Published
Depends on the home infusion/home health company. I worked for a premium home infusion company where many of my patients were private pay so the vast majority of my visits were to homes measured in the 7-8 digits of value.
Vascular access is an independent specialty, you are consulted to see a patient, assess that patient, perform your intervention, and then move on.
SO works for an insurance company. Despite working from home it is not an independent form of work. All day long she is collaborating and communicating with her coworkers. Despite not seeing one another she likely communicates an order of magnitude more with other nurses in this job than at the hospital.
You're probably more likely to be assaulted in the hospital than in home care. I've done both- assaulted multiple times in hospital, NEVER in a home.
That's what I thought too. Home health I had no issues. Hospitals I had a few try but a certain code brings plenty of people much larger than me to descalate the issue, fast. Now, LTC....I got whacked with a cane, cornered in between furniture, and when I managed to get free, was chased down the hallway by a resident experiencing really bad sundowners. She then tackled the poor old man who happened to be in the hallway. I was also stabbed in the arm with a spork at the same facility by another resident on that unit when I tried to calmly get her to stop trying to force feed the other woman at her table that wasn't hungry. Those were some interesting incident reports.
2BS Nurse, BSN
703 Posts
I am looking for suggestions for a more autonomous RN position. I absolutely love my patients but find that my whiny co-workers are draining the life out of me. I have no choice but to sit next to them in the nurses' station and listen to them constantly complain. I'm searching for a job where I can work alone with patients, but I wouldn't feel safe in someone's home.