

Good luck with everyone's applications to anesthesia school.

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  #65  
Old Mar 02, 2008, 10:13 AM
magno79 (Male)
Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2006
Re: I'm in... with one year experience

Neuro,
I am sorry for the misunderstanding. "Old Nurse" is more a state of mind then an age. I have a great deal of respect for people that have good experience. I use them often as resources and due value and trust them in time of need. What I am saying however, is that no one on this thread, who is not a CRNA, has the qualifications or education to say that someone else is not qualified. Even more so if you have never worked with the person.
So, an old nurses is someone that thinks they are better than another. Some one that no longer has time to teach or help out. The saying that "nurses eat their young" is so true. Why on earth would you not encourage someone that is willing to learn. That is the fatal mistake to our career.

Magno79


Last edited by sirI : Mar 02, 2008 at 10:26 AM. Reason: referred to edited post
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  #66  
Old Mar 02, 2008, 01:52 PM
neurogeek (Female)
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Re: I'm in... with one year experience

Mango,
I appreciate the clarification. My personal opinion is that anyone who is admitted to a CRNA program probably really deserves it because they are obviously a cut-above the rest. No doubt about it, there are many well qualified nurses who are newbies to ICU (< 1 year). All us old nurses are saying is that over a period of years those abilities just become more fine tuned (if the nurse works at it). It's just a matter of giving credit where credit is due. It would be wonderful to think that we will all start our programs on equal footing but the reality is that this just isn't so. The knowledge and abilities we bring with us will vary greatly amongst us. Being open to this, recognizing our own weaknesses, and learning to utilize the strengths of our peers is what will make us more successful.

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  #67  
Old Mar 04, 2008, 12:02 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2008
Re: I'm in... with one year experience

Originally Posted by magno79 View Post
Neuro,
What I am saying however, is that no one on this thread, who is not a CRNA, has the qualifications or education to say that someone else is not qualified. Even more so if you have never worked with the person.
Magno79
I am a CRNA so I feel very qualified to comment on this. I've made a number of good points on this thread that haven't been responded to with anything of substance. How can someone defend starting anesthesia school (or even interviewing for school) without enough hours to sit for CCRN? How can someone who has less than one year of independent decision making taking care of critically-ill patients be so sure they've learned it all? The lack of self-awareness from many of the "nurses" posting on this thread is really shocking. By saying that you learned everything you need to know about ICU in <1 year, you show both a lack of respect for the enormity of that role and just plain ignorance. This forum is a joke because a bunch of people who have no clue are uninterested in hearing the truth from anyone who knows what they are talking about. Just keep patting each other on the back . Sorry but you won't have virtual hugs or high-fives in the OR - only your skills and experience to get the job done.

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  #68  
Old Mar 04, 2008, 03:09 AM
Becky423 (Female)
Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2008
Re: I'm in... with one year experience

one crna,

I certainly respect your position and your input, but can you tell me what you think are the reasons the AANA and the individuals schools are willing to accept/ interview nurses with 1 yr/ less than 1 yr at interview if it did not produce safe, effective, and prudent CRNAs?

Years ago, students entering anesthesia school did not even have to have any knowledge of vents, drips, etc - they could enter anesthesia school without any critical care experience. I know this because I've talked to some of the experienced CRNAs (>30 yrs practice). Why was it safe/ effective for them to do it, but not now?

Not putting down your opinion, but truly want to understand why the governing/ accreditation organization and many schools would allow this if it weren't safe & effective?

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  #69  
Old Mar 04, 2008, 07:33 AM
sirI's Avatar
Iris backwards
Join Date: Jun 2005
Re: I'm in... with one year experience

How can someone defend starting anesthesia school (or even interviewing for school) without enough hours to sit for CCRN? How can someone who has less than one year of independent decision making taking care of critically-ill patients be so sure they've learned it all?
ITA. (The same argument is found with the NP as well). How can any nurse advance their practice with zero to very little/limited RN experience?

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  #70  
Old Mar 04, 2008, 11:03 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2008
Re: I'm in... with one year experience

Originally Posted by Becky423 View Post
one crna,

I certainly respect your position and your input, but can you tell me what you think are the reasons the AANA and the individuals schools are willing to accept/ interview nurses with 1 yr/ less than 1 yr at interview if it did not produce safe, effective, and prudent CRNAs?

Years ago, students entering anesthesia school did not even have to have any knowledge of vents, drips, etc - they could enter anesthesia school without any critical care experience. I know this because I've talked to some of the experienced CRNAs (>30 yrs practice). Why was it safe/ effective for them to do it, but not now?

Not putting down your opinion, but truly want to understand why the governing/ accreditation organization and many schools would allow this if it weren't safe & effective?
Let me clarify...I personally think that ~2 years critical care experience should be the minimum prior to starting a program thus if someone wants to interview with 1 year experience, I wouldn't be entirely opposed (as they would likely be close to 2 years when starting school). I am opposed to a new grad RN with no other healthcare experience starting school with only 1 year experience because that is not enough time...regardless of how smart you are/hard you work. In addition, many ICU orientation programs for new grads are now 3-9 months long thus an individual starting anesthesia school with one year experience, may only have 3-9 months of independent decision making experience. AANA has the one year minimum and I respect that because someone may have been a paramedic for 9 years prior to becoming an RN, etc. Yes, these things should be left up to admissions committees however the number of spots in anesthesia school has doubled since 2001 - thus it is much easier to get into school now than it was 7 years ago. Some schools have a plethora of very qualified applicants and others, obviously, not so much. Higher education in this country is a business and schools have pressure to fill their slots for tuition dollars. It is the job of all CRNAs to show a vested interest in the type of applicants who are being accepted to schools and the quality of graduates who are being produced.

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