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I recently accepted an OR position and will start this month. I'm beyond excited! I'm still trying to find my niche in nursing and I have a good feeling about this. My question is for those who have started within the last 6 months to a year, how are you liking it so far? How is orientation going? I know there is a huge learning curve and I'm prepared to take it one day at a time. Any tips you could suggested from your experience so far? I come with ICU experience.
For anybody who has more than a year of experience in OR, feel free to input as well! I'm curious to see the perspective of those still in or just finishing up the 6-9 month orientation.
Hey!!! I am scheduled to start orientation for OR July 7th. I graduated this December 13' but i did a 10 week externship in the hospital i have been hired for in the PACU/OR. I am very excited but very nervous as well. During my externship i was able to see many surgeries, and learn some new equipment. I know that there is much more material to learn, but i am eager and ready. Eventually i will try to find a job in NICU since that is my passion, but i will definitely take advantage of the OR position and learn as much as i can! Keep in touch everyone!
I'm almost two months in. Love it so far, hard part for me are having different preceptors, mostly though I've been with the same person, luckily. Some scrubs can neurotic with their set up so you HAVE to be flexible. Take in what they do and why they do it because there is a reason for it and keep moving forward. Don't get stuck on trying to do it your way, just agree and get through it and be open to learning different ways of setting up your table. When it's your table you can do what you want..
I still keep my bedside skills afloat by picking up extra shifts :)
TraumaORnurse
76 Posts
For me, the hardest thing was learning & remembering surgeon preferences. You can have 3 surgeons doing the exact same case but each will position different, prep differently, and want different equipment. I definitely recommend keeping a notebook with this info to refer back to. The other difficultly I ran into was learning some of the equipment.
While you won't routinely use the same nursing skills you use on the floor, you, it's not a "thinkless" job. Coming from critical care, your experience will be helpful, especially if you're working at a trauma center.