Hi BusyGirl,
First of all, congratulations on the birth of your son! I'll bet your nursing education really came in handy when he was a babe and needed you so very much right from the start. I hope he is doing well now!
I was glad you posted to this thread because I'm pretty much in your shoes right now too, with a little variation. I've been out of nursing since I got married just over 3 years ago and I'm wanting to get back into working too.
Like you, I've questioned people about the Refresher Courses for RNs. Most folks are telling me that they are mostly geared for nurses who have been out 5-10 years and plan to work with adults.
I worked on a Mother-Baby Unit for 6 years and then a NICU for 3 years where I was on the Transport Team, did charge duties, attended high risk deliveries, and was a preceptor. My desire is to return to a Level III NICU, finish my BSN and eventually enroll in a Neonatal Nurse Practitioner Program. Of course, I have to get hired in the first place to get the ball rolling!
During the first year I didn't work, I didn't do anything nursing related other than continue receiving my nursing journals. During the second year I began doing the CEUs required for keeping my certification up to date. I got 40 hours in that year and even attended some "classroom" CEU events. I also got a nursing license in my new state. During this past third year I've really been focusing on doing all the CEUs I can find related to NICU patients. I'm signed up to attend another OB/NICU seminar at our local hospital next Wednesday and hope to make contact with some of the NICU folks attending. I'm debating about finding out who the NICU Nurse Manager is and asking her if she has/expects any positions to be available. I'm a stickler for "rules" and feel a bit wierd about not going through the "proper channels" via the Nurse Recruiter first. I'm scheduled to go to our National Neonatal Nurses Convention the first week of September and am planning to contact the Nurse Recruiter when I return. I figure all my CEUs from the self-study, classroom study, and national convention will be of some benefit on my resume. (By the way, when I got married, I moved to another state so I don't know a soul here... which complicates everything... a lot can be said for networking, huh?)
I've been soaking up everything I can find about writing a resume and cover letter as well as how to ask people to be references for me and also about interviewing skills. In my previous hospital (the only one I ever worked in) I never needed to do a resume because I worked there as a nursing student and was hired on immediately after graduation. All of this is so new to me!
I found a book which I'm finding incredibly helpful for resume building, interviewing skills, cover letters, etc., along with lots of other information about managing my little career.
Your Career in Nursing: Manage Your Future in the Changing World of Healthcare by Annette T. Vallano, MS, RN, CS ISBN# 0-7432-3521-5 Retail price is $18.00
As far as your situation goes, if you will be required to care for adults and you don't feel comfortable anymore, you might benefit from a RN Refresher Course. The one in our town is taught by our local university twice a year, it last 3 weeks (4 if a nurse feels she needs the extra clinical experience) and costs $1,000.00. This is just one example I know of. I believe you should try to speak with your previous nurse manager (would that be the person you'd be working for again on your OB unit?) or the nurse recruiter to see what their insights are. I certainly don't think you need to be an assistant though. Shucks, everything would come back to you pretty quickly... like riding a bike. If you took a Refersher Course on your own before applying for a job, it would show your employer you took the incentive to prepare yourself and would only look good I'd think. I was considering doing that until I heard on the grapevine that for NICU nurses the RN Refersher Course offered here is not of real help since the babies are so completely different. There are however many aspects of the course that would apply in a sort-of-kind-of way.
I want to ask the Nurse Recruiter if I need a Refresher Course before being allowed to apply for a position because if I do, I want to get in on the one that starts in the middle of October rather than to wait for the next one offered in April next year. I'm hoping that all my CEUs and seminars/convention and keeping my certification active will help me not have to fork out 1000 bucks I really don't want to spend. Oh well, we'll see.
I'm sorry my post got soooo long! I type too fast for my own good. I wish you the best of luck with your future nursing job as well as the health of your dear son! If I can be of any help to you feel free to PM or email me.
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