Experience .... question Should I go or stay ?

Nurses General Nursing

Published

  1. Stay at the nursing home to gain experience?

    • 1
      Yes
    • 0
      No
    • 5
      Go to the clinic !

6 members have participated

So I am a new nurse (LPN 3 months in the game ) and I really don't have that much experience. I know in time I will. However I recently got a job at a nursing home and I HATE IT. Not the pt. just the people I work with and the lack of support. I feel like I am drowning and there not life guard around. I do not get payed over time even though I stay 2 hours late documenting. I do not take lunch with is normal but I do not get payed for it. I have no union or benefits. I shared this with a friend who is also a new nurse and she basically told me to put on my big girl panties.

I wanted to know if it was normal for me to have 43 pts all to myself to pass out meds , treatments, change doc orders, file medical and answer the phone. She told me she had 50 pt and she gets it all done? She said if I leave the nursing home how will I get experience and when I become an RN I wont be able to get hired. etc

I may have the opportunity to leave the nursing home and work at a clinic as a floating nurse with full benefits and they specializes in

  1. Allergy and Immunology
  2. Bariatric Surgery
  3. Cancer/Oncology
  4. Cardiology
  5. Cardiothoracic Surgery
  6. Colorectal Surgery
  7. Dermatology
  8. Endocrinology
  9. Family Medicine/Primary Care
  10. Gastroenterology
  11. General Surgery
  12. Infectious Disease
  13. Internal Medicine
  14. Liver Diseases
  15. Lung/Pulmonology
  16. Nephrology
  17. Neurology
  18. Neurosurgery
  19. OBGYN
  20. Ophthalmology
  21. Optometry
  22. Orthopaedics
  23. Pain Management and Anesthesia
  24. Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine
  25. Podiatry
  26. Radiology
  27. Rheumatology
  28. Surgical Oncology
  29. Travel Medicine
  30. Vascular Surgery
  31. Urgent Care
  32. Urology

So my question is should I go or should I say at the nursing home ?

Specializes in School Nursing, Telemetry.

As I'm not a SNF nurse, I can't say what the normal patient load is, but I think it's ridiculous for anyone to be expected to stay over 2 hours and not get paid, in addition to not taking a lunch. I work as a school RN/med-surg RN and there are times when I don't get a lunch, but this shouldn't be the norm. I hate when people feel like you've got to be a martyr in order to be a nurse. Yes, you have to expect that things happen and you won't get your breaks occasionally, because patients always come first (within reason), but the perspective that you're a wimp if you want a break has got to stop.

I am always inclined to say stay in the position you have for awhile and give it a chance. But, if you truly don't like it, and you SECURE another job, than go ahead and take it. You'll be getting experience in whatever job you get. You'll have a different skill set.

One of the jobs I work is in a clinic. Believe me I am still overworked. I miss my breaks frequently because as the PP said - patients come first. That being said I do not volunteer my time to ANY employer. Another job I work does not pay for you to attend staff meetings - I don't go to them then.. If you are working after you need to not punch out. If you are not getting a lunch you need to submit a missed lunch note.

LTC tends to be a VERY busy job, and as you gain more experience you will move faster. Clinic nursing tends to pay less than LTC, but your benefits may be better. Only you can say what will work best for you. Being a flot at a clinic with that many specialties isn't going to be a picnic either. At least in the LTC facility you can come up with a routine. Being a float does not allow that luxury.

your'e better off working a wal-Mart than that pighole. Why do people subject themselves to places like that?

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