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I am a lost for words, I never thought this could actually happen to me. This was my first job, on the telemetry floor of a major hospital, with an outstanding reputation, one that consistently ranks among the best. During preceptorship, I was learning so much, I got to the point where I really felt confident.
I was quickly handling a full patient load and developing my efficiency. I was building my intuition, patient outcome prediction skills, and patient and family rapport skills. I was 6 months into the job (5 or so on the floor by myself after preceptorship) and I was already floated to the ICU step down unit, and given an excellent 6 month review for my performance. And through it all, I never had a patient code on me, this was by design, not default. My intuition allowed me to closely monitor patients that "didnt look right", and intervened before it got worse.
However, I could not help but notice how an average of 1-2 nurses would leave to get work in another hospital! I would always ask myself: why? this is supposed to be one of the best hospitals?
Anyways, leading up to my 6 mo review, I would find myself at work every single shift 15 mins ahead of time 6:45- 6:50am (which has always been the case) and leaving right on time because of how well I managed my patient load. I even put together a powerpoint presentation to educate the nurses on the floor about a pain management team I was planning to head, as was asked of me by my asst. director. I was not feeling very challenged anymore though. Im sorry if my being frank can be interpreted as arrogance but it is just the truth. I wasn't feeling challenged. I was getting bored.
So I enrolled in an EMT course to challenge the paramedic exam and have those extra credentials. Working 12 days a month, and not going home with baggage or "worries" put me in a position to feel the need to reach out for professional development opportunities to increase my chances of getting into the ER.
WOW WHAT A MISTAKE! After I told my other asst. director about enrolling, and asking for certain days on my schedule to accomodate the classes, EVERYTHING CHANGED!!!
My director then got fired, and i'm assuming it was because of the very low patient satisfaction scores (HCAPP), and high nurse turnover rates.
Just a couple of weeks later, I was written up for using a pair of sciossors to cut a pill instead of using a pill cutter. WRITTEN UP! a written counseling for this? Really? Oral medication administration is not an aseptic technique, so it stands to reason that if your in a pinch (which I was at the time) a sciossor could do the trick. Isn't that what nursing is all about anyways? A constant, moment to moment evaluation of your priorities based on the acuity of your patients needs? BELIEVE ME, there where more important things going on at that time.
I let it slide, I simply refused to let it bring me down. I figured "hey, maybe they are big on that stuff".
However, it didn't stop there. A couple of weeks after that, I get called into my managers office to be placed on a "performance improvement plan" I could not believe it!! They were taking (I put 2 and 2 together based on the conversation) this one nurse's advice about my performance. This nasty, miserable, with a history of getting other nurses in trouble, nurse's account of my performance, and it was enough to place me on a performance improvement plan. Unbelievable!!! I felt sooooo betrayed!!!
I couldn't help but approach her and ask her why she would do such a thing without having spoken to me about any heart felt concerns (if they were so sincere) in order to work with me to correct any legitimate problems with my performance? About a minute into the conversation she not only admitted to having "reported me to administration", but also cut off the conversation and insisted on resuming discussion in our managers office.
Needless to say the conversation got pretty nasty in there, she accused me of retaliating against her, and I ended up getting suspended.
I returned approximately 2 weeks later and was given a heavy patient load. It was complete with a patient that had been discharged 3 times (during the same hospitalization) before the head M.D. of internal medicine asked me to call security to have her escorted out of the room, three discharges, two admissions, and a training on insulin pumps. They even tried to give me a direct admit (which is much more involved than a regular one or a transfer). Talk about a nice homecoming huh?
The next day I report to work and halfway through the day Im called into my managers office, again. They said I left an IV port on one of the patients I discharged the day before. They said the patient returned to have it removed. As such, my employment ended that day.
How sad, I gave this place my every last ounce of heart, soul, and passion. I promise you that I have never dedicated sooo much to something in my life, and now it is over, done. There are no words that can describe how frikin painful this feels.
I just want to know where I go from here? What should I do now? Will I ever get hired by another good hospital, let alone a major one? Does this mean that Im basically black balled from nursing? being that I was fired during my first year? (because that one year mark seems to be such an important milestone) Is there some unwritten code that states that if a nurse doesnt get past the first year they are basically not one of the "good nurses" or am just being upset and paranoid.
PLEASE HELP ME!! I need answers from you guys! I need answers from experienced nurses out there.
At one point I was at the top of my game, things looked great at work, I even saved the hospital Millions of dollars in what would have ended up in a medication related sentinal event. A drip that was labeled with the five rights of med adm., but attached to a Lasix vial! I caught that error, saved the hospital from certain doom!!!!
Please help me I dont know what else to do!
Ok, OP, deep breath. To me (and just my opinion) you come off as confident, but it was certainly manifested by your manager asking you to take the lead in some teaching. You did what you did because you seemingly thought it was a good thing to do at the time. Stop beating yourself up. When a new grad finds their niche, then it can all come together well. You learned from your preceptor, and caught on. It is really hard when you are on that "high" to be corrected for things that perhaps you were not on top of. There's lots of coworkers who are less than thrilled with a newbie that is confident.
With all that being said, you can only go on from here. Challenge that paramedic exam, and see where that takes you with your RN. If you want to be somewhere, ask to meet with the manager and ask how you need to get there. Take some per diem in the facility if you can. You have almost a year under your belt. Your 6 month eval was stellar. You had an performace improvement plan--did you meet to reach your goals for that? So use your copies of the evaluation as an example of your work.
It really, really stinks that this has happend to you. But you know where you went wrong--you just need to acknowledge that you made some errors, and let it go. Vow not to do it again.
In the meanwhile, try to get a job at a more community hospital ER. It will certainly give you experience in emergency medicine. If your state allows, challenge the EMT-B exam. Start by becoming a "call" EMT for a local fire department. See how that goes, and then go onto Paramedic. Being both an EMT and an LPN, I found that EMT is far different in pre-hospital and hospital care.
I would start though at looking at your local community hospitals. See what they offer as far as jobs. Best of luck in your future endevours. And remember, breathe.
Jadelpn, Esme12, Thank you much for your kind words of comfort. Your posts really struck a cord, and served to give me a perspective so fitted to my situation.
I really do appreciate and thank all of you much, for your feedback. I hope I can someday be of service to you as you have for me during this thread. I will definitely use it to reevaluate my professional life, career goals etc.
Sounds to me like you got too big for your boots too soon. You made some fundamental errors, were given the opportunity to improve but reacted defensively and outraged because you knew it all. As a new graduate, it is your position to learn and be guided by those with more experience and to abide by hospital P&P.As for what happens next, look honestly at your part in this drama, learn from it and move on. What about pursuing the EMT course?
This is not the time to blame the victim.
You are the victim of lateral violence. This is why you saw so many nurses leaving such a "wonderful" facility.
Your accuser knew exactly the response to take when you approached her , because she is the instigator of much of this violence.
You cannot just talk to your accuser ( now you know) , it's viewed as inflammatory, etc.
You needed to go to the grievance committee to document/attempt to resolve it. (now you know).
In order to preserve your reputation, talk to a lawyer. Lateral violence is well known now. I would imagine a lawyer's communication with the facility will improve YOU'RE outcome.
Mightynurse, you have to slow down. Don't trust anyone, they were probably jealous as you are creative like me lol. I have found out that people don't like when you have great ideas. Advance your degree. I was fired from a job when I was 7 months pregnant!!!!!!!! I lost health insurance and ended up delivering at a county hospital. I worked agency up until my due date, my boyfriend was unemployed. And the reason I got fired for refusing to give a bed bad to a hospice patient which I ask for a cna to visit the patient. I was afraid of getting hurt as I was 7 mos pregnant. After my son was born a year later I found my job and I'm still working here 14 yrs. it has also come to make a change and I'm pursuing FNP by fall 2014. So when one door closes another opens. For your next employment be honest you were not giving any support from coworkers. Nursing is team effort. When one door closes another opens. See it as a life experience and not as a mistake. You sound like a good nurse, you will be fine.
A 100 year veteran??? That would make here, what, 120 yrs old? Amazing!! (just kidding!)It sounds like it wasn't worth the migraine to put her in her place a little.
That being said, I do agree with you: sometimes you DO have to dumb yourself down. Because you can only control your own behavior, not others'.
There's no guarantee that humility and respect will be two-way (that would be ideal, but that's not the world we live in).
When it isn't, dumbing yourself down a bit essentially makes you less threatening to other nurses can help smooth ruffled feathers. Besides, you know your true level of competence, on the inside.
Just don't dumb yourself down too much.
Like the Loch Ness Monster, Big Foot, the Chupacabra and other mythic beasts, we have the "Nasty Nurse Veteran" who never learns anything new, and feasts on the tender flesh of new nurse graduates. These poor innocents are thrust into a relationship with the old crones who act as their preceptors. The sole purpose that drives bitter, dried-up battle-axes is to get the "Bambi Nurses" driven from the hospital. It has to be the old, battle-scarred veterans causing the newbies to be fired, right? It couldn't have anything to do with the youngsters, could it?
I'm sorry op.people suck.
My first thought is that that nurse was threatened by your presence.I guess once that happens , not much you can do. You were in a difficult situation, being a 1st year grad. It would have been kind of hard to have looked for another job before that happened.
Hopefully you will find another job Be humble.
Just a question- and maybe I'm ignorant, but why does it matter if you work at a prestigious hospital?
Straight up? I threw up in my mouth a little when I read you cut a pill with scissors!!!! I know where my scissors go and what they do and no way in HE!! would I pop a pill in my mouth that had been cut with those babies!I know you said it wasn't arrogance, but dang, that's certainly something that through itself at me as I read...
Some people clean their scissors.
totallackofsurprise
27 Posts
A 100 year veteran??? That would make here, what, 120 yrs old? Amazing!! (just kidding!)
It sounds like it wasn't worth the migraine to put her in her place a little.
That being said, I do agree with you: sometimes you DO have to dumb yourself down. Because you can only control your own behavior, not others'.
There's no guarantee that humility and respect will be two-way (that would be ideal, but that's not the world we live in).
When it isn't, dumbing yourself down a bit essentially makes you less threatening to other nurses can help smooth ruffled feathers. Besides, you know your true level of competence, on the inside.
Just don't dumb yourself down too much.