Originally Posted by MissNursieNurse
As a rather fresh nurse, I have changed my speciality to psych nursing. I've been in the field now for just over a year, and I can not count the number of times that nurses have come up to me and told me I have made the 'wrong decision' in that I will 'lose my skills'. I feel that psych nursing is a total different set of skills, many of which we did not learn in nursing school. A lot have told me that I will get lax and forget many of the things that I did learn, skill wise. I feel that psych nursing entails a complete different set of skills that many nurses working in the 'general' hospital would not know how to use. I love psych and wish that other's would not look at it as not using my 'nursing skills'. There is far more place for advancement and I feel that I am using my degree to the highest I can where I am working currently. I am wondering if anyone else has come across similar comments from collagues and how that has made you feel. I love the skills that I am using and getting to lear and I think it's wonderful that there are so many avenuse to presue in nursing.
I went into psych with only six months of the sacred med/surg nursing under my belt. Stayed there a long time and, yes, some of my medical skills did atrophy. On the plus side, I was also an EMT so my assessment skills stayed pretty sharp. On the minus side, I missed much of the developing technology and new protocols, not to mention I lost my familiarity with many of the "old" equipment and practices.
I liked psych and, as you said, picked up all kinds of interesting abilities that I wouldn't have acquired in a regular medical setting.
Eventually, it became time for a change. I was more than a little overwhelmed at the thought of returning to acute care and started looking at the available options. I ended up taking an 8-wk RN refresher course at a local community college. The course included two weeks of classroom and lab (sterile technique, IVs, suctioning, and a whole lot more), and a six-week clinical in a hospital setting. I ended up on an ortho-neuro floor which showed me that was NOT where I want eventual employment, but the experience got me back up to speed on the basics and restored my confidence as a medically oriented nurse.
I am coming up on one year working in a busy urban postpartum unit. My job is a very good fit and I'm thrilled to have it. And I find myself using my psych background all the time.
If psych is what you love, go for it, understanding that your lack of med/surg experience may raise some hurdles later on. That lack may even cause you some problems now in that you may have difficulty recognizing/addressing medical issues in a patient population that can be a handful when it comes to effective communication. Some may withhold information. Others may not be able to process or tell you what they're feeling physically. Determination on your part to educate yourself and take advantage of training your employer offers can offset your limited med/surg background.
As for the future, who knows? You may spend your entire career in psych. If you want to look elsewhere, there are opportunities that would require miminal brush up. There are others where you would benefit from taking a refresher course. That's why such courses exist. Just know that it can be done. One of my classmates was returning to nursing with one year of floor experience and 15 YEARS at home. She did very well.
I'd encourage any nurse in any field to keep learning. Seek after the things that apply to your specialty, but also be open to information and ideas outside your area. This keeps the brain nimble, the spirit humble, and the imagination alive and kicking.
I wish you well.