Re: New Graduate ER Nurse Originally Posted by dhammo01
I still think you should start off on the floor before doing ER or ICU. Not all wards are alike. I don't like Med-Surg, but intermediate care is a great floor to start off on because you get all the skills down. You probably don't get to run drips in the ER like you would on the floor, or see basic meds that are given every day to patients or learn how to communicate with physicians and deal with families. I wanted to to be in the ER so bad when I graduated and interviewed for it, but instead I excepted a job in a trauma unit. I didn't think that I would like it, but now I am very greatful that I was offered a job on this trauma unit because when I leave I now have a foundation and experience to fall back on. I now want to get into ICU instead of ER because I love the technicality of it all, and being able to sit there and see something unfold before your eyes either good or bad, which you don't get to see in the ER. I did my preceptorship in the ER too and I really thought I would be an ER nurse. Now I realize that trauma is the only way to go. Things change and so do your ideals of nursing when you're actually on your own.
-David
We run drips in the ER (whatever drug worked on the code/MI is now the drip until we transfer to the CCU), we communicate with physicians all the time (our docs seek out & take the our input very seriously), we certainly deal with families (you weren't serious about that statement?) and as for "being able to sit there and see something unfold before your eyes either good or bad, which you don't get to see in the ER" (huh???? not flaming you but it sounds like you've never spent any time in an ER). Plus we don't just sit there....
I'm not sure what kind of ER you precepted in, but it doesn't sound at all like where I work.
Anyway, to the OP, go for it!
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