Re: Ready to work in Nevada Originally Posted by jayrelic As a new grad, what do others who have been here suggest? I'd like to work in Tele, Cardiac, or ER.
I have searched many hospital websites but have not yet applied for fear of being lost in the 'online blackhole'.
Chances of being hired as a new grad with no experience in the ED is rare, if not impossible. I had applied for positions in ED's only to be told that unless I was a NAP (NV's method of segueing nursing students into positions) in the ED currently, I wouldn't have a chance. And that is with ED experience (20 hours/ week) while I was in nursing school under my belt!
Tele should be doable. Cardiac may be possible, depending on what level of cardiac you're wanting. If you're talking cardiac ICU/ fresh hearts, chances of having that experience as a new grad are slim. If you're talking cardiac step-down (essentially tele), then you're golden.
As a new grad, I was hired by the St. Rose system for ICU. I've learned that this is pretty rare, and is only given to someone who has hospital-based experience. Prior to and during nursing school, I worked in a hospital setting, so that helped me out and got my foot in the door.
Anyway-- so you can get specialized placement (tele, cardiac step-down), but the ED and CCU are more difficult. Oh-- I do second what someone already wrote about St. Rose-- they're a great system for which to work. Highly supportive, great RN's, and they really devote a heck of a lot of time into your training. I had applied online to St. Rose, the Valley system, and Sunrise. Valley never answered my e-mails OR my repeated phone calls. Sunrise was a close second to St. Rose because they have so many speciality areas. But for me, St. Rose won out because they seem, above the other hospitals in the area, to value their nurses.
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