I've Been A Nurse For 5 Years & Still.....

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Don't know what to do...

So a good friend of mine who went to nursing school with me recently told me this. She is frustrated at her current job because she doesn't feel like she is learning anything and is reduced to task work like vital signs and phlebotomy. She said she left her last job (1st job out of nursing school) in ambulatory surgery hoping to find Cushier employment (no stress, no weekends, little responsibility) but now feels like she wants a challenge.

She has always commented on and applauded the fact that i have such a wide variety of skills and experience and can work in any specialty. I recently suggested she give acute care a try at least, even basic med-surg just to build her confidence and broaden her job opportunities. She said no way she will ever work in the hospital and that ever sine nursing school she didn't want to do bedside or deal with sick people. She even said she didn't want to go back to ambulatory surg and was thinking of L&D but when I explained how hectic and intense L&D could be she never mentioned wanting to do it again.

In ambulatory surg she mainly did plastic surgery type procedures but now she is hoping to get into the OR and move up. The problem is as we all know the job market is really tight, and I've tried to explain to her that merely having a few years of experience working here and there and a masters degree won't necessarily get you your dream job when you're going up against nurses with many years of varied and combined experience and education levels, employers are really being quite picky in what they want and want people with leadership skills and 5+ years experience for any masters level job which she admits she lacks. She has been looking to go back to amb surg which she didn't love but isn't finding many openings and was already not qualified enough for a job in her current line of work that someone she knew was going to set her with.

She's asked for advice but doesn't seem to want to consider anything that will require too much responsibility or stress and wants a simple 9-5 with good salary $80k+. She loves the idea of working in cath lab, L&D but does not immediately qualify. My suggestion to her was to get even a Few months of some type of acute care experience and then apply to what piques her interest so at least she's marketable. She young and still a relatively new nurse and there are nurses with 6mo-1 yr of experience who can function more independently. I don't know what other advice I can give, what do you guys think?

Specializes in PACU, presurgical testing.

Interesting that she left ambulatory surgery; that is as plum as it gets for a new grad! I don't know about the pay, but it has the perks of my PACU job without the late evenings and call.

As far as pay goes, I make less as a new grad nurse now at 43 years old than I did as a computer trainer 20 years ago. That is paying dues, and it's the same for new grads in any position at my hospital (i.e., whether you start in a "specialty" or in med-surg, you get paid the new grad rate). And it ain't $80K.

Specializes in ICU / PCU / Telemetry / Oncology.

She sounds like a spoiled brat, 'nuff said.

Sent from my iPad using allnurses.com

I thought nursing was marketed as an occupation with wide variety and a niche for just about everyone. Why then the insistence of dues being paid at the bedside?

There certainly are opportunities for new grad RNs that don't require paying dues providing bedside care. Ambulatory clinics, doctors' offices, and urgent care centers come to mind.

But good luck making anywhere near 85k a year as a new grad in any of these settings. Generally speaking, staff nurses in a clinic tend to make less per hour than staff nurses in hospitals or LTC facilities.

It's all a trade-off. You want a 9-5, Mon. through Fri. job that doesn't involve hands on care or pushing a med cart? Fine. But don't expect to make as much as those of us who do shift work and weekends and take on full patient loads.

I don't think it's even really about "paying your dues". It's about having something to offer. A nurse with years of experience and a proven work history has a lot to offer. A new nurse, not so much. Without experience, you don't really have the right to expect cushy hours with top-of-the-industry pay.

Specializes in Med-Surg, NICU.

I could see making that kind of money with those hours as a new grad NP, but I suspect that most of those NPs have extensive bed side experience.

Can I ask (as a new nurse) how much pay per year or hour can I aim for

Can I ask (as a new nurse) how much pay per year or hour can I aim for

It varies greatly by location.

I suppose 85k a year isn't too unreasonable for a new grad RN who lives and works in New York City or Hawaii or anywhere with sky high costs of living.

Where I live 50-60k seems to be the norm for a new RN. I believe that's closer to the national average.

Specializes in Critical Care, ED, Cath lab, CTPAC,Trauma.
I thought nursing was marketed as an occupation with wide variety and a niche for just about everyone. Why then the insistence of dues being paid at the bedside?

Key word here...MARKETED!

There is a wide variety with a niche for almost everyone. That doesn't mean that you don't have to "put in your dues" or that these variety of positions are available only AFTER experience at the bedside.

Specializes in Critical Care, ED, Cath lab, CTPAC,Trauma.
It most definitely was entertaining. Oh, my goodness. This explains a lot.

Why Generation Y Yuppies Are Unhappy | Wait But Why

LOVE THIS!
Specializes in Hospital Education Coordinator.

why would someone go to nursing school if they did not want to care for sick people? If she is your friend she may be making excuses because she has learned she really is not cut out for the job and wants out. I recommend you offer support in whatever career she chooses.

The video clips at the end give a more balanced presentation, but overall..... yep.

"doesn't seem to want to consider anything that will require too much responsibility or stress and wants a simple 9-5 with good salary $80k+."

I have achieved that goal. I also paid my dues.

There is no advice, she will have to learn the hard way... just like the rest of us.

Don't know what to do...

So a good friend of mine who went to nursing school with me recently told me this. She is frustrated at her current job because she doesn't feel like she is learning anything and is reduced to task work like vital signs and phlebotomy. She said she left her last job (1st job out of nursing school) in ambulatory surgery hoping to find Cushier employment (no stress, no weekends, little responsibility) but now feels like she wants a challenge.

She has always commented on and applauded the fact that i have such a wide variety of skills and experience and can work in any specialty. I recently suggested she give acute care a try at least, even basic med-surg just to build her confidence and broaden her job opportunities. She said no way she will ever work in the hospital and that ever sine nursing school she didn't want to do bedside or deal with sick people. She even said she didn't want to go back to ambulatory surg and was thinking of L&D but when I explained how hectic and intense L&D could be she never mentioned wanting to do it again.

In ambulatory surg she mainly did plastic surgery type procedures but now she is hoping to get into the OR and move up. The problem is as we all know the job market is really tight, and I've tried to explain to her that merely having a few years of experience working here and there and a masters degree won't necessarily get you your dream job when you're going up against nurses with many years of varied and combined experience and education levels, employers are really being quite picky in what they want and want people with leadership skills and 5+ years experience for any masters level job which she admits she lacks. She has been looking to go back to amb surg which she didn't love but isn't finding many openings and was already not qualified enough for a job in her current line of work that someone she knew was going to set her with.

She's asked for advice but doesn't seem to want to consider anything that will require too much responsibility or stress and wants a simple 9-5 with good salary $80k+. She loves the idea of working in cath lab, L&D but does not immediately qualify. My suggestion to her was to get even a Few months of some type of acute care experience and then apply to what piques her interest so at least she's marketable. She young and still a relatively new nurse and there are nurses with 6mo-1 yr of experience who can function more independently. I don't know what other advice I can give, what do you guys think?

Psych is pretty cushy(not geriatric or adolescent) but she will lose any med skills she had left (just pass meds ..) and l&d is hectic but post partum was pretty much a hotel as a tech I took v/s ..took moms to bathroom and did peri care ..and dropped trays and trays of food lol they were all healthy

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