Published Mar 5, 2009
kmiles
7 Posts
Hi! Sorry about the insult that MDSing is not "real nursing", but sometimes I feel that I am losing all those clinical skills that I worked so hard to aquire during school and will never be able to go back on the floor again.
I became an MDS Coordinator after being an RN for only one month by "accident". The accident was that I gave a medication by the wrong route. I was subsequently asked to leave the ER and return to Med/Surg where I had worked as an LPN for over a year. Not wishing to be back under the Med/Surg manager I knew was a tyrant, I chose to leave the hospital. I was hired by a SNF to do "Medicare forms" not knowing anything about MDS. I don't see myself doing this for the rest of my career.
So, how do I keep up my skills, or better yet, how do I apply for a job as a clinical RN after having had close to no previous clinical experience as an RN? Would a hospital even hire me into a new grad program? Kim
achot chavi
980 Posts
Kim,
You can only try and find out- it will depend on how desperate they are. Whats the situation in your area?
As you put it "accidents" happen.
Maybe apply as a private duty nurse in the hospital just to keep your feet wet and learn by keeping your eyes and ears open,
You might want to take a refresher course. That will show that you are serious about clinical nursing.
You didn't say how long youve been doing MDS and left clinical..
Good Luck.
Thanks for the encouragement. I have been the MDS Coordinator for a 109 bed facility for only four months now. I am not sure that this is my cup-o-tea, even though the management has been pleased with my RUG scores and care plans. It feels like I am back in school, doing assessments and care plans that will never be seen or used.
The board of nursing said that the complaint on my licence should be removed sometime this month (March), so I will try for another (or at least a second) job when that is cleared up. I live in a small town with one hospital and two nursing homes. I would have to move to Phoenix to be in a new hospital. Thanks again for the reply. Kim