Published
My exposure to this situation is 10 years old, and jobs have changed a lot since then.
I worked bedside nursing for 17 years, nights, weekends, holidays, etc. I finally applied for a job in out patient surgery. Out patient surgery is a wonderful area to work. Closed nights and weekends (but you might have to take call). Lower patient to nurse ratio. I was very annoyed with myself for waiting 17 years, when I heard fellow nurses in out patient surgery saying, "Oh, yeah, I worked the floor a few months after school, didn't like it and came here!"
Today the job market has changed a lot, but there are possibilities out there. Keep your ears and eyes open.
I've been a bedside nurse for the past 5 years. I want to do atleast 10 years bedside nursing, so 5 more years to go! Although I completely understand wanting to leave bedside nursing, I still have a heart for it, so I'm trying to consider areas where it's not as physically stressful with low patient to nurse ratios (ICU for me lol)
After years of working my way up the coperate latter, I had the corner office, but I missed what I had been trained to do, the good and the bad of it I've recently read a book, "A Nurse's Story" by Tilda Shalof, who tells my story much better than I can. "something for the Pain" by Paul Austin will tell you all about his horrors dealing with shift work.
I worked in acute care for about a year and then moved into home health nursing. I ended up going back to school for a master's degree and then I moved into various administrative positions in staff education and quality assurance. I now work as a state health care surveyor. I've been a nurse for 6 years. One of the great things about nursing is the variety of career possibilities. There are lots of options out there...it just depends on how motivated you are and how you market yourself to potential employers. Good luck!
EDnursetobe
76 Posts
Hi everybody! (hi Dr. Nick!)
Anyway... I'm having a rough couple of weeks. Long story short, at first I liked my job, now I absolutely dread going to work. and on my days off all I can think about is how much I don't want to go back. I don't really know what changed...
I haven't been working that long, but I feel like I want to get out of bedside nursing as soon as possible. I like working with patients and I don't really mind the job itself, it's more like I can't stand the hours (12 hour shifts are really like 14 plus the commute) I'm already missing my friends and feel isolated. Plus I don't like how RNs are treated where I work. Plus I see a lot of the older nurses (who I have a ton of respect for) that are in chronic pain and have crazy high blood pressure. I don't want that.
And the problem is, every out of the hospital type job requires like 3 years experience now. I just don't think I can make it that long!!!
Did anyone leave the bedside after 1 year? What are you doing?
would love some ideas.