Nurses Helping Nurses
allnurses Network: Central | Jobs | Books | Newsletter
allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses
Home General News Blogs Articles Students Region Specialty Degrees F.A.Q.
Hospice Nursing /

Southern Care Hospice



Did You Know?
allnurses is the largest community for nurses on the web. We now have over 388,175 members! Join today to network with other nurses, laugh, share, and much more.

Feb 28, 2009 10:22 PM

Southern Care Hospice


Hey guys and gals,

If my interview went well, then I'm about to start my first hospice RN position. I was just wondering if any of you have had experience or heard anything about the company Southern Care Hospice. I've researched their website and they seem to be pretty well spread over the south and northeast US. And they've been around for a little over a decade, so they're not fly-by-night or anything. But I'm looking more for personal experience from you or any co-workers/friends. Thanks for any input!


Share

Search Tags
None
Top

 
Advertisement
Sponsored Links
 
Reply
9 Comments
No. 1
from rnboysmom
Old Mar 03, 2009, 09:39 AM
Updated Mar 03, 2009 at 09:42 AM by rnboysmom

Default Re: Southern Care Hospice
Have worked for this corporation and won't comment on a public level. I can tell you that even huge corporate companies all function a little differently at local levels, so be sure that the local company practice is in line with the corporation practice and vice versa. Manager dynamics make a huge difference especially at local levels. On a more professional level, I have made several posts regarding questions you may want to have answered before you begin work with any hospice company, including this one. Best bet here is to ask to interview at least 2 different case managers (or a case manager and another discipline)with the company to be able to ask them these questions. This shouldn't be a problem if "there are no problems". What you have to remember is that you are a professional nurse, and if you want to be a hospice nurse, there are many different companies that can vary widely on policy and practice. The company you end up working with may determine your success as a hospice nurse.
1. What does your normal day look like? How many visits do you typicallly make in a day? What does your back-up look like if you run into an emergency during the day? Who does admissions? What allowances are made for regular visits if you do have an admission? Does management kick-in during staffing shortages or do they overload the nurses with the extra visits? How are nursing shortages handled?
If you get to interview the case managers--How happy are you with your
job? How many hours do you typically put in during a week? Do you take
paperwork home? Are you expected to take paperwork home? What does
a typical day look like for you? Visits? What is your caseload average? Do
you feel that your management is behind you and backs you? What is your
driving time on a typical day? Is the mileage aspect factored into your day?

2. Compare benefits against other hospice in the area. How likely are you to be able to get the day off if you are exhausted? Benefits don't seem important until you find out you can't access them. (a previous company I worked for offered a ton of PTO time on a yearly basis, but, you could never take it. Anytime you did on-call. you were out from 5pm to 8am and were physically exhausted the next morning. All of your PTO was used on going home to get the sleep you missed out on from being out for 24 hours straight--8 for your regular shift and the 16 hours you were in your car for on-call.)

3. HOW IS ON CALL HANDLED? This is a biggie as a poor on-call system, or lack of back-up from primary or other core services can sink even the best of hospice nurses and contribute to rapid burnout. HOW IS ON CALL COMPENSATED? Beware of somebody telling you "we just give your time back or give comp time" because:
a. it never happens and
b. almost every state in the country does not recognize "comp time" under its labor codes--so if you decide to leave the company and they owe you 300 hours of "comp time" the labor law says TOUGH LUCK. The monetary aspect of on-call may not seem important at first and may be smaller in some smaller companies but is should seem fair overall and be comparable against other companies in the area for the size of the company. Read the posts here in this forum regarding on-call compensation. Have the interviewer explain the compensation clearly and explain to you what will be expected for that compensation.
3. Does profit status make a difference to you personally (if so, ask). Ask what the hospice is involved with within the community. Are you salaried or hourly? If you are hourly, will they put this in writing?
4. Don't be afraid to ask for, or to seek references about this company. What LTCF's are they in? Where and how do they get their referrals?

I know that this is a long list, but hospice nursing (heck any nursing ) is tough. Hospice nursing is especially trying as you are frequently "flying solo" in the sense that you do not have a whole building of experts at your fingertips during times of crisis. The key is in finding a company that is supportive, compassionate and whose ethics and moral principles align with your own. Good Luck!
Top

4 Readers Gave Kudos
 
No. 2
from Bumashes
Old Mar 03, 2009, 09:13 PM

Default Re: Southern Care Hospice
Thank you so much for your input. I've PM'd you another paragraph...
Top
 
No. 3
Old Mar 11, 2009, 07:00 PM

Default Re: Southern Care Hospice
If the hospice you are asking about is "Southerncare" then you may want to do a google search using the terms "Southerncare", "24.7 million" and "whistleblower".
Top

1 Reader Gave Kudos
 
No. 4
from Bumashes
Old Mar 11, 2009, 09:51 PM

Default Re: Southern Care Hospice
Eh? Hmmm...that's not sounding so hot. I'm hoping that since this office is a "country" office and is very small that it will be run differently than some of the PM's I've been sent about larger locations. Could be just wishful thinking, though...
Top
 
No. 5
from Bumashes
Old Mar 11, 2009, 09:57 PM

Default Re: Southern Care Hospice
Just googled like you said. Eek! Well, not much I can do at this point since I've already quit my other job, and I'm ankle deep in this one. But I will go into it with my eyes WIDE open! Thanks for your tip off.
Top
 
No. 6
from Ginapixi
Old Mar 17, 2009, 01:23 PM

Default Re: Southern Care Hospice
rnboysmom: you stated the obvious excellently! much better and nicer than I would have - since i used to work for the company once upon a time...
Top

2 Readers Gave Kudos
 
No. 7
from Bumashes
Old May 12, 2009, 09:45 PM

Angry Re: Southern Care Hospice
UPDATE

For those who're bored and want to know:

After being hired, I worked there for 7 weeks. Now, I don't work there any more. I quit, and I quit quickly. If I ever have to give a reference for them, it will NOT be good!!!

Top
 
No. 8
from Ginapixi
Old May 12, 2009, 10:37 PM

Default Re: Southern Care Hospice
sorry! for you - or good for you, you deserve better!
Top

1 Reader Gave Kudos
 
No. 9
from rnboysmom
Old May 13, 2009, 09:04 AM

Default Re: Southern Care Hospice
ABSOLUTELY!!! You deserve better!!!!!!
Top

1 Reader Gave Kudos
 
Reply




Thread Tools


Who's Online
336 members
3,110 guests
3,446

4

16th Philly area hospital to stop delivering babies: Mercy...

0

Really interesting article on Indian open hearts

0

High-Tech Pump Does What Her Heart Can't

0

Air Force RN Force RN Found Not Guilty

0

Hospital Falters as Refuge for Illegal Immigrants

6

California Imposes Stricter Rules Regarding Drug Abuse In...

27

Are older nurses being forced out of the profession?

3

An outlook in California?

8

Australian surgeons successfully separate conjoined twins

42

Disruptive behavior by doctors, nurses persists a year...



1

Society Needs Care Too

12

Why am I doing this, anyway?

2

Nurse Heal Thyself

9

My Papa, why I am the nurse I am today.

17

I made it through

11

An angel's gaze

14

A Sister Never Forgets

16

Ruby's Marbles

37

What Do Operating Room Nurses Do?

14

My Little Old Jedi

20

I love this job......

23

"I hear voices"

19

Preventing FRUTI (Foley Related Urinary Tract Infection) in...

24

Error and Attitude

10

It's Just a Shower





Sponsored Links

Currently Reading This Page: 1 (0 members & 1 guests)

Interested in the hottest topics of the week? Subscribe to the Nurse-zine Newsletter.
Enter email address: