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I'm 7 weeks into my first job, still orienting, and still learning things every shift. Most preceptors are great resources, and you should be asking them a lot of questions (after you have already tried to find the answer). Also, you want to be prepared and willing to take the reins and be independent, but always run things by your preceptor if you're not completely sure--much better to take the extra couple of minutes to run it by a more experienced nurse than to put your patient and your license at risk. Also on my floor, there are 3 other new nurses orienting, and I've found their preceptors to be approachable as well during times when my own is off the unit or with another patient.
Honestly, the hardest part for me is figuring out what MD/PA/APRN I need to call (I'm at a huge inner city hospital, so we have so many different care providers, it can be quite confusing at times!)
No one is ever 100% prepared for their first job out of school, though I've never heard of anyone dying from it either. Soak up every learning opportunity you can, and find your go to people to ask questions.
you will succeed :yelclap:
nursesrockKN
2 Posts