Switching specialties?

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Hello fellow nurses! I'm in desperate need for advice and I can't ask my friends at work because no one is aware I want to leave. I graduated nursing school in May 2016, started the critical care residency in august, and I have been on my own since December. When I started I had so much passion for this job, I thought it was my dream! But since I've started on my own with no preceptor I've dreaded work every day. I am so stressed, anxious, and surrounded by death and hardly any happy endings. I'm in deep Dallas so the patients don't care about health and are angry/rude/homeless/drug addicts/alcoholics etc. Sooo I am DESPERATE to get out! Problem is I only have 6 months experience and I feel bad leaving the staff, they are the only reason I'm still there. I was thinkinf about becoming a newborn nurse in the nursery. It was my 2nd choice after ICU. Is it a good idea for me to leave? Is it even possible to go from adults to babies? Every job opening says I need women's health experience. Help!

Specializes in Clinical Research, Outpt Women's Health.

You need to give it more time in my opinion.

Do you want to become a NICU nurse? Because there aren't really jobs for nursery nurses anymore since the standard is that babies room in. Some postpartum units will have a "nursery nurse" who helps with circs, admissions, ect. But I imagine they don't hire directly for this, they would just have their postpartum nurses rotate in.

if you did want to get into postpartum maybe take a related course but you should stay in your current position longer.

Specializes in ICU.

Newborn nursery is getting phased out. It's all about LDRP. If you're at Parkland or BUMC then there is a nursery but, will you stay there forever? probably not..

NICU does not sound like it is for you unless it is a level two or lower. If you can't deal with the death of people who are terminally ill and old, I find NICU impossible for you. Can you care for a newborn born at 23 weeks? 7/10 die. As soon as they are born they are resuscitated, meaning that is your job when you are present for the birth in L&D.

If you can't deal with death any ICU is not for you. Inpatient nursing is probably not for you. Do your time and switch to a procedural area.

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