Originally Posted by JennRN&Mom23
Hi, I work on a Medical Unit (surg is separate at our hospital). It is in total a 70 bed unit with telemetry. I have been working there for 10 years in total (6 as an RPN and 4 as an RN). I loved it and can't imagine working anywhere else.
I'm in Canada and am not sure what certifications you are talking about. We don't get certified here to work med/surg.
I have had a varied experience, I worked med/surg telemetry for two years--36 patients, 3 nurses (one an LPN) and 1 assistant--I was brand new and did not know any better. I then went to home health, then to the outpatient heart cath unit.
I am back to med surg and I love it! I am certified through AMSN and am proud that I have declared my specialty and have proven I know what I am doing. I have explained it to nurses and physicians (who have questioned my new intials) that is the difference between a general practioner and a specialist. This has earned me additional respect from my co-workers and from the physicans that I work closely with.
I work on a 36 bed medical unit that does have telemetry on approx 75-80% of the patients. Day shift has six nurses, Evening shift has five to six, and Night shift has five. Of course, the day and evening shift staff is subject to cencus. Our second and third shift work seven days on and seven days off. We work seven days and get paid for nine days. This is the incentive for working this schedule. However, new hires are not getting this option.
The nursing shortage has made a tremendous difference in the number of nurses that we have. Day shift only has FOUR FULL TIME RN'S. We are located between two large cities, where commuting will pay you an additional $5 to $10 dollars an hour. I am working an extra day on my off week to help out. Our hospital has recently started a flexi-pool to handle these situations, but my experience is that their work is substandard. One nurse did not sign off/ or do the tasks on three pages of orders.
Unfortunately, this was not caught until third shift.
Any thoughts and suggestions would be appreciated. Of course, commiseration is a good thing too! Good luck out there, Veronica RN, CMSRN