Recently, a local hospital had a one day strike. One of their issues was their hospital's policy regarding floating nurses to other units.
I'm curios what other hospitals do about floating. What kind of floor do you work on, what kind of floors are you able to float to, what floors are you not required to float to, and what level of comfort do you have with it.
I've seen hospitals where medical nurses were not required to float to the ortho floor. I've seen other hospitals in which medical nurses are floated to surgical, emergency, etc. For example, a seasoned medical nurse told me that management attempted to float her to the ED. She refused to go, stating that if she applied to work in the ED and got the job, she would have been given a few weeks orientation and she didn't feel qualified to go as a float. I'm not sure if she went under protest or not but she got me thinking. I know another nurse who had always wanted to work in the ED and went happily. Is one right and one wrong?
Personally, I have floated from the medical floor to the trach/vent floor in an LTAC but we floated often enough to develop a certain level of comfort and we had a lot of support from the regular staff on that floor. However, floating from a medical floor to the ED would make me nervous.
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Recently, a local hospital had a one day strike. One of their issues was their hospital's policy regarding floating nurses to other units.
I'm curios what other hospitals do about floating. What kind of floor do you work on, what kind of floors are you able to float to, what floors are you not required to float to, and what level of comfort do you have with it.
I've seen hospitals where medical nurses were not required to float to the ortho floor. I've seen other hospitals in which medical nurses are floated to surgical, emergency, etc. For example, a seasoned medical nurse told me that management attempted to float her to the ED. She refused to go, stating that if she applied to work in the ED and got the job, she would have been given a few weeks orientation and she didn't feel qualified to go as a float. I'm not sure if she went under protest or not but she got me thinking. I know another nurse who had always wanted to work in the ED and went happily. Is one right and one wrong?
Personally, I have floated from the medical floor to the trach/vent floor in an LTAC but we floated often enough to develop a certain level of comfort and we had a lot of support from the regular staff on that floor. However, floating from a medical floor to the ED would make me nervous.