Fired after the first month as a new grad! In shock!

Nurses General Nursing

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I was offered a job at a busy outpatient urgent care clinic before I graduated. I will try my best to make a long story short. I was trained by over 6 different preceptors for the first few weeks. Each time I was switched to a new person, it wasn't because I wasn't learning or had an issue with another nurse; it was because the other nurses "didn't have the time to train me" (this was their explanation, not mine). I guess this wouldn't be a problem except that each time I was switched the new preceptor wouldn't let me do anything without "watching" her first. I barely had any hands on experience at all. This was very frustrating and boring, but I tried to watch and learn.

After almost a month of this, I finally got up the courage and spoke to my supervisor about this. I told her I felt that I wasn't getting appropriate training and I needed to be assigned one preceptor and actually given the opportunity to use my hands. She agreed, and finally assigned me an actual preceptor.

A week later, I was told on Monday that I was doing great. My supervisor and preceptor gave me some feedback about time management, but most of the feedback was positive. They literally said I was making great progress. I felt great, I thanked them for being so supportive, and continued to work the evening shift.

Then I ended up interacting with a very unprofessional, rude doctor. He belittled me all night, he would mumble orders and expect me to enter them in the computer for him. When I would ask him to repeat himself so I made sure I entered the right thing, he would get angry. The final straw came when he picked up a chart for a 15 year old patient and started talking to the parents of a baby about her medical history. I had no idea any of this was happening, until he swung open the door to the room, and shouted at me "What are you doing? What patient's room am I in? You gave me the wrong chart!"

I calmly walked up to him and pointed to the room number on the chart "That says room number 9"

He replied "Well I'm in room number nine!"

I pointed to the door. It was room 10. He was livid. His face was so red... We work in a clinic, the charts are left in an open area for the doctors to come to, first come, first serve. I don't hand anyone charts, and I didn't make any errors.

The next day I walk in and I am told that I am being terminated because it's taking too long to train me. My supervisor, whose voice was shaking and looked on the verge of tears told me that the doctors at the office decided I wasn't learning fast enough and they had to let me go.

I don't feel like this was fair at all. I was never given a chance to prove myself. I was never told that I wasn't performing to standards. The doctor I had the altercation with, I now know, is the co-owner of the practice. I guess I should have kissed his butt a little more and not corrected him in front of a patient. You live, you learn.

Now I am wondering if I will ever get another job. My contract said that I had 90 days to be in training. I wasn't unprofessional. I never had issues in clinical at school and I had three clinical professors offer to write me letters of recommendation.

I know that I should have spoken up earlier about the lack of hands on training but I really didn't want to upset anyone. I never, ever put a patient at risk and I never did anything that would be considered negligence. When I did start to do hands-on activities I was told I was performing well. The only thing I was asked to improve was prioritizing, which was I admit is a weakness. But I feel like their expectations were a little absurd for a new graduate. Did anyone else go through this? Any advice? Should I list this on my resume?

Specializes in Critical Care; Cardiac; Professional Development.

Welcome to the highly political world of medicine. It stings, its wrong, it can be traumatizing. I hope you are able to pull yourself up by your bootstraps, shake this one off and go forward. There was literally nothing you could have done to prevent this from happening. I am so sorry.

Welcome to the world of right-to-work. If the owner doesn't like you, it doesn't matter if he's a jerk. He's the owner, he makes the rules.

Specializes in Gerontology, Med surg, Home Health.

Make sure you find out about the orientation you'll get if you get the PRN trauma job. Being a new grad is difficult enough but doing trauma nursing on a PRN basis? You'll need a solid orientation to succeed.

Specializes in ER.

I would just move on. A blip on the radar. Don't list it as it was only a month. Live and learn. Be patient with the process and tow th e line until you are off of your probationary time.

Specializes in Hospice.

Good riddance, nasty little doctor who's barely a blip on your radar! High ho, Trauma!!!! My dream job is trauma, excites me a little.

Specializes in ED, ICU, PSYCH, PP, CEN.

Forget about this toxic workplace that you spent 4 weeks at. It never happened. Orientation and probation is a time for seeing if the job is for you. Obviously it wasn't . If you feel you must tell anyone about this horrible workplace you spent a few days in, say that it wasn't a good fit and leave it at that.

I was fired for not dissimilar reasons and had a job a week later that has turned out to be a very sweet deal. That was 2 years ago. I did not mention the rotten job cause it was 3 weeks with a bunch of jerks. I have been in my new position for 2 years now and love it.

There is a lot of this crap that goes on in nursing..

Its always important to take every experience as a learning opportuity. Not just your clinial skills or understanding your need to better understand nursing prioritization, but you mentioned how you should have kissed that doctors butt. You hit the nail on the head. They found an excuse to fire you and they fired you not because you were taking too long you train. You had a contract saying you would get 90 days. You ****** off the boss.

I got fired from a job for pretty much the same reason. She let me sta the 90 days though before she found a lame excuse. Going over it in my head, I realized it was my relationship with her. Live and learn, like you said. Learn that making nice and making friends onyour job is imprtant and it doesn't matter how good (or how sloppy, so it works in your favor, too) you do yourjob. If you are going to make nice with anyone on the job, it's going to be your superiors. Yes, it's butt kissng but people in those kinds of jobs love it. On your next job, do the good work you know how to do, master prioritization, and make the boss personally love you. Then you will get your magical year and after that be able to make decisions about what you want to do next. Good luck!

BTW, in your interviews, if you say your weakness is prioritization, make sure you quickly follow up with what you are doing to fix it.

Specializes in CRNA, Finally retired.

I think that urgent care is a tough place for a new grad to work - trauma, even worst. But I sympathize that it's difficult to find work so people take whatever horrible job they can get.

Specializes in Critical Care, Education.

Hate to be the bearer or bad tidings but . . . if the OP had FICA deductions, that (very short) job will show up on background checks. If resume/application does not match this information, it will be called into question. But I do like the idea of just calling it a "temporary position". That would certainly work.

Put it on job applications that ask for job history. That doesn't mean you have to put it on your resume.

Gosh, wow, some people are just so unhappy. You will sure get a job soon. Forget dumb doctor & that place. If they allow for nurses to be treated that way, not a good place to work. Apply elsewhere. luckily you just started there and you can move around without being so much at a loss. Good luck. Jerk of a doc...he'll get his!

Hate to be the bearer or bad tidings but . . . if the OP had FICA deductions, that (very short) job will show up on background checks. If resume/application does not match this information, it will be called into question. But I do like the idea of just calling it a "temporary position". That would certainly work.

A resume is not a job history. It's a marketing document. Failure to include a previous position on there is not a reason to fire someone. Prior to nursing I worked various jobs for 10 years and included only 2 of them on my new grad resume. No one ever called that in to question.

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