Nursing Jobs
|
|
Job Seeker:
Employer:
|
How-To allnurses |
 |
|
Welcome to allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses
The largest most active online nursing community. Join 312,486 nurses from around the world to learn, communicate, and network. For full allnurses.com access, register today - it's free! Problems during registration? Please don't hesitate to contact support.
|
Would you like to comment?
Join or Login if already a member.

Oct 16, 2007, 10:19 PM
|
|
|
Hey all...I'm a student in my last semester of school. I have interviewed and accepted a position as an OB nurse following graduation. Ever since I was little I have wanted to be an OB nurse. I have tried to keep an open mind during school but I know this is where I want to be. The problem is several of my teachers and nurses I have in clinical are telling me I should do at least a year in med-surg before specializing. I'm not passionate about med-surg nursing. I'm passionate about OB. I just want to know what you all think.
|

Oct 16, 2007, 10:54 PM
|
 |
SuperModerator
|
|
|
Definitely TO OB!! That old nurses' tale about needing a year of med-surg is bunk. It is helpful to have some practice with organization and prioritization before taking on a critical care area, and OB can certainly be that, but there are also enough low-risk deliveries that you should be able to get a solid grounding in nursing basics before you have to join the fray of hectic crashing moms and babes. Go with your heart. I haven't looked after an adult since nursing school and I'm perfectly happy with that. Neither did I do any peds med-surg before landing in PICU, but I don't feel at all deprived!
The following members say Thank You:
|

Oct 17, 2007, 09:45 AM
|
|
|
ooh please go to OB... i wish i did.. it's not as stressful on you. i work med/surg and it is so stressful and hard.
The following member says Thank You:
|

Oct 17, 2007, 09:57 AM
|
|
|
UGH! Please give me 5 minutes with the well-meaning, but ill-informed instructors who continue to dish out this "advice" to students.
Nursing is hard work. It is hard work even if you are passionate about your chosen area of care. It is pure drudgery if you are forced to care for patients whose conditions and problems don't fascinate you. There is nothing "magical" about med/surg in terms of learning organization, prioritization, problem solving skills, assessment and care of patients, pharmacology, team work, or hospital politics. All of these essential skills can be (and are) learned in any care of care.
Go to OB. Go directly to OB. Do not pass go. Do not collect $200. Enjoy!
The following member says Thank You:
|

Oct 17, 2007, 10:09 AM
|
|
|
Hey, you have to go where you are happy and if it has always been your goal to go into OB, then that is where you should go. Yes, med surg may offer some benefits, but it is up to you and no one else.
Kris
The following member says Thank You:
|

Oct 17, 2007, 01:45 PM
|
|
|
I know exactly where you are coming from!
However, I'll have to be the odd person out with my opinion. I always wanted to be an OB nurse, too. However, I did work 2 years before starting in OB (1 year in LTC, one on Med/Surg). Did I enjoy it? Heck NO! However, I really feel like I gained skills--communication, assessment, critical thinking, blah blah blah...
In OB, you really need to be able to think on your feet, make quick decisions, and communicate assertively to Docs, patients and families. No 2 patients are exactly the same, and you need to be comfortable in your skin as a nurse to deal with a lot of these situations.
I feel I benifitted tremendously from my other experience, and actually, don't know if I'd have made it on OB right out of school. That being said, each person is different, and their experience and exposure at their nursing programs differ. I felt horribly unprepared for "real life", and really grew in my Med/Surg role.
We do hire new grads at times. However, most of them do not last very long. It's really a lot of info to process. The ones that do stick it out are fantastic, though.
If you do choose to go straight to OB, make sure to ask what their orientation program is like. Some facilities have fantastic, organized programs, while others fly by the seat of their pants. You would certainly need an extensive orientation. At our facility, once you are done orienting, no pains are taken to insure that seasoned nurses are working with newbies...You can (and sometimes do) have all new nurses working at once (shame shame shame on our manager)!!
Whatever you decide, best of luck to you!
|

Oct 18, 2007, 10:44 AM
|
|
|
I would definately go to OB. That is all I ever wanted to do, but It is very hard to get into without experiance where I live. I am hoping a few years of NICU will make me more appealing!
Good luck and have fun!!
|

Oct 21, 2007, 11:42 PM
|
|
|
I have been a High Risk L&D nurse for 1yr2mo. I went into nursing school knowing I wanted to be an L&D nurse. When I got ready to graduate I had all kinds of people telling me that I needed to be a med-surg nurse. I was like, for what, to make me and everyone around me miserable. Anyway, in L&D I got my fair share of medsurg through my pregnant pts who came in with every illness from diabetes to cancer. I have had some very sick pts with some very sick babies. Long story short, I got med surg experience through L&D without having to work in Med Surg. My advice: DO WHAT YOU LOVE!!!!!! Its your life, your paycheck, your license, and if you hate your work.....your misery!!!!
The following member says Thank You:
|

Oct 21, 2007, 11:55 PM
|
 |
Anxiety Nut
|
|
|
Originally Posted by macaroon
Hey all...I'm a student in my last semester of school. I have interviewed and accepted a position as an OB nurse following graduation. Ever since I was little I have wanted to be an OB nurse. I have tried to keep an open mind during school but I know this is where I want to be. The problem is several of my teachers and nurses I have in clinical are telling me I should do at least a year in med-surg before specializing. I'm not passionate about med-surg nursing. I'm passionate about OB. I just want to know what you all think.
Thank you so much for starting this thread! I am in the exact same situation. I really, really want to go into OB nursing after graduation and every advice I get, including my mom, friends', and teachers is the same thing: do med-surg first. I really don't want to do that. *sigh* If the experience will offer me more benefits than headaches, then I'm all for it, but I don't know. Med-surg nursing is not something I really want to do.
Originally Posted by janfrn
Definitely TO OB!! That old nurses' tale about needing a year of med-surg is bunk. It is helpful to have some practice with organization and prioritization before taking on a critical care area, and OB can certainly be that, but there are also enough low-risk deliveries that you should be able to get a solid grounding in nursing basics before you have to join the fray of hectic crashing moms and babes. Go with your heart. I haven't looked after an adult since nursing school and I'm perfectly happy with that. Neither did I do any peds med-surg before landing in PICU, but I don't feel at all deprived! 
I loooove you for saying this! It's not everyday I hear this kind of advice. I think all nursing students are being told the same thing.
Originally Posted by dansmom6
I know exactly where you are coming from!
However, I'll have to be the odd person out with my opinion. I always wanted to be an OB nurse, too. However, I did work 2 years before starting in OB (1 year in LTC, one on Med/Surg). Did I enjoy it? Heck NO! However, I really feel like I gained skills--communication, assessment, critical thinking, blah blah blah...
In OB, you really need to be able to think on your feet, make quick decisions, and communicate assertively to Docs, patients and families. No 2 patients are exactly the same, and you need to be comfortable in your skin as a nurse to deal with a lot of these situations.
I feel I benifitted tremendously from my other experience, and actually, don't know if I'd have made it on OB right out of school. That being said, each person is different, and their experience and exposure at their nursing programs differ. I felt horribly unprepared for "real life", and really grew in my Med/Surg role.
We do hire new grads at times. However, most of them do not last very long. It's really a lot of info to process. The ones that do stick it out are fantastic, though.
If you do choose to go straight to OB, make sure to ask what their orientation program is like. Some facilities have fantastic, organized programs, while others fly by the seat of their pants. You would certainly need an extensive orientation. At our facility, once you are done orienting, no pains are taken to insure that seasoned nurses are working with newbies...You can (and sometimes do) have all new nurses working at once (shame shame shame on our manager)!!
Whatever you decide, best of luck to you!
You have a point. Hmmm. It's dificult to decide. *sigh* I want to get some experience, but I don't want to be miserable while doing it. Your post, though, really makes me think. So, thanks.
|
Would you like to comment?
Join or Login if already a member.
Currently Active Users Viewing: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
| Thread Tools |
Search this Thread |
|
|
|
|