Re: Getting hired with ADHD?
It's not the kind of thing you would tell the nurse recruiter. You should be talking up your strengths and not mentioning your weaknesses. Unless there is some law in your area(I am Australian) that says you have to give this info.
A huge part of nursing is time management and prioritising so the bigger question is whether your ADHD will impact on your ability to do the job. Maybe it will help your thoughts to become more organised, I don't know. I have heard from some nurses that they don't have to take a list to go shopping anymore - because of all the mental prioritising and memorising of lists. HeadNurse gives a
good explanation of this on her blog.
"I don't know how it happens, but somehow your brain gets good at remembering five or six things for an hour or two, ranking those things in order of importance automatically, and then (most important) discarding them once you've dealt with whatever they are."
and my favourite -:
"Not only does your brain have to get good at sorting, discarding, and shoving things into medium-term memory, but you have to do it all on the run and while paranoid." (my emphasis.)
So, in the end,
a)you will find out if you are suited to nursing when you do your clinical placements
b) You may even learn new strategies for organising your thoughts and time
and c) if you are safe to practise, it is none of anyone's business what medical conditions you do or do not have.
It is your job to sell yourself, not give the recruiter reasons to not hire you. This isn't like high school or camp when you give a list of your medical conditions. It is on a need to know basis. And if there is going to be a problem with you being a nurse, you will find out when you do your clinicals.

Buttercup99
P.S - You have to think of your reason for disclosing your ADHD. It's not like you will get any leniency for it. You will likely just get blamed for things earlier. Instead of "her time management needs improving - oh that's just because she is a new nurse." It will be "Geez, her ADHD is putting the patients at risk. Strike 3 and you're out." It just gives them a cop out.
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