Philly area new grad pay

U.S.A. Pennsylvania

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If you know what one of our local hospitals pay new grads, post it here!

I'll start: Jefferson and Methodist: 26$/hr base

Please add on!

If you know what one of our local hospitals pay new grads, post it here!

I'll start: Jefferson and Methodist: 26$/hr base

Please add on!

That comes out to what...$42,000 a year after taxes (factoring in 40 work weeks?)

I wonder how much TJU would cost tuition wise if you go there for undgrad (undergrad (RN/NP)) cheaper? - and then work at the hospital.

That sounds about right...

I heard Penn starting is 26.75...can anyone confirm?

26.75 is correct for the starting pay for new grads at UPenn

Specializes in PICU.

Is this before or after you pass boards?

As far as I know, In Philly the salary is the same before and after passing.

CHOP is $24.50 for new grads. Less than alot of the other Philly hospitals, but great place to work if you want peds.

CHOP is $24.50 for new grads. Less than alot of the other Philly hospitals, but great place to work if you want peds.

How much do you pay for parking and wage tax? I have been leaning toward CHOP but a few people told me the above factors can get expensive.

Eileen

If you know what one of our local hospitals pay new grads, post it here!

I'll start: Jefferson and Methodist: 26$/hr base

Please add on!

Anyone know about the hospitals outside of the city?

Eileen

I'm a director in a philly suburb. new grad start at $25 in the ER and ICU- no city wage!!

I'm a director in a philly suburb. new grad start at $25 in the ER and ICU- no city wage!!

Do you hire new grads in the ER? I always imagine it as fast paced, an area where you need to know everything very quickly.ER has always interested me, but at the same time scared me a bit. I keep hearing how every new grad should work a year on med surg to become a good nurse, does anyone think this is true?

Eileen

I have found an easy answer to this question. In my experience, med-surg nurses will tell you you must have a med surg background. Nurses who started in specialty areas will say that if you would prefer to start somewhere there, there is no problem if you acknowledge there is a steeper learning curve, and it will take longer to become proficient.

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