How soon after becoming a nurse is too soon to get pulled to another floor? Is there a timeframe your unit goes by, or is it based on the maturity of the individual nurse?
I've been off orientation a month and have been struggling with the transition. My manager asked me if it would freak me out to get pulled for four hours yesterday. I said it would, she said based on staffing I was the person that made sense to go, but someone else would go in my place and left it at that. Well, that someone else kept asking me if I would rather go. I do not think that nurse was deliberately pressuring me; on top of it, it didn't seem right to me that she should have to lose the patients she had for 8 hrs to get a new assignment on a different floor for her last 4. I opted to go, because I was floating (no patient assignment), heard it was an easier unit, and I figured I can do anything for 4 hours. My brief shift up there was fine, but the nurses could not believe I would get pulled after only a month on my own. They said their rule is 6 months off orientation. Then, this morning, I got a text from my friend who started on my floor the same time as me. She got pulled today too, and they used the explanation that since I got pulled yesterday, they figured she was fair game. She thought it was too soon for her to get pulled as well, but went anyway.
I'm going to email my manager and my clin spec about it, but I wasn't sure if this was the norm on other floors. Are we spoiled to think that we should have a couple more months before getting pulled, or is it commonplace to give that leeway to new grads?
Thanks for the insight in advance. And Merry Christmas to those who celebrate!
How soon after becoming a nurse is too soon to get pulled to another floor? Is there a timeframe your unit goes by, or is it based on the maturity of the individual nurse?
I've been off orientation a month and have been struggling with the transition. My manager asked me if it would freak me out to get pulled for four hours yesterday. I said it would, she said based on staffing I was the person that made sense to go, but someone else would go in my place and left it at that. Well, that someone else kept asking me if I would rather go. I do not think that nurse was deliberately pressuring me; on top of it, it didn't seem right to me that she should have to lose the patients she had for 8 hrs to get a new assignment on a different floor for her last 4. I opted to go, because I was floating (no patient assignment), heard it was an easier unit, and I figured I can do anything for 4 hours. My brief shift up there was fine, but the nurses could not believe I would get pulled after only a month on my own. They said their rule is 6 months off orientation. Then, this morning, I got a text from my friend who started on my floor the same time as me. She got pulled today too, and they used the explanation that since I got pulled yesterday, they figured she was fair game. She thought it was too soon for her to get pulled as well, but went anyway.
I'm going to email my manager and my clin spec about it, but I wasn't sure if this was the norm on other floors. Are we spoiled to think that we should have a couple more months before getting pulled, or is it commonplace to give that leeway to new grads?
Thanks for the insight in advance. And Merry Christmas to those who celebrate!