Re: Best unit to prepare for OR?
The OR truly is a specialized area. Regardless of where you start your career, you will still need a thorough orientation- most are 6-9months for someone with zero OR experience. Yes, med/surg will teach you time management. Yes, ICU will teach you drips and airways. But the OR requires a different skill set. Time management is necessary, but the anesthesia provider is the primary person dealing with drips and airways. The OR nurse must be able to gain the trust of a patient in very little time- and then must advocate for him or her when they are at their most vulnerable. Situations can change very quickly in the OR (not that they don't in other specialties, but chances are you won't have to evacuate a room with someone's aorta clamped in med/surg).
Some hospitals require a year of med/surg before you can specialize. Others don't. If you know that your heart is set on the OR, skip all that. I did, and while I'm still learning new things every day, I felt that I had enough support throughout my orientation (and it continues to this day) that I'm competent to do my job.
Have you had the chance to observe in the OR for more than a surgery or two? Part of my interview process was to spend a day shadowing. Request it if you haven't already, just to see what a typical day is like.
While the hospital you choose to work at may have some input with requiring experience, I see no reason why you shouldn't evaluate the pros and cons and potentially skip other units and go straight for the OR.
Nursing News