Re: Do psych nurses actually make a difference?
i've gotta agree with the folks who make time for their patients. it IS easy to get stuck in the nurses' station, but it's also true that those who do so most often aren't prioritizing their time on the floor with their patients. you CAN spend time with your patients, although the techs will, too. that's why i enjoyed being a tech while i was getting my BSN, and i'm glad i spent my first 2.5 years as a new grad doing med-surg, since my psych patients don't leave their COPD, diabetes, etc., at the door of the locked acute unit when they're in psychiatric meltdown.
as for those who've left psych, i can see why. i've just started doing travel nursing in psych, and already i see things that i took for granted at my old unit are not available to patients on other units in other states. but there's still such a chance to make a difference, and i see it every day.
in the end, you need to decide for yourself what's best for you, and one of the best ways to do that can be to work on different units, which having your RN license still makes possible. it used to be that the only jobs new grads could get were on med-surg units, and the experience, just in assessing and communicating with patients, docs and co-workers, made better-rounded nurses. while i didn't enjoy med-surg at the time, i have been eternally grateful for the increased confidence it gave me when i came back "home" to psych.
so, follow your heart, and see where you land - then let the rest of us know how you like it
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