Published
With all that experience and qualifications and titles, and you are going back to semi-bedside role? You bet I think you gone mad! :0
I would find a cushy admin job and live in the ivory tower, telling the heavy-burden-laid overnight staff nurses "Hey you! You need to SMILE!!!! :))))"
But that's me. I also think it's crazy people gets fulfilled working in nursing... but hey I am jaded.
Pretty impressive work experience and education there, cosmicmama.
Has anyone else gone back to night shift after being a "normal person" for several years, particularly if you are a little older?
Out of my first 20 years of nursing, I worked primarily 19 years on a relatively day schedule. I've worked the MN shift for the past 15 plus years primarily because I wanted to get away from all the daytime drama and BS when managers were around.
cosmicmama, ASN, BSN, MSN, RN
157 Posts
I've been a nurse for nearly 30 years. I've done my share of night shift, around 15 years total. About five years ago I left the bedside to do case management for an insurance company, and while working from home has been nice, the work doesn't feed my soul and I find it incredibly tedious and boring. Also, I have gotten a couple of masters degrees while working with this company, and I'm ready to move into nursing leadership but I just don't see a niche that I would enjoy in the industry that I am currently in. I would like to go back into acute care. I have 13 years of labor and delivery experience and I am interviewing for a night shift assistant nurse manager position at a large teaching hospital. I feel this would get me back into the hospital, get me started on acute care nursing leadership, and get my foot in the door for more opportunities in a field that I loved. However I am nervous about going back to night shift after all these years. I'm just wondering if I'm going to be able to manage it for a year or two until other opportunities open up. Has anyone else gone back to night shift after being a "normal person" for several years, particularly if you are a little older?