Did I make the wrong decision

Specialties LTC Directors

Published

I am the new adon at my 90 bed ltc/snf. Here's the thing though, I have only been an Rn for a year. I have no other previous nursing experience. Right off the bat they wanted me to take the DON position and I declined. They have continued to try to get me to take that ever since. I finally told them that with my lack of experience it would not be safe for the residents for me to be the DON and they've let up on that some. I did take the adon though. I'm in charge of weekly wounds and f329 for sure. We actually went over the entire DON orientation handbook and that got me flustered because they would go over something bit then tell me that I wouldn't be doing that. It was a lot to take in all in one day.

I am a perfectionistI (but not in typing out posts from my phone ;) ) and I want to be the best adon they've ever had but after reading several pages of posts on this site, now I'm scared I made the wrong decision.

We have no "acting" DON at the moment..only a stand in and the survey window opens in may...TWO MONTHS!

I already have wonderful relationship with all other staff and they're thrilled that I took the positition, but should I have?

please share your thoughts...no matter how brutal. Also..I have read all the tips on this topic but if anyone has anything specific for f329 or weekly wound care please share.

Specializes in Skilled Rehab Nurse.

Yikes. I'm a brand new RN (since January) and I can't imagine that I would feel comfortable in that position in a year. Our ADON actually has very little floor experience and that has been a point of contention among other nurses where I work. Do you know how they've done on past surveys?

Specializes in Gerontology, Med surg, Home Health.

First off....take a breath. You won't be perfect...no one is. But as long as you do the best you can and care about the residents, you'll be fine.

Wounds....it's all about documentation and care plans. Make sure there is a Norton Plus or Braden done at least quarterly and if the resident is at high risk for skin break down, care plan your interventions whatever they are. Our staff nurses do a weekly wound measurement form and we have a wound doc come in weekly to look at the pressure ulcers AND we keep a wound log. Personally I think it's overkill but I'm only an interim. Get the docs involved. If someone is a diabetic and has wounds or is on hospice and going to die soon, the PCP can make a note that the wounds are unavoidable. Hate to say it but sometimes you have to learn to play the game and tell the docs what to document.

We were all new once...although for some of us, it's been a really really long time since we were new.

Specializes in MICU, ED, Med/Surg, SNF, LTC, DNS.
First off....take a breath. You won't be perfect...no one is. But as long as you do the best you can and care about the residents, you'll be fine.

Wounds....it's all about documentation and care plans. Make sure there is a Norton Plus or Braden done at least quarterly and if the resident is at high risk for skin break down, care plan your interventions whatever they are. Our staff nurses do a weekly wound measurement form and we have a wound doc come in weekly to look at the pressure ulcers AND we keep a wound log. Personally I think it's overkill but I'm only an interim. Get the docs involved. If someone is a diabetic and has wounds or is on hospice and going to die soon, the PCP can make a note that the wounds are unavoidable. Hate to say it but sometimes you have to learn to play the game and tell the docs what to document.

We were all new once...although for some of us, it's been a really really long time since we were new.

Lol, ain't that the truth :) And for my 2 cents, take a deep breath, re-read what Cape wrote, and understand that the surveyors will not hold you responsible for any deficiencies. You haven't been there long enough. It will be overwhelming at first, but so is any other specialty when you first start.

Ok, today was my first day on my own. It went pretty good. They've been without an ADON or steady DON for so long though that it is going to take some time to get caught up. I have about 300 pages to read between the f329 and the orientation handbook and have not even started on that because I am trying to get ahead in my BSN classes.

Thank you for being encouraging. cecile9155, they wanted me to take the DON almost a year ago when I was a brand new nurse and when I kept saying no they wanted me to take this position. I thought no way back then too. I still don't feel like I am ready for it, but I also know that I am going to learn so much more this way.

I am still scared to death and don't know if i can do it, but for now I am going to try and if I dont like it I can always step down.

Oh! and we are getting a full time DON next week!! I'm pretty excited about that.

Specializes in MICU, ED, Med/Surg, SNF, LTC, DNS.

Sroseo,

How have you been doing?

+ Add a Comment