Published Jan 10, 2007
Lovely RN
52 Posts
Let me start by giving a little background about myself. I hve been an RN for 4 1/2 years. Majority of the time in telemetry where I worked for the last 3 1/2 years 7a-7p. I recently had a child 5 months old. I am still off work now. I began interviewing about a month ago. I don't have any Home Health exp. However I couldn't bear going back to 12 hours and being away from my son that long even though it is 3 days a week. Today I was offered a home health RN case manager position afflliated with a community hospital about 5 minutes from my house M-F 8-4:30 call every 4-6 weeks 2.50 an hour while on call and if I have to go out I will be paid my hourly rate of 24.75 . The orientation is about 2 months. Average daily productivity is 5 points. Re-visits are 1 point and admissions are counted as 2 points. The manager said she doesn't expect new hires to be up to productivity for a few months after the orientation. I don't expect 35hr. like I was making becuz last position was registry however not sure if 24.75 is the norm for these type of postions. Any help greatly appreciated.
judisdream
2 Posts
Sounds like a good starting salary for my area (Northeast Indiana) but not sure about yours. I work for a hospital-based agency and we have a base range for all RN postions, although home care is slighty higher due to the case management aspect. Don't count on your day being over at 4:30. That may be your agency hours but not necessarlly your patient's. Call time can be very frustrating and you may be up all night with calls and expected to work the next day. All in all home care is very rewarding and if you like the one-on-one relationship you can establish with your patients go for it!
Cattitude
696 Posts
let me start by giving a little background about myself. i hve been an rn for 4 1/2 years. majority of the time in telemetry where i worked for the last 3 1/2 years 7a-7p. i recently had a child 5 months old. i am still off work now. i began interviewing about a month ago. i don't have any home health exp. however i couldn't bear going back to 12 hours and being away from my son that long even though it is 3 days a week. today i was offered a home health rn case manager position afflliated with a community hospital about 5 minutes from my house m-f 8-4:30 call every 4-6 weeks 2.50 an hour while on call and if i have to go out i will be paid my hourly rate of 24.75 . the orientation is about 2 months. average daily productivity is 5 points. re-visits are 1 point and admissions are counted as 2 points. the manager said she doesn't expect new hires to be up to productivity for a few months after the orientation. i don't expect 35hr. like i was making becuz last position was registry however not sure if 24.75 is the norm for these type of postions. any help greatly appreciated.
hello! what type of home care agency is it? here in ny we have 2 kinds, long term and short term and there is a big difference. i work long term with chronic pt's. i have basically the same pt's for years until they die or transfer to a facility. i do home visits and all aspects of case management for approx. 25 pts. with 10 yrs nursing exp. my pay is about $43 per hr. and that is for an area about 10 miles outside nyc.
i do know that many states don't have long term home health , only short term. that usually entails pts' coming home from the hospital and doing wound care, iv abx, lab draws, etc... the paperwork in home care is a pain, you must have good organizational skills and be very good with time management.
having said that, i love the freedom and flexibility this job allows. i love no weekends, no holidays, no nights. i love making more money thatn slaving away in the hospital. i love having that one on one relationship with my patients. this job believe it or not will sharpen your clinical skills. you have no monitors or machines to rely on, only your eyes, ears and gut instincts.
i don't have children yet but all of my coworkers do and this job really allows them the freedom of being able to do things for their kids that they couldn't have done doing shift work at the hospital...
good luck with whatever you choose!!!
beez
Thanks so much for your advice(Beez and Judisdream). I decided to go for it. I believe it will be a great experience and allow me the flexibility I so much need. I was burned out from the hospital. I did renegotiate my days I will only work four days a week instead of five same hours though. This way I can have a weekday off to spend time with my little one. I am a tad bit nervous about this since this is unchartered waters for me, but I believe I will do just fine.Wish me luck. I start on the 29 of this month.
Mijourney
1,301 Posts
Hi Lovely. I wish you much success in home health. I know it will be difficult at first if you're used to the structure that a hospital gives. It's not at all like that in home health. As a case manager in home health you have to be creative, extremely disciplined, and unafraid. As the previous poster indicated, you have to rely only on your own senses in the HH world.
A couple of things I would caution you about in HH. Look at what areas and how much territory they are asking you to cover. You do not want to be scattered all over a large territory because it will be difficult to get home at a decent hour. When you're on call and need to go out at night, make sure someone is with you or at least can get to you quickly. Again, I don't know what territory you will have but some areas are not desirable to be in even after noon time. Try to stay in good stead with your aides if possible, they can be a handy ally when you need them. Watch out for wishy washy management. You may have already read through some of the threads where HH nurses are having it rough. Finally, I think it's important to stay on top of regulatory issues in HH because it seems to be going through a lot of change. Boomers like me are going to have an even greater impact on HH then consumers in the past.
I think that if you are people-oriented, have compassion for people in difficult circumstances and enjoy teaching, instructing, educating and so on, you will do well in HH. After working in HH, I can never see myself going back to the hospital.