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  #21  
Old May 02, 2002, 12:50 PM
Registered User
Join Date: May 2002
charge nurse

New Jersey-combined MICU/CCU. We have 24 beds, 12 on each side. When a manager is on they do not take an assignment unless all of us have 3. If a staff nurse is in charge we generally take an assignment rather than have a colleague or two be stuck with 3. Staff also tends to back up the staff, even with an assignment, than the managers do. I think our managers should have an assignment.
Good luck with your poll!

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  #22  
Old May 02, 2002, 05:12 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2002
Arrow

I work in the ICU of a small community hospital in rural Western Pennsylvania. I too am a charge nurse and we are expected to take a full patient load. With the nursing shortage hitting us hard the entire situation has been at times unsafe. Please see and respond to my posting about Staffing in an ICU.

Thanks
PRF

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  #23  
Old May 04, 2002, 08:35 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2001

In the unit I work in (ccu/micu) the PCC's generally don't have a pt. assignment unless we are short staffed. PCCs are paid an extra $1.40/hr. RN's who are in charge if there is no PCC schedualed get an extra $.70/ hr. again usually no pt. assignment.

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  #24  
Old May 04, 2002, 09:35 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2000

Connecticut, 800+ bed hospital, no differential, charge RN in ICU does not usually get assignment -- varies with sick calls, etc. No ICU for me thanks -- they're sick enough on the floors.

Good thoughts to all of you.

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  #25  
Old May 06, 2002, 07:41 PM
Zee_RN (Female)
Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2000

18-bed ICU in a community hospital. We have six full-time charge nurses and they do NOT take a patient assignment (which I think is the only safe way to do charge nurse duties). I think it's just terrible that so many places have charge nurses with a full patient assignment! Charge nurses earn $1.00/hr more than staff nurses. Fortunately, our ICU is quite well staffed right now; we're up to full staff and even have a couple RN's waiting for openings in the ICU. But even when we were down staff, the charge did NOT take patients...sometimes charge nurses came in extra as staff nurses but there was still a dedicated charge nurse without a patient assignment at the helm.

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  #26  
Old Nov 23, 2003, 11:12 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2003

I work in a 15 bed unit and our charge nurse usually takes no assignment. All of our experienced RNs rotate the charge role. They are responsible for staffing, assiignments, carry the code beeper and respond to codes if needed, assist other staff member, and cover patients that are cared for by an LPN. Occasionally if staffing is bad they will take half a patient assignments (such as 1 1:2, 2 1:3 etc).

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  #27  
Old Dec 09, 2003, 09:58 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2001

In Florida, yes you do! You can take as many as 3 with the Charge thing. It is crazy but it's true.

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  #28  
Old Dec 09, 2003, 10:06 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2002

16 bed Coronary Care Unit (medical and surgical)
Designated charge nurses
Extra pay for charge (though not sure how much)
Charge Rn takes assignment, but they make the assignments so if it is really busy, they can take a lighter assignment or one patient. Our day shift charge occassionally does not take an assignment if there is alot of shuffeling of patients to be done.

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  #29  
Old Dec 15, 2003, 01:24 PM
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2002

I am an RN in a 20 bed Trauma/Medical/Surgical ICU in a large teaching hospital. Our charge nurse is responsible for staffing, bed assignments, and being a helper/resource person for staff....she does not take patients. We also have a team leader assigned to each team who does take a patient load but is responsible for making patient assignments after report and being a resource/helper for her teammates. I have seen our charge nurse forced to take a patient maybe two times in the two years I have worked in this unit due to high acuity or staffing issues but it is usually only for a couple hours or so. Our charge nurse makes an extra $1.00/hr for doing charge but we also have shift coordinators who are "permanent charge nurse" for most of the week and they have a higher salary than staff nurses but also have extra duties such as scheduling, etc...Only when a shift coordinator is not available to work does a staff nurse having to do charge and in that case they receive the extra $1.00/hr and do not have an assignment.

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  #30  
Old Jan 16, 2004, 02:04 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2004
charge duties

I work in a 14 bed icu and I take the same amt. of patients as the other rns when I am in charge. Im responsible for calling people in to work extra if we are short, documenting interventions, making sure the report sheet and next days staffing is updated, and booking beds.

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