If you accept a job, stay at least a year

Nurses Professionalism

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I see a lot of people here, especially newer nurses, tell us that they got this cruddy job, and they are looking for their dream job. They will quit a job 2 months into it when said dream job comes up.

I just want to go on record here. I disapprove of that and feel like it's unprofessional. You wouldn't see other professions behave like that. Can you imagine an engineer or a lawyer, or any other of the real professions, taking a position, then quitting in 3 months to take another one. No, that is behavior of fast food workers and mini-mart employees.

I don't know why managers are even interested in nurses who do that. It's like dating a man who is cheating on his wife. Do you really think he's not going to eventually do that to you as well?

Maybe it would elevate the profession if nurses signed employment contracts like other professions do.

I hear people here complain that, 'I don't want to risk my license!' where they are now working. I think that's a bunch of hooey. They are trying to sugar coat their unprofessional decision to leave a job shortly after being trained with high and mighty hogwash. People don't lose their license for working in a less than stellar institution.

And there you have it, my two cents. :cool:

Not certain where all this guilt tripping posts are coming from. As a nurse who has worked for the BON and also has been a surveyor in 2 states....and worked open heart surgery, pediatric surgery, psych, staff development, LTC, and served in the military as an Army Nurse, I say do what makes you happy and definitely take care of yourself first. It was a philosophy that served me AND my patients well.

Specializes in NICU, ER, OR.

This USED to be a hard n fast rule , not even too long ago ... but times have changed... places are **** holes , and you only realize after your there, plus new and better opportunities come up... and in this market , present day.... people gotta do what they gotta DO

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