Re: Nurses who DON'T work in a hospital, what do you do?
I work in a district public health agency as Assistant Director, supervising 3 nurses and 2 health educators. We have grant funded projects working with women's health issues (breast cancer outreach and referral, senior services, heart health, prenatal assessment and referral), environmental health (lead poisioning, asthma, radon) follow up of communicable diseases (TB, STD's, food borne outbreaks, rabies contacts), and well child and immunization clinics, etc.
The hours are good - Monday thru Friday 8:30 AM to 4PM. Occasional weekend followup of lab results, which fortunately is rare. The pay is nowhere near as good as that of hospital nurses, but there are other reasons to go into public health.
In addition, I am also a Pediatric Nurse Practitioner, and maintain my annual certification in case I decide on a job change in the future. But the excitement of emergency preparedness activities keeps the job new and challenging.
The one thing that is difficult is recruiting new, younger nurses to public health. Most of us here in CT are what you might consider "senior" nursing staff....fewer new nurses consider this area, mainly due to the competition from the hospitals and the inability to conpete with their salaries. Public health nurses tend to be a bit older, and many are in their "second career", having aleady worked in other areas.
But...all that said...I love my job!
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