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Floor nursing to ICU? or New grad to ICU?



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  #1  
Old Aug 11, 2007, 07:45 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2007
Floor nursing to ICU? or New grad to ICU?

how difficult is it to get into NICU or ICU in general after becoming a regular floor nurse? Do they always prefer new grads over floor nurses? I've heard that because the idea is that its easier to train than to retrain. Please let me know your thoughts.

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  #2  
Old Aug 11, 2007, 10:52 PM
Ruby Vee's Avatar
Experienced RN
Join Date: Jun 2002
Re: Floor nursing to ICU? or New grad to ICU?

Originally Posted by kaeky View Post
how difficult is it to get into NICU or ICU in general after becoming a regular floor nurse? Do they always prefer new grads over floor nurses? I've heard that because the idea is that its easier to train than to retrain. Please let me know your thoughts.
I know a lot of the younger/newer nurses will disagree vehemently with me, but I think "floor" experience before entering the ICU is essential. It helps to be able to concentrate on learning the new skills rather than having to start from scratch learning how to take off orders, talk to families, when and how to talk to a physician, how to take a blood pressure, etc. I think some floor experience first makes a better ICU nurse, and it certainly makes for an ICU nurse with more longevity! Nurses who've worked the floor first are less prone to "burn-out." I know that's not cut and dried, but over all, I think floor experience first is the best.

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  #3  
Old Aug 11, 2007, 11:40 PM
CarVsTree's Avatar
CarVsTree (Female)
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Re: Floor nursing to ICU? or New grad to ICU?

I agree with Ruby Vee. I will have 2 years experience on Trauma Step-down/med-surg when I start the Critical Care Course at my hospital. I love my job, but don't love having too many patients. When a med-surg pt. goes bad you now have an ICU patient and 5 others. Or your tech comes up to you and tells you your patients sao2 is 69%. Then a tech covering another pt. tells you their sat is 84% (and its only 8pm and you haven't even laid eyes on them yet. Meanwhile you have 4 other to take care of.

Teaches you good assessment skills (no machines to tell you what's going on), time management, yes ICU nurses are busy, but CC nurses that have never worked the floor are totally lost when they're pulled here (and they're only given 4 patients).

One other thing, when I get a report for a CC nurse that never worked outside of the unit, they often don't understand they're patient or ramifications for their actions. They understand on a technical level, but they don't know their patients. They know their vitals, but not them. Don't know if that makes sense or not.

I just know that I have a lot to offer my patients in CC now that I have 2 years of knowledge, calling docs, asking, begging, demanding, and finally calling the attending to get a CT scan for my pt. with all the signs of a PE. Having a pt. vomit 2 units of blood and calling the trauma resident who says, "I'm in a trauma." There is no other doc there. Then calling the attending and getting him up to the floor in 2 minutes.

There is just so much that I've learned. Now when I go, I can as Ruby so wisely said, focus on learning new skills. I already get how to deal with patients, their families (and very dysfunctional ones at that), residents, attendings, etc.

I also know I love trauma not just think I do. I KNOW I want to go to Trauma ICU because I LOVE trauma, I love our attendings, and I like the challenge of dealing with trauma patients and their families. I had no idea what I loved, hated, or was indifferent about 2 years ago.

That's my 65 cents!

Take care!

Sue Z

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  #4  
Old Aug 12, 2007, 07:23 AM
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Re: Floor nursing to ICU? or New grad to ICU?

As a graduate RN (in Australia mind, but still) I would recommend working on the floor first. In my grad program, i have been given specialties, 2 of which are critical care units. I feel that my prior experience as an undergraduate nurse has helped me immensely.
A new grad has more potential to struggle, as they dont have a grasp on the kind of things Ruby Vee mentioned.
As a grad who has gone pretty much straight into critical care (though never asking for this!) with a fair amount of acute nursing experience, i recommend working the floor before jumping into the ICU environment.
I personally do not intend on staying in the critical care environment at the end of my grad program, as i want at least a year on the floor first, if ever i return to the crit care environment.

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  #5  
Old Aug 12, 2007, 07:45 AM
NursingAgainstdaOdds's Avatar
Hey, nice veins
Join Date: May 2007
Re: Floor nursing to ICU? or New grad to ICU?

[edited to add : I'm a GN.] 95% of the CC nurses I've discussed this with roooooooooooooooollllllllll their eyes when they learn of GNs entering the ED or ICU. Personally, I feel it is with good reason - 99% of the time my pts are pretty predictable, and if they do start circling the drain I have time to react, time to call a clinical assessment team, time to get an MD on the floor ... it just seems to make sense to me. Of course, I'm just a newbie with zero CC experience, but logic to me dictates a GN head for an area w/ pts who are generally more stable.

And, now that I think about it ... if it were me or my family member in the ICU, I'd want a seasoned nurse by their side, not a GN. *ducks tomatoes being hurled in her general direction*(please don't hurt me. )

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  #6  
Old Aug 12, 2007, 08:53 AM
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Re: Floor nursing to ICU? or New grad to ICU?

I think EVERY nurse should do a year of med/surg. It is a shame that with the shortage people go straight into specialties.

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  #7  
Old Aug 12, 2007, 09:49 AM
llg
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Join Date: Sep 2002
Re: Floor nursing to ICU? or New grad to ICU?

If you are interested in Neonatal ICU, adult med-surg experience is not helpful and may even hurt your chances of being successful. The transition from adults to neonates is so dramatic that many people have trouble making that switch. With 14 years of experience running orientation programs in several NICU's, I have monitored that phenomena for years. I have also talked with educators in other children's hospitals who have said the same thing: the adult med-surg nurses are the ones who have the hardest time switching to NICU and who have the worst chance of making it through the first year in a NICU. The success rate for new grads is much higher.

After a year or two in adult med-surg, a nurse begins to feel competent, confident, and comfortable in her role. She trusts her judgment. When she then swtitches to NICU where the judgments are so different and few of the lessons she learned apply to her new work environment, she feels as if the rug has been pulled out from under her. Feelining uncomfortable and insecure, many retreat back to adult med-surg where they feel competent and comfortable. I can't tell you how many nurses I have seen do this and say to me, "I'm so disappointed. I always wanted to work in NICU, but I'm just too afraid I am going to hurt one of these little babies if I work here."

New grads don't expect to feel comfortable right away and haven't developed that feeling of competence and confidence that usually develops about a year or so after graduation. So ... they stick out that first year of transition and develop that comfort in a NICU environment. I hope that explanation makes sense.

Also ... a good NICU will be quite used to hiring new grads and will have an orientation program that is geared toward helping them succeed. If your local NICU does NOT often hire new grads and does not have such a program, then I wouldn't start there as a new grad ... but if they do, then go for it if it what you want.

Finally ... if you feel that you are not ready for the NICU's intense environment and would like to get some nursing experience before becoming a NICU nurse, then that's OK. But I strongly recommend that the experience you get be something that is relevant to NICU -- don't choose adult med-surg that will give you experience that you will have to "un-do" to work in NICU. Level II nursery experience is the best choice. Mother/baby, general peds, etc. are all better choices than adult med-surg. Work somewhere will you will be working with babies and/or small children.

Now ... if you are wanting to work in an adult ICU, then that's a whole different story. For that type of career goal, adult med-surg experience can be very helpful.

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  #8  
Old Aug 12, 2007, 10:06 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2007
Re: Floor nursing to ICU? or New grad to ICU?

On the flip side, I have lost 3 nurses in the past 5 years from medsurg to NICU and they are all still there and love it!

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  #9  
Old Aug 12, 2007, 10:21 AM
PMFB-RN (Male)
Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2006
Re: Floor nursing to ICU? or New grad to ICU?

Originally Posted by Nursegrrl8 View Post
I think EVERY nurse should do a year of med/surg. It is a shame that with the shortage people go straight into specialties.
*** I disagree and am happy that nursing leaders also disagree (at least at my hospital). I entered a large level I trauma hospital's SICU as a new grad and have been very successful. My hospital has a very comprehensive, nine month long, training program for new grads. Of the 8 new grads in the program with me only two had no health care experience before going to nursing school.
I knew exactly what I wanted to do and it isn't med/surg. If I had been forced to spend a year doing med/surg it's very likely I wouldn't have even gone to nursing school to get my RN. I know at least a couple of people in the CC training program felt the same way.
All that said, I have plenty of respect for the floor nurses and though I occasionally float to med/surg (my choice, CC nurses are not required to float to med/surg in my hospital) it's not for me.

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  #10  
Old Aug 12, 2007, 02:55 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Re: Floor nursing to ICU? or New grad to ICU?

I think it's foolishness to put a new grad in a CCU or ICU. Ahhh just my 2cents........I really liked Sue's 65 cents worth

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Floor nursing to ICU? or New grad to ICU?

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