It is my first time to work in the US, and since I am a re entry RN who couldn't get into a hospital ("you have to have 1 yr acute care experience before we could accept you" or "try working in a nursing home first so you could get used to patient care again") decided to try working in a SNF despite the many horror stories that I have heard from friends. It has always been my principle to get a first hand experience before I draw conclusions.
I initially applied for a NS position, then discovered that I have to cover 54 beds, average of 8 daily chartings, 4 weekly chartings, and mandatory charting for those with changes in condition (i.e., unlimited, but at the time there were 10 who have UTIs, pneumonia, falls..) I turned down the shift and wanted to resign, but was later on convinced to continue when one of my bosses told me that I could just be an AM or PM med nurse and later on do the AM or PM shift (max 26 patients, and depending which side, you will have a med nurse for four hours)..
I decided to focus on the positives, and tried to ignore the fact that nurses DON'T have time to check (or re-check/re-validate) the accuracy of the MAR. WE (my batchmate and other medication nurses) talked and concluded that the average time we consume in giving meds is 2.5hrs for every turn (for 8am meds, we finish at 1030am, sometimes 1015am). They say management knows about this, but the updating of the MAR has been delegated to Medical Records personnel because it is too expensive to hire more nurses.
The biggest thing that bothers me is that a co-worker discovered that we have been giving Metformin to a certain resident 2 months beyond the date it was discontinued.
I only worked 3 times on that side, and I was an orientee, but still I was a part of the error. And honestly, I think about this a lot now that my DON wants me to be oriented on the more acute side of the NH.
I am funding my nephew's nursing education, but other than that, my finances are ok because my hubby works.
I want to resign, should I? But I'm worried as to how this will reflect on my future job interviews, should I tell my interviewee these issues? Honestly right now, I am thinking of going back to the Phils and just be a clinical instructor. It seems there's no real nursing shortage here.
Do you have any other issues with nursing home staffing / patient safety? Pls do tell.