Forced to resign, new grad with only 1 year of experinece.

Nurses General Nursing

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I find myself today some how discourage and with a low spirit, I would like to know the opinion and hear experiences from either new grads or more experience nurses about my story.

I was hired exactly one year ago as a New Grad at the ER in a local hospital. We all new grads were hired with a $5000 contract for 3 years. This contract involved educational training for New Grad ER nurses, This will include a preceptors and a Regional ER course. Well at the time and as a New grad looking for a new experience and any job that came across the ER sounded great, and 3 years contract really did not felt like much.

Well my journey started, I was trying to get use to be called the orientee, because this was the way all our coworkers were referring to us.

Well one day after a couple of week of orientations and lots of CE courses online required by the hospital, our manager said to us the ER course will start next week, but we have to make an addendum to your contract, is not going to be $5000 anymore now is $7500, I was forced to sign it at that point. We all sign it . The ER regional course was 4 or 5 weeks and it was useless, poor teachers nothing ER related really broad and vague. It was like assisting to one of those fast track NCLEX courses, basic stuff but nothing that I didn't knew already from nursing school. I really felt robbed, but again I needed a job and I was still excited about ER. We were suppose to have a ONE preceptor to follow through what you were learning, not many and who ever was willing to take you that day. This is what happened, I had multiple preceptors, some good, some hate to have an orientee and some just care less about teaching you. I completed my 6 month review with clean record :-) I even call dad , I am good I passed my probation period clean with clean record. that was a huge relieve, up to that point all my managers and directors were being some how nice to me. Well things change, once you are on your own with no preceptor, I was oriented during day shift for 3 months and now I was sent to nights. That was a major change for me, keeping in mind I had never ever work a night shift in my life, but that was my agreement and I was willing to fulfill it.

I was hired in March and I managed to keep up my new grad record clean, until season started, most of the techs were either fired or left, I see many nurses leave but I really didn't get involved, I was there to earn my living not to gossip around.

December 31th I was called for the first time to my managers office, I had gave another patient papers mixed with the packet the doctor handled me to discharge this patient, and I mislabeled a blood tube. I was being written up for the first time, my manager didn't look or acted as nice as before, she was rough, mean and really not understanding. I assumed my fault, but I accept my personality is sometimes talkative and I said I am not sure I gave those papers to the patient, because this is the case many times where the charge nurses give discharges or doctors do and then you have to sign on them, and ER is really busy things like this are hard to remember. But I guess I should just assume my fault and leave that office. Well I managed to just say I am sorry I will pay more attention to detail, this was what they counsel me about, attention to detail. Well after that I felt they were watching me, I was so sad and anxious not to make any mistakes that I feel the more careful I was the more clumsy I was becoming. I was called one more time to the office, A Retired Nurse who came to my ER almost at change of shift placed a complaint that she was never place in the monitor, and also I had place a urine sample in the same bag with the tubes, this according to the lab contaminates specimen and she made me withdraw the labs again. I gained a second write up. I appeal the monitor case because it was charted, but manager said patient was a reliable source and eve though I had patient for less than 30 minutes and even if I gave bedside report and it was documented in my chart, it wasn't valid and I had to keep the write up. I did not appeal this write up not until I received the 3rd write up.

The third write up happened last week march, we are talking of 3 write ups in a matter of 3 months. The last write up that caused me a suspension was about my biggest fault, I entered the medication list of one of my patients into another patients chart. They found out when the patient went to the floor and the nurse wrote me up, I have no excuse the ER has been to explosion level and my anxiety because I knew this was going to happened, my charge nurses being of no help, no techs in the ER , many normal factors of the ER.. no Excuse I am making stupid mistakes. I was told by my managers who were very aggressive in front of the ER director in this write up appeal meeting, We are seeing a pattern here you are not having attention to detail and also you don't accept your blames. They also told me that one more error and I will be fired. What should I do? Is this a good time to resign and take a deep breath before making more mistakes? Is my manager going to give bad references about me once I start looking for a job? I really feel stupid for making all this rookie mistakes :-(, mostly because my manager has told me I don't belong in the hospital world.

I am scared of resigning, but I am more afraid of being fired, how to handle this and leave with my head up ?

Specializes in Med/Surg, Ortho, ASC.

OP, I'm not sure you're giving us the whole story. A previous post of yours from last October is based upon taking a vial of morphine home in your pocket, and facing ramifications from that. So these 3 write-ups are definitely not the only issues that have occurred.

Yes the Morphine event was scary though was not a write up, hospital even compensated me for this time, I guess this was honest of my side to return the morphine and the hospital took it well, this occurred on my first week at night going on my own. ofcourse many this has occur to me being a new grad in a busy ER in season has been seriouslly challenging.

I am not feeling like am expert at all but I handdle it well, still a new nurse in some areas and some days when you get 4 difficult cases at the same time gets really challenging, mostly because we really have no techs and our charge nurses really are useless, all they do is report us and play with their phones. But I really love nursing and I love my profession, I'm trying not to give up, regardless of the mean nurses comments or write ups or anything. But I can see now why many new nurses do give up quickly.

There are problems on both sides of this issue, the employee did not reach the desired level of clinical competence in the expected time frame and has made errors, the employer's change to the terms and conditions of the contract after they hired the employee is unethical at the very least. The addendum to the contract from $5,000 to $7,5000, along with the threat of one more complaint and the employee will be fired, may be considered constructive dismissal, I would speak to a lawyer familiar with labour law before resigning.

Slow down and focus one thing at a time. Med recon can be a huge deal to put in the wrong chart. Blood mislabeled is a big deal if meds or treatment are based of that blood. Slow down and check your five rights no matter what you are doing

Yes I will :-(... slowing down can be challenging too lol

I am not feeling like am expert at all but I handdle it well, still a new nurse in some areas and some days when you get 4 difficult cases at the same time gets really challenging, mostly because we really have no techs and our charge nurses really are useless, all they do is report us and play with their phones. But I really love nursing and I love my profession, I'm trying not to give up, regardless of the mean nurses comments or write ups or anything. But I can see now why many new nurses do give up quickly.

I don't think the message is for you to give up on nursing, but the message from your employer is that you should quit working at their hospital.

Your lack of knowledge about the charge nurse role isn't doing you any favours, suggest you educate yourself about charge nurse responsibilities before making your judgements.

what makes you think I'm not aware of the charge nurse role? just as a curiosity, unless play with their phones is in their job descriptions I don't think I'm wrong.

what makes you think I'm not aware of the charge nurse role? just as a curiosity, unless play with their phones is in their job descriptions I don't think I'm wrong.

Anytime I hear someone accuse other nurses of sitting around and doing nothing, I see someone who is naive to think any nurse's job out there is a cake walk.

It's not productiive to blame/critisize other people on not doing their jobs. You've made several significant errors a year in and need to focus on the underlying cause and turn it around.

Specializes in OR, Nursing Professional Development.
what makes you think I'm not aware of the charge nurse role? just as a curiosity, unless play with their phones is in their job descriptions I don't think I'm wrong.

Elan84, I think you need to keep in mind that when you are pointing at others, there are 3 fingers pointing back at you. You need to stop worrying about what others are doing and focus on your own nursing practice in order to improve. You, at the one year mark, are no longer a new grad but should be at the stages of either a novice nurse or an advanced beginner. You need to focus on what you need to do to bring your practice up to the level it should be and not focus so much on what others are doing. As to not being aware of the charge nurse role, well, until you've actually done it, you can't really know what all it involves. When I started doing charge in my department, it was quite the eye-opening experience, and I gained a whole lot more respect for the others who do it as well.

I don't see why you anger towards me, yes I made a mistake I am not saying I didn't at all I did and I feel bad about it. But I also come accross with many people with your same attitude, always judgemental, angry and with a arrogant personality, also I want some tips on how to not let that affect me ?, I am a very sweet,positive, healthy and friendly person, not use to people constantly attacking you. Why it feels like I see this picture in many nurses? is this the way I'm going to become in few years?

Thank you all who replyed, I take many of your comments very seriously. I will not judge, focus, keep my mouth close and my head up and resign my current job as soon as possible. This is just my first year, before I know it I'll be on that 5th year and be at many of you level and hope to make it alive :specs:. I thank all of you for the positive vive and also for the upfront responses it all helps. I have an interview tomorrow, I hope GOD is on my side, I hope to find a hospital were I can grow, were I can give and I can love and help my patients because at the end this is why we are Nurses. This new nurse journey is long and though, may be mistakes will occur the importance is to learn from it and be patient and tolerant with ourselves.

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