New Grads, A Few Words of Encouragement

After reading so many threads here on allnurses.com about the hard times many new grads are having at getting jobs, I just wanted to share a few words of encouragement. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

My feelings go out to all of you who are having a hard time finding jobs. I feel your pain and know what you are going through.

I graduated in '95, we all had similar issues with new grads having a hard time finding a job. The market was saturated, hospitals only wanted 1-2 years of experience. I found it very frustrating and scary. Months and months of applying, sending out my resumes and applications, and continually getting rejected. Eventually, I came to the realization that my dream of working in a hospital as a new grad was not going to happen.

I began applying at Long Term Care (LTC) facilities, something that did not interest me at the time, but I was wanting so bad to begin my nursing career that I was willing to take any job that I could find to begin getting some experience, etc...

While my goal was to work in a level one trauma center and ICU, or ER, I found myself in long term care, and once I accepted it, I really enjoyed long term care. I found myself learning a ton of nursing assessment knowledge and personal skills. It really forces you to become independent and autonomous, working on time management and so many skills that are essential to all nurses. I learned a ton from so many LVN's and RN's in LTC, they were amazing sources of experience and mentoring. I really felt that my experience in LTC was a wonderful asset to my future working in Critical Care. I eventually ended up working in CCU (Coronary Care Unit), and the vast majority of our patients were elderly, and I felt I had already been accustomed and educated on that clientele, and my experience with that population from LTC, it was a great source of confidence.

After a few years, I began re-applying to the hospitals and with my experience, and the nursing saturation cycle changing, I eventually moved into a long term acute care facility, got hospital experience, all while continuing to apply and follow up with multiple hospitals, eventually was hired by a hospital in telemetry, then CCU and I finally moved into a job that I was wanting from a new grad. Also, during this time, I took every opportunity to get certificates in ACLS, EKG classes and other certificate classes to help make me more marketable and attractive to hospital managers. But it was a long hard journey, but well worth it.

As you all know, the market and nursing shortage (or not so shortage) varies dramatically based on different geographic regions, cities, states, etc... I have no idea about the long term care employment marketplace where you live. But I would recommend you explore ALL employment opportunities, whether or not it's in your overall dream of how you thought you would start your career.

The average age of nurses (upper 40's), the baby boomers creating more demand for health care, etc... all indicate that nursing will be a strong employment arena. I feel that the projected nursing shortage we've all been hearing about for years was and is a legitimate concern. However, the changes in the economy other industry job losses has brought many existing nurses back into the workforce, kept nurses working later in their career than planned before retirement, etc... All of these issues have skewed the projections and the nursing marketplace is not really hot for the time being.

My gut feeling and my hope is that in the next year or so, as our economy improves, more nurses will be retiring, more baby boomers putting more and more demand on the health system, the hiring freezes will lessen and that the nursing marketplace will eventually open up more and all you newer nurses will have many more opportunities.

No one has a crystal ball on when things will turn around, but by historical records, they eventually will. There are so many positive indicators that nursing is still a strong profession and a wonderful career choice.

So my words of advice to all of you is try to remain as positive, do your best to get employment, open your boundaries to acceptable driving distances, possible relocation if that is an option for you. Take jobs that may not be your ideal job, gain any experience that you can, even if it's not what you want. Continue to educate yourselves, certificates and classes (ie. ACLS, PALS, EKG) that are related to the type of nursing you want to do. So when the time comes and the employment opportunities do open up, you are prepared and ready.

Best of Luck!

Specializes in ICU.

There are ample jobs in Milwaukee, Wisconsin!

I am also graduating this May and have a job lined up in an ICU.

Good Luck!

i am a new lpn and i just passed my nclex in march, ive been to about ten inteviews and must have sent my resume to about twenty dif places,. i get the same answer " you do not have any exp". i am begining to feel that i just made the biggest mistake of my life, i have two daughters ages 2 and 1, and my husband salary can barely make it.. and i can honestly say that i wish that things would start getting better but thats not how i feel iis like all my sacrafices to get to this point is for nothing...

Thanks for this encouragement. After graduating in Dec, and having such a hard time finding ANYTHING, I finally got a per diem job in an assisted living facility. I have spoken to my profs. since graduating, and they all say, "We tried to warn you" without being too outspoken, that on the East Coast, there is a small vacancy ratio! Well, the college keeps pumping us out!

Specializes in Geriatrics.

Upon graduating top of my class becoming an LPN, I was hired immediatly in LTC. My first day as a graduate LPN, my DON assigned me to the "skilled hall". This facility has 6 wings, holding 50 patients per wing. Me? Im assigned to SKILLED! All "NEW" nurses pay attention! I WAS SCAIRED TO DEATH! This hall, recieved all new admissions, the very ill patients, if they progressed, with the ok from their MD, they would transfer to the other halls. To this day, I thank my DON, for assigning me to this hall. The skills I obtained in the ten years I remained employed with this LTC facility are unremarkable. From admitting the patient, paperwork, taking off orders, ordering meds, clarifying questions with MD, treatments, ordering supplies, Iv's, Cad pumps,Ng tubes, peg tube feedings, catheters, peritoneal dialysis, trach care, making and recieving MD calls each day, pushing Iv meds emergency and non emergency, assessing critical situations and watching your patient heal from them, doing CPR, calling and leading a RED TEAM ALERT, also meeting the patients family needs, and at the end of my ten years at this facility, I had been Charge Nurse of each shift, including when I went to 16 hour shift weekends. They sent RNs to me to train, which I enjoyed teaching, they would look at me and ask me how i could take all the stress? Made me smile! Please know new nurses, us seasoned nurses know your fears, we have been where you are, and it takes time to become a great nurse. To learn, ask, Ive been a nurse 16 years now, I STILL ASK, its always changing, and its ok. Expect mistakes. They will humble you, and learn from them, we all make them. After 16 years in LTC, I feel I can go ANYWHERE with my skills and Charge experience, and do just fine. But I so remember walking onto that skilled hall brand spanking new my heart in my throat, thinking maybe I shoud work at Walmart instead! Be strong, Good Luck, Ask, always ask questions if need calls, we ALL are learning each day, you will become "the nurse" only "the nurse" YOU want to be in time! Congrats!:yeah:

I really needed that encouragement. Thanks a lot! :yeah:

I live in the Bay Area, graduated last December, and has been job hunting ever since. I am very frustrated and feeling hopeless that it'll be almost 5 months, and I haven't received a single phone call from any of the hospitals I've applied to. :crying2:

Now, I am considering a possible employment at a skilled nursing facility. I would take any nursing job available to start my career and pay the student loans.

Thank you so much for the advice....

That's a long journey....

Hoping that i can also found my way to success....:icon_roll

Thank you ALL for your answers..you all make a lot of sense. I hope you're right about the job market turn-around, in fact, I guess I'm counting on it. I can't imagine working your butt off for years in school, not to mention paying for it, and then struggling for months to find jobs! That's got to be very frustrating..as someone who has spent her life working in 'unskilled' labor and didn't finished college, I cannot say I know how that feels.

I wish you all luck in this job market; Lord knows we always need good nurses, everywhere. Congrats to those of you who have been lucky enough to get jobs.

Specializes in Geriatrics.

Keep your heads up, keep calling back weekly to check on your apps, take any shift you can to get your foot in the door, and again, LTC is a great way for RN's or LPN's to begin your careers, learn your skills, which to manys disbelief, skills ARE abundant in LTC facilities, I am living proof! Also in Indiana, the overtime in LTC is unbelievable, so not only are you learning your skills, you have an "open door" to all the overtime you can handle to pay down your loans! I dont know if I mentioned this, also the facilities I worked at, nurses were ALL listed as LN's. Makes for a great sisterhood. We ALL were teaching each other, new things every day! You worked hard to get your degree, now put that effort into finding your new job, it will come, as only you know, hard work pays off sooner or later! Then one day when you are working insane hours, being the Nurse in Charge, you will say to yourself quietly, "I want to work at Walmart"! :) Go get em new grads, the world needs you! DO NOT GIVE UP!:yeah:

Specializes in aspiring midwife.

Hello, Friends! I'm a student with one semester of pre-reqs left before I can apply to my local BSN program. I hope I can help out some of the new grads.

First off, I can't say for sure, but my mom tells me that Verdugo Hills Hospital in Glendale, CA is looking for nurses and supposedly they have a loan payback program and give you a car. You might want to look into it. And last I checked on Craigslist, the Humboldt County area (in Northern CA) had lots of postings for nurses, most with sign-on bonuses. Good luck.

Also, keep your options open. If you've just graduated, you probably have dreamed of being a nurse for a long time. But if you have an Associates or Bachelors degree, that opens up your options in MANY areas, not just nursing. I have a friend who is the assistant manager for the cash-handling office of a large corporation. He was hired because he has a bachelor's - in art. I aspire to be a midwife, but I had a minor crisis when deciding whether to pursue nurse-midwifery (which will probably take me 8 more years of school) or to become a social worker. I looked around and discovered that several places looking for social workers accepted nursing credentials for their social workers. If it works for you, it's another good way to help people, right? In the short term, at least.

I've been told by a few people that in some places "home-nursing care" is becoming popular, or needed anyway. Not hospice care - but for people who have had surgeries or have another reason they need follow-up care. Instead of staying in a hospital or care center they can enlist these nurses to provide follow-up care in their home a few times a day or week or whatever it may be. I think insurance covers this, and even if it doesn't it still may be a financially reasonable choice for many patients. If theres a group like this in your area, talk to them, if not - maybe you can start one up!

The last thing I was going to throw out there is the option of doing a loan repayment or service program. You may be able to get in with the Indian Health Service, which pays back substantial amounts of student loans in exchange for a 2-year contract serving in an underserved reservation. You may not want to move to a res - but the experience and loan repayment is definitely a plus at this time. For those who don't have kids and are more flexible - the Peace Corps and Americorps have some cool options for nurses. Their loan forgiveness isn't as substantial, but still, there's experience to be gained and good work to be done. And I believe that they at the least will arrange deferment of payments while you're serving.

Good luck, sisters and brothers! I hope things turn around by the time I get there.

But...whatever happened to "nurses can get a job anytime, work whenever and wherever they want?"

Specializes in ED.

I don't know if anyone is willing to relocate to Canada, but in Ontario we are desperate for RNs in ALL settings (entry-to-practice requirement of BSN). Please visit the website of the College of Nurses of Ontario - our regulatory body.

The nursing shortage is huge here and there's something like 11,000 unfilled positions right now and it's only getting worse since nurses are able to retire here sooner.

The pay is fantastic, it's one of the highest in Canada (right now, I think it's the highest). http://www.ona.org/faq#f16. As you can see, nurses starting this year in hospitals are starting at just under $30/hr and VERY quickly advance to top pay. There is a 3% raise for each bracket each April by ONA standards (our nursing union for hospitals).

In Ontario, the cost-of-living is relatively low (unless you live near a very large city like Toronto or even Ottawa).

In my 3rd year of nsg school, I already had a job for when I got my temp. RN license the next year and it was a 4 year contract job in ER with less than no experience other than clinicals (nice big sign-on bonus too).

If you'd like more information on anything please don't hesitate to send me a message :)