Inefficient training at first job, considering quitting

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I got a job as a graduate nurse/RN at a nursing home recently here in California. I've been training in a very fast-paced busy hectic environment. I'm not learning a whole lot (atleast not enough to be completely on my own) because of the environment. My nurse (LVN training me) has been very patient and as helpful as she can be while still taking care of 17+ patients at a time. She said she wishes she can go more in depth with all the paperwork and things like that if she had the time. I asked to be moved to a slower unit of the nursing home. But I was told that there is only 1 nurse per unit of the nursing home for every shift (~20 patients per nurse). And if I were to move to another unit, I'd be completely alone and I'd have to be READY to be on my own.

This place is SEVERELY understaffed. There is no unit secretary to call doctors, fax papers, deal with jammed copiers, etc. No wound care nurse. Not enough nurses. You have so much to do. Nurses stay atleast an hour past their shift just to catch up on what they need to do. The nurses are constantly overwhelmed. One says that she thinks about quitting every other day. There's a nurse who doesn't even document correctly. She documents about a right arm PICC line when the patient actually has a left hand peripheral line... That is how crazy it is. And people get written up a lot... I wonder why. Maybe because they're overwhelmed and can't possibly do everything. And we only get 30 minutes lunch. The nurse training me doesn't even have time to eat... I don't have time to actually sit down with my patients and have a nice conversation with them. It's just like, "Hi. Here's your meds. Gotta go now bye."

I've only been given 5 days of orientation. How is anybody supposed to learn how to do their job in 5 days? Apparently they'd give me more time to orientate if I need it. But I need like 6 months (like new grads at hospitals get). I'm supposed to have a sit-down discussion with the DON and whoever else on Monday. I don't even know if I should show up. They won't even give me 1 week off to study for my NCLEX. They'll just give me 2 days off before my test to study. I need to pass it the first time to start my BSN program. They said the job is more important than the NCLEX...

This is my first job. So I don't have anything to compare it to. But I know this isn't how it's supposed to be. New grads should be trained well to do their job in a reasonable amount of time... especially when human lives are involved. I don't want to screw something up and lose my license before I even get to RECEIVE my license.

I want to just quit and concentrate on the little time I have to study for my NCLEX and then focus on getting my BSN. Apparently some hospitals won't even accept nursing home experience anyways. And I don't NEED a job right now. I don't have kids to support or an apartment to pay rent.

What do you think I should do?

sad to say some nursing homes are like that...i live in MD..worked as an lpn in nursing home....and now work as an RN after getting my license in april 2011....the techs and nurses are clearly understaff....and we nurses sometimes stay 2 to 3 hrs after the shift to complete the work.....(yet mgmt complains about overtime) and yes some places dont want to give good orientation...but trust me...the minute somthing goes wrong..you will be fired.... My advice for u is if u dont need this job..dont let those fools control your destiny...take the time off to study for the nclex..try out for an hosp or another place....the money might be less in a hosp (at least here in MD it is) but u will learn a lot under a preceptorship..unlike nursing homes....stick to that voice in your head...Five days is definately not enough to learn...some can do it while others need more time

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