For experienced nurses, can you honestly encourage anyone to enter nursing?

Nurses General Nursing

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  1. For experienced nurses, can you honestly encourage anyone to enter nursing?

    • 67
      no
    • 77
      yes
    • 13
      undecided

157 members have participated

For experienced nurses, can you honestly and with 100% conviction encourage someone to become a nurse?

I tell people about the profession...the positives and negatives...it's up to them to decide. I also recommend volunteering in a hospital.

no, but I would tell them how it really is!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! if you care about people and truly mean that.....then it isn't a bad way to make a $$$$$$$$$ :roll :roll :roll :imbar :p

Yes, I can recommend people join our field. I love what I do. Ok I do have days when I want to scream and run out the door. But doesn't everyone everywhere? I can honestly say when my day is over no matter how hectic I have helped someone, even if they do not appriciate it. I think we should really focus on why we became nurses and do what we have to do. Afterall the doctor is not going to do it!!!

I can't picture anything diff.........cause I am not geared to it.............

If someone felt that nursing was the only thing in the world he/she wanted to do...that there was nothing else as a career option, then I guess I wouldn't try to talk him/her out of it. However, I would want that person to know all the pros and cons...not just the "warm fuzzies."

for sure.......it is just not passing tylenols.......

I can't say that I go out of my way to suggest nursing as a field for anyone to go into. If someone asks my opinion, I give them a very candid account of my nursing career, and let them take it from there. There's a lot to consider, as we all know, and these days more than in the past, it takes a very special and determined person to make it in nursing.

Yes it does!!!!!!!!!!!

YES

1996-1998. Nursing layoffs. Impossible to get a hospital job. Wound up working at McD's for minimum wage. I was lucky to get even that job because I was "overqualified" for everything else...they were just desperate. Then I went to work at a small hotel (part of a national well-known chain) that employed 3!! RNs - me as night audit manager, one as head of housekeeping, and one to run the breakfast room. In this climate you can't be assured of always having a job. With the shortage on, sure...but it will cycle back out. I always used to believe that jobs would always be out there...but they weren't. Now I've lost that security.

I would only recommend nursing to someone who is young and does not intend to have a family if they want to do hospital nursing; or to someone who has a spouse who can financially support them if they need normal working hours. That's it. It's just not fair to family (especially the kids) to have a mom or dad who is either working or sleeping all the time.

Those 12 hour shifts are nice if you have enough days off in between - but if you do, then you're working a bunch in a row and there is no existence outside of work on those days, and it usually takes a couple of days to recover and catch up on all the stuff that needs to be taken care of outside of work. So you maybe get a day or two to enjoy before you're back at it.

babs

scrappy...........gotta love your simplicity.......and truth!!!!!!!!!!!!!

the patients are wonderful...real humanity as never seen in any other profession....the corporate part of it stinks...

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