Published
Based on several threads that I've read on here, and on my own personal experiences as a new nurse beginning my 4th month of experience, I'm seeing a general trend towards rushing new nurses into experiences, roles or responsibilities that traditionally are more "appropriate" for nurses with a little more experience. This coincides with hearing several stories by new nurses who were pushed off of orientation early, given a shortened or unstructured orientation, or no orientation whatsoever.
I would ask why the big rush to have new nurses function on the same level as nurses with years of experience, but I already know the answer - finances. They're paying you to work as a functional team member, and expect you to preform according to your payscale. Fine - I get that - but at what point do we cross the line where the costs outweigh the "cost benefits?" Pushing new nurses too quickly leads to problems on the patient side, and on the nurse side. Patient safety is put on the line by overtaxing a new nurse with extra patients, longer hours, or more responsibilities. Nurses are "burning out" quicker or quitting before they hit the 6 month mark.
None of these things are healthy even with experienced nurses, so I don't mean any disrespect for those experienced nurses who struggle with the same situations. However, new nurses aren't as "seasoned" and are more likely to make a mistake or burn out quicker.
Personally, I'm barely into my 4th month (including orientation), and I've been given more than the "maximum" patient load, expected to join committees, floated to 4 different units (despite being told new nurses aren't floated until after 6 months), and taken advantage of with scheduling.
Just opening this up for a general discussion. I'm interested in everyone's personal stories relating to the topic, as well as your views and opinions.