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As a ER RN are you required to be ACLS prepared?!?!?
at the er i worked at it was required to have bls, acls, pals, tncc. before i got burned out with trauma and left they had started recommending emt training for the rn's as well. i also had my cen, enpc, btls, pepp (the last 2 obtained when i took my emt course before they started advocating it). the more certifications the better care you can provide
at the er i worked at it was required to have bls, acls, pals, tncc. before i got burned out with trauma and left they had started recommending emt training for the rn's as well. i also had my cen, enpc, btls, pepp (the last 2 obtained when i took my emt course before they started advocating it). the more certifications the better care you can provide
We're required to have BLS, ACLS, and TNCC. We're enouraged to have PALS and/or ENPC.
As a ER RN are you required to be ACLS prepared?!?!?
Not all places require it (*crazy, huh) but as an ER nurse you truly do need it. Remember, to a coding patient the ER is either the first place they come in contact with when they begin a new life - or the last place they see before theirs is over.
vamedic4
ACLS provider for 13+years
I think the 6 month rule is a bad practice.
Most ED's that I have been in - it is an absolute requirement before you start or are allowed off orientation.
I think a well prepared ED nurse should have:
BLS (CPR class, from the AHA or ARC)
ACLS, this is an AHA class
PALS, this is an AHA class, too
NRP, from the AAP - check their website for courses
TNCC, from the ENA
ENPC, also from the ENA
I encourage all ED nurses to be involved in the Emergency Nurse Association (http://www.ena.org) and work toward Board Certification as a CEN, CTRN or CFRN. I think Board Certification is a true indication of a PROFESSIONAL nurse!
Good LUCK!
GFocker
16 Posts
I was required to abtain ACLS w/in one month of hire.