Recruiting and hiring

Nurses General Nursing

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I am informally polling my peers to find out the general recruitment practices and attitudes in your area. I will also discuss briefly my own experience here in Las Vegas.

Nevada has the fewest nurses per 100,000 population of any state in the country - due in large part to the booming growth in Las Vegas. The city's population is growing at the rate of 6,000 residents per month, and it grew by 83% between the 1990 and 2000 censuses. We now have over 1.5 million permanent residents, plus 200,000-300,000 tourists at any given time.

In theory, this should translate to a large numbers of medical jobs available. In practice, jobs are proving elusive despite the fact that almost every hospital here has an expansion project underway. Applications are met with apparent ambivalence, and there are few followup contacts by employers. It is almost a necessity to work a place from the inside in order to get hired, which you cannot do unless you know someone there. My experience has been that the nursing shortage here is partially self-inflicted.

My wife and I are both nurses, and we have both struggled to find work in an area of severe nursing shortage. Nursing friends of ours have reported similar experiences. Employers in Las Vegas seem indifferent, do not follow up on applications for months (and sometimes not at all), and will not hire someone who does not have the exact background they are looking for. I worked in mental health and was thrown out of work when my hospital's parent company closed my facility. I drew unemployment for three months, because no hospital would even talk to me. At the time, I had five years of nursing experience, all in a supervisory capacity, and a national certification.

Is our experience typical, or is this peculiar to our market?

Specializes in Everything except surgery.
Originally posted by Starkid2616

Brownie: I think you are right on target.

This seems to be the trend these days.

The heck with the patients and continuity

of care, just the almighty BUCK! How sad. The shortage as they say IS self inflicted.:eek:

I agree Starkid...it is sad..:o. And I agree...it may just be the area people are in, or that some hospitals prefer to look at the short range, and not long term stability. Such as hiring overseas nurses, rather than new grads, or just using agency to hold the tide. Either way...it's difficult to read about nurses being mistreated while looking for a job. Especially the new grads just starting out.

Hi all - went for an interview as a graduate nurse in Telemetry and was offered job on the spot. Definite shortage here in Pennsylvania.

Specializes in ER, ICU, L&D, OR.

Howdy yall

from deep in the heat of texas

Whats wrong with an almighty buck or 2 or 3 or more

doo wah ditty

Specializes in ER/ICU/PACU/ Nurse Anesthetist.
Originally posted by ITSJUSTMEZOE

This is one of the main reasons why I travel,

I pick the area I want and my resume is posted to thier hospitals and which ever fish bites is the one I begin negotiations with, They are aware of my credentials and what Im willing to put up with and my demands , if they dont bite thats fine , the old tale is true there are more fish in the sea...

I have yet to go without any of my demands being met at anyone one time that I have worked , You may want to consider traveling even in your own area. Some hospitals tend to hire travelers becasue we are short timers and are very flexiable to a point, I know of many that travel in thier own area and make better money.

Zoe

Wish I could travel, but being a new grad doesn't give me that option :o

Nevada is weird. I lived in Vegas for a year and couldn't even get a bartending or cocktail waitressing job, even though I had tons of experience. I had to settle for dressing up like Carmen Miranda on Freemont Street. It's definitely a who- you- know town. I of course, knew no one. Maybe th enursing profession is a who-you -know type of thing too.

Specializes in CVOR,CNOR,NEURO,TRAUMA,TRANSPLANTS.

Get one yr under your belt and you too can travel as well.

zoe

Specializes in Hospice, corrections, psychiatry, rehab, LTC.

During the time I was on unemployment, I applied at every hospital in the Las Vegas area, plus several nursing homes. One LTC facility, which has the reputation of hiring anyone with a license and a pulse, turned me down because the DON said that my "experience does not match well with the position". My impression was that that was more true for her than for me (she seemed like a total airhead). The person in HR told me prior to the interview that they had not had an RN application in almost six months.

Only one hospital called me to tell me "We don't have anything for you." This same hospital was running a half-page ad every Sunday saying that jobs were available in "most specialties". The HR person at this hospital went on to say, "I will see if I can get one of the nurse managers to consider hiring you." Very encouraging words. I never heard from them again.

I also get the idea that specialty has a lot to do with how easy it is to get hired. If you work ICU, ER or L&D, it seems that you can just about write your own ticket. The rest of us are just fried.

I had not thought about the angle of foreign nurses. There are a lot of Filipino nurses in the medical community here. As for travelers, I have not worked with any, but that may be due to the fact that most of my career has been spent in mental health.

I considered travel nursing myself at one point. I signed up with one of the largest travel agencies in the country that claimed at the time to have "over 5,000 jobs". They told me that they had two that they could use me on: one in upstate New York in the heart of the ice belt, and the other in the Virgin Islands (this one paid about $12 per hour, and required completion of a prior travel assignment).

I am beginning to wonder if the lure of nursing, as it was pitched to us when we started school (lots of jobs, change specialties easily) was more of a myth than a fact.

I think that certain areas of the country are experiencing different levels of shortages.

In NY, correct me if I'm wrong, but when I left... If a manager couldn't find a nurse with 5 yrs. exp. in that specialty... it was considered a shortage.

Here in NC, there is a real shortage, where we are taking new grads into the ICU's because there is no one applying. Our only competition is an army hospital and a VA hospital, both which pay lower and take longer to get into.

So here, with a true shortage... our nurse recruiters welcome any nurse.... we had a campaign....100 nurses in 100 days... with a job fair to boot.... you could apply, be interviewed and hired on the spot....

I was hired 5 years ago and received the "red carpet treatment" when the nursing shortage did not exist and many hospitals across the east coast were thumbing their noses at me...

The initial treatment that I received is WHY I chose this facility and city to work over several states, multiple cities and very many hospitals. The treatment has only improved with the shortage....

If anyone if feeling snubbed and poorly treated... my hospital will welcome you with open arms and deliver on it's promises

Couldn't be happier after 5 years

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