Re: Office Nursing
I work in a plasma center, which is not exactly working in a clinic, but I do mostly work out of an office, and there are some similarities in work flow. I do physicals to assess donors for suitability, as well as assess and treat donors having adverse events. I only deal with one donor at a time, 30 minutes at a time, so in that respect, this is similar to a clinic. Also, the donors MUST be healthy, so they're not sick and helpless - one of the challenges in this job is splitting hairs over the donor's history, determining what conditions are safe and what conditions are incompatible with plasma donation (we have a SOP manual that describes what our company can and cannot accept in a donor, but we often have to interpret that according to nursing judgement.) I work under a physician, but he is rarely there, and he wants the nurses at the center to "not be doctor-dependent" and be able to act on their own, within the NPA-defined scope of practice of course. And within the company guidelines, we have a lot of autonomy. This is the best job I have ever held. I worked in nursing homes and psych for several years, hated it, and was stressed to the point of turning my license in to the SBON when I got this job. I am enjoying the daytime hours, not having to work nights, only working every third weekend, no holidays. I enjoy interacting with donors one-on-one, 30 minutes at a time, rather than having to be the "daddy" for adult men and women for eight, 12, or 16 hours at a time.
I will never work in an in-patient care setting again. The worst day at the plasma center is still more bearable than in-patient care at its best.
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