Which nursing organization should I join?

Nurses General Nursing

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I am a fairly new nurse (graduated in Sept last year, and passed boards in Oct), and I am currently in a nurse residency program working as a Clinical Nurse RN on a step-down/telemetry unit. I just had my name placed on the wait list to get transferred to the ICU as soon as I can, because my ultimate goal is to work with trauma patients.

I am looking to join a nursing organization, and was wondering which one would be best for someone in my position, with my goals. I was thinking about the ANA, but didn't know if any other organization would be better. Eventually, I'll probably join more than one, but wanted to pick a good one to start with for now.

Any input/suggestions would be appreciated. Thanks!

Thanks. I am looking at the ANA website right now, and I have another question. I live in KS, and work in MO, and I have a 2-yr contract, so I will be working at least another 1-1/2 yrs in MO. I am looking for a PRN position on the KS side. Should I just pay for the MO full membership? Not sure what to do...

ana, and its local state affiliate or whatever the best state nursing association is in your area. some of them have disaffiliated from ana for a number of reasons and are terrific.

any sort of specialty that you think might interest you -- joining them will get you their journals and it's a great way to have the specialty brought to your door.

Specializes in Transplant/Surgical ICU.

AACN, you can't go wrong

An answer from an admittedly biased source:

1. There are professional societies that focus almost entirely on the needs of one particular branch of nursing, sponsor clinical certifications and have a heavy clinical focus: AACN and AORN are typical examples.

2. There is the ANA which once was the voice for all RNs but has declined to the point where it is mostly a voice for management and academic RNs. Whenever the interests of management collide with those of the bedside nurse - things like staffing ratios - the ANA will reliably stand with management.

3. As mentioned, some of the state nurses associations have left the ANA and those tend to also be involved in collective bargaining - in other words, they are both unions and professional associations - and they tend to represent better the interests of the staff nurse. And they mostly do accept individual members, for those who don't work in a unionized workplace.

4. The NNU - National Nurses United - is an umbrella group comprising several of those that left the ANA. It is also a union, but I'm pretty sure it accepts individual members.

All those in 3 and 4 above tend to be more political in their interest than clinical - standing up for the rights of nurses and the safety of patients, but not with a specific clinical focus.

Specializes in Flight, ER, Transport, ICU/Critical Care.

AACN.

Join, get involved and take advantage of the benefits of membership. Excellent investment - IMHO.

Good Luck!

:angel:

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