Published
How many british nurses are out there using this board?
Do you find it useful/helpful?
How regularly do you contribute to a discussion group?
Let me know I am curious.
Thanks
It is excellent to see so many british nurse alive and well and participating.
Lots of other boards seem to exclude british nursing.
It would good if we could get our own thread here, that relates to british issues. However discussing with colleagues around the globe makes you realise how many common problems we all experience.
Keep submitting to this thread.
do you British nurses mind a question from a non-brit?
I've considered the idea of living in England (London maybe? I know, expensive right?) one day as a nurse. anyone know how difficult/easy this is to do as an american nurse? Is the pay for nurses pretty good? (i'm single)
[or should I be posting this somewhere else? I just thought that this might be a good place cause lots of you (british nurses) would be reading this!]
ljb:
If you go for the experience (and we're all in life for the experience, not necessarily to enjoy it, right?) then you might have a very experiential time in London - yes it's very expensive to live there, and nursing is not well paid in the UK, but some London hospitals offer some sort of, generally appalling, live in option which could get you started.
You might want to consider going further north - more of a culture shock, but perhaps more interesting, in some ways, than London.
The kudos and personal growth that follow after 'working abroad' seem to be with us for life. I continue to dine out on a spell in Iran in 1975!
I believe that anyone should be welcome to post here - let's keep the site flexible, factual, and very friendly.
London and surrounds are are very good place to gain experience. but the areas are very expensive and hospital accomodation tends to be dire to say the least. However going further north although may be a culture would probably afford you a more rewarding experience, as outside the capital and it closest regions nursing seems to be more dynamic and aimed at progressing the profesion rather that holding it back.
i am an american whose parents are both from the uk. they go back every 6 months or so as they are now retired. i love to see the postings from you british nurses. i wonder a lot about "what it's like over there." i 'd love to go do an exchange program in england someday. i have been to england fifteen times as a child and teenager, but i have not been there fo almost 20 years now. just think if my dad hadn't come to the usa to work, i might be one of you!
donmurray
837 Posts
South Coast here too, also Edinburgh born. Working in Elderly Mental Health.