Published Jul 2, 2017
cnsrn1
11 Posts
So I graduated in May and recently passed my NCLEX and am starting my RN job next month. I am also moving to another state and am in the process of downsizing everything I own. That being said, part of me wants to hold onto my two medsurg textbooks. I keep thinking I might need to reference it if I'm unsure of something at work and as a reference with continuing education. Granted, nursing information is always changing and research is always being added, so is that even worth it? I'm starting in a graduate nurse program, so I know there will be resources...
Basically, my question is to all of you working nurses, did you keep your textbooks and ever reference them when you started working?
Party_of_five, BSN
82 Posts
Ditch 'em! You can always google anything you want to know.
Miss.Jersey, MSN, APN
55 Posts
I go back and forth about that too. My textbooks would be worth a couple hundred dollars online. But because I want to go back for the BSN I think about keeping them to reference for papers.
meanmaryjean, DNP, RN
7,899 Posts
Sell or donate them.
Cruella de ville
As a new nurse 10 yes ago, I kept them and read them almost every night during my first few months of working.
Now the only ones I ever read are my pharmacology book to review new meds and study up on older meds.
quazar
603 Posts
I'm keeping mine so that years from now I can laugh about all the crazy stuff we used to do in medicine in the dark ages. Or something like that. I paid a king's ransom for them. They make excellent doorstops and any visitors being nosy and looking at our bookshelves think we're super duper smart. Bonus.
Jedrnurse, BSN, RN
2,776 Posts
Some things don't change, like A & P; if your book you had to get was good- keep it! My pharmacology book from school was great. I buy the updated edition every few years. Online sources can be quick and easy, but often cursory and too brief.
PricelessRN, MSN
19 Posts
I say get rid of them. Nursing is always changing, (new drugs, new procedures, and EBP)...it will be outdated in a few years anyway. As an LPN, when I went back to RN school I was SHOOKED when they said we don't aspirate IM injections anymore!
feelix, RN
393 Posts
I am curious if you have online access to the books or not? If yes, sell them before a new edition comes out. In any case, all nursing books become obsolete in 5 years and you will be referring to wrong information if you are still using.Some basics, however don't change and they can be referred to online.
mmc51264, BSN, MSN, RN
3,308 Posts
Not only did I not keep any of the ones from 1st go round, for subsequent degrees, I have rented most of my books. Much cheaper
audreysmagic, RN
458 Posts
I keep my mom's 1970's medical dictionary from HER nursing school days for exactly that reason. We found it in the basement, had a good chuckle over it, and now it lives on my living room bookshelf because aesthetic. I originally kept all of my nursing textbooks, but they were lost in a move...now that I'm going back for my MSN, I've decided to keep the textbooks that I actually USE frequently, at least until I'm done with the program...the ones I rarely touch or ONLY use for class assignments, I'm selling after the term is over.
This is definitely something I'm considering while doing my RN-MSN bridge. I've bought the books for the foundation classes or the ones I think I'm going to really enjoy (like my humanities elective, which has some really beautiful art in the textbook)...but as I progress, I'm definitely considering renting books I doubt I'll ever open again. Is there any one site you rent from, or do you just shop around? I've seen the rental option on Amazon, but I haven't looked into it too deeply yet.