Not Learning anything New.....

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Ok, I have a job in homecare.

I am an LPN. I do not feel I am learning anything NEW.

Overall, I like home care. I really do.

But I am not using many of my nursing skills.

I am "scared" to leave my job, because it is very stable and gives me full time hours.

I don't want to be trapped though. And as you all know...the economy sucks.

Willing to hear anyone and everyone's :twocents:.

Specializes in Wound Care, LTC, Sub-Acute, Vents.
ok, i have a job in homecare.

i am an lpn. i do not feel i am learning anything new.

overall, i like home care. i really do.

but i am not using many of my nursing skills.

i am "scared" to leave my job, because it is very stable and gives me full time hours.

i don't want to be trapped though. and as you all know...the economy sucks.

willing to hear anyone and everyone's :twocents:.

maybe you can do per-diem/agency at snf or ltc? you will learn tons of stuff there.

I am surprised you feel you aren't learning anything new.

Isn't each patient dfferent, with a different set of needs?

I'm sure they all have psych issues, financial problems, etc. Try adding additional support you can guide them to through the community.Home bound patients have a ton of needs.

Specializes in Med-Surg; Telemetry; School Nurse pk-8.

Hi Pat,

It is hard to think about leaving a steady job in this economy, so you might have to think outside the box. Perhaps take a class in a new area to support your nursing practice? It could be something to further develop your clinical skills or to add to your daily skills -- like Reiki. Or there are tons of volunteer opportunities for nurses -- shelters, schools, after-school programs, non-profits... Do something that you enjoy.

I know it's difficult to do when you are already working FT, but I think being challenged is part of avoiding burn-out. I know that for me, the day I stop learning is the day they put me in the ground ;-)

Best wishes!

~Minnie

Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.

Are you doing visits or 1:1 private duty care?

If it's visits you should be learning or gaining experience in a variety of diagnoses and nursing interventions as well as seeing the client/pt in the home environment which I think is invaluable.

I started out in a hospital before I did anything else, but the skills I used there were all new anyway because it was a peds hospital.

I found myself doing private duty cases and worried about being bored but I learned so much by doing this that is not abc, step-by-step stuff that was just as meaningful and enriching to me as a nurse. I learned how to take care of vent patients which opened an entirely new area for me.

How often do we say (at least I did) "I wish I had the time to just talk with my patient for longer than 3 minutes" - in home care you have that chance, and the extended time gives you a window into what it's like to actually live in the world with a disability or chronic condition.

Yes - full time hours are getting darn near irreplaceabe now depending on your location. Just some thoughts :twocents:

thanks to all your replies.

I do 1:1 visits. I work in a small agency, and I have not had any

new patients in over a year.

Although I like my job overall, I am not challenged anymore.

Right now I work only with ONE client.

I lean towards taking a class of some kind.

But I also want to put into practice more nursing skills.

Guess I have thinking to do.

Specializes in ER, ICU.

At some point, you've done it all and there just aren't that many new challenges, unless you like changing specialities every year. Just be happy you have a job, and look for ways to make it more interesting. There is nothing wrong with coasting along doing a good job for a while. It might be a good time to get some education that you can tuck away for the future. I used a period like that to get my Masters.

Security versus adventure. You have to make the choice, or do what many do, hold two or more jobs in different areas.

Specializes in nursing education.

I agree with taking a class. Maybe one of the ones on the LPN-to-RN route. It might stretch your mind in ways you didn't think were possible. At least, that's what my classes are doing.

For me, the BSN-to-MSN route feels like it's job security insurance, too.

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