Are You Cut Out to be an Emergency Department (ED) Nurse?

For many nurses, the epitome of nursing is to work in the Emergency Department (ED). Have you ever wondered if ED is a good fit for you? Specialties Emergency Video Knowledge

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Emergency Room nurses are a special breed. They are highly skilled, compassionate folk who work well as a team. They are open to experience, and agreeable. Here are some more traits common to most ED nurses.

Game On

ED is a noisy, fast paced environment with stimulus coming from every direction. There is no normal in the ED. It's noisy and chaotic.

ED Nurses Thrive In Chaos

Unlike their neatnik ICU sisters and brothers, ED nurses don't require a controlled, structured environment. They adapt quickly to rapidly changing conditions.

They tolerate ambivalence and prefer change to structure.

Emotional Intelligence

ED nurses are high in emotional intelligence. They can establish a rapport with an elderly woman desperately grasping her husband's hand as he is being rushed to surgery, and seconds later, elicit a giggle from the feverish two-year old in the next room.

They can smoothly manage both the wife and girlfriend showing up at the same time situation. They can approach the busy doctor and get him/her to order the pain med they need for their patient...now.

ED nurses may cry inside, but not on the job. They're not seen as overly emotive types. They remain calm while projecting an attentive demeanor. They have the ability to put highly anxious family members at ease while listening for the vent alarm in the next room over.

Breadth Over Depth

They prefer broad to deep. An ED nurse will not study H&Ps from previous encounters to delve deeply into patient history.

They don't get bogged down in the details and are not interested in non-presenting patient complaints. They aren't there to study; they're there to stabilize.

But they are comfortable with babies to toddlers to middle-agers to seniors.

Heart rhythms are either normal, too slow or too fast. If it's too slow, speed it up. If too fast, slow it down. Done.

Treat 'em and street 'em and.... next, please!

Fast on Their Feet

ED nurses make instant decisions, react quickly, and think fast on their feet. Often they do this with minimal information.

Should they see the 58-year-old male clutching his chest or the 24-year-old doubling over with cramps or the 18-year-old with hand wrapped with dripping bloody gauze first?

They can sniff out sepsis and spot an impending code.

They make rapid assessments in under 30 seconds and can manage several emergent patient situations at once.

ED nurses have excellent time management skills because they RACE from pod to pod, and front to back. They efficiently discharge, admit, transfer, treat and triage in record speed.

Adrenaline Junkies

Self-proclaimed junkies, ED nurses love the rush they get from true emergencies; a trauma, a pulseless John Doe...and never knowing what's rolling in next!

They thrive on change, and preferably change with an element of risk or harm. ED nurses need high stimulation, charged action, and immediate results.

Esprit d'Corps: High Fivers

ED staff are often tight knit, team oriented, and socialize across job titles. They value their team identity and count on each other to survive. They form close ties to their work friends.

They are highly social, known for having a wicked sense of humor, and are witty and sarcastic. They are friends with the EMTs, paramedics, policemen, and prison guards.

Breakfast after your shift? They're in. Volleyball challenge from Respiratory Therapy? Accepted. Game on.

Physical/Kinesthetic

They're physical, always moving, have stamina, and cannot tolerate sitting for a shift. They can rig up practically anything and are creative at dressings.

Always ready to Spring into action, they dislike paperwork and routine, repetitive tasks.

Street Smart

ED nurses score high in common sense and street smarts. They are down to earth and sensible.

They are not easily conned, and they can spot maligners a mile away.

Does this sound like you? Did you read this and keep thinking, "That's me! That's so me!"

If so, you may be an ED nurse at heart. I hope this helps you find your nursing niche.

Yep this is me and I love every second

I don't work as a Nurse anymore. Too Old now. But I worked in the Emergency Department for 13 years of my career (part of that 21 years total spent in the U.S. Army during the Persian Gulf). I had learned a lot in Nursing School but less than half of what I learned in the Emergency Department. I look back on my career, on the good things and the bad things, and think "Hey this could be compared to a good Western Movie." You have your "Sheriff" the Shift Supervisor for the Hospital, you have your "shop keepers" the ICU, Coronary Care, Orthopedics, OB-GYN, Surgery, you have your "Hotels" the floor and you have your "watering hole" or "Saloon" the Cafeteria. But it just would not be a good Western Movie without the "COWBOYS" the Emergency Department Nurses. Now I've been in my share of "bar room brawls" or the disarming of unruly wild patients, removing guns and knives several times in my career. I've been in the "Posse" who responded to combative patients all over the hospital who sometimes stand on that narrow headboard of their beds proclaiming they are Jesus and at times me wondering if they really are by how steadily they are standing on it. My salute to all of the Nurses who work caring for people of all walks of life and all circumstances. But my heart has a special place for the Emergency Nurse and the Critical Care Nurses and the Surgery Nurses for without you this "OLD COWBOY" would have already plodded of into the sunset. Thank you all for fixing my heart.

I am a ER nurse and couldn't ever imagine doing anything else. My co workers are like family. We work so well together and always have each other's back.

This is great!! I "retired" from ER and am leading students in the clinical setting now--Lots of nursing students want to go to ER, ICU, Mother/Baby, OR....I often talk to them about the "need for speed" in the ER. I worked in Mental Health for years, then to ER, and it's true, My name is LuAnn and I am an adrenaline junkie. My entire career has been spent in CHAOS and I have loved it!! I watch the students and notice the ones who seem to rebel against the routine and steer them toward ER, and it's so rewarding to see the light come on when they realize they could thrive in CHAOS LAND! Not every one is comfortable with a stable routine, and I think that characteristic should be nurtured just as any other should be. Your article nailed it!

Specializes in Patient Safety Advocate; HAI Prevention.

Hmmm, not much room in that list for compassion??? I believe that ER nurses are among the most compassionate nurses I have ever known....well at least some of them were. Some were more into the list above than about compassion. They were quick and skilled, but they did not connect with patients, AKA vulnerable human beings. I was an ER nurse and I believe all of that efficiency and skill can be used while at the same time connecting emotionally to the patients and their families. I did it, and so did many other ER nurses that I knew. They were the best!

I worked in the ED for over 10 years. I was at Alameda County Hospital in Oakland, San Jose ED, and a variety of others. This is a pretty accurate description of ER Nursing. I worked on the trauma teams. Had my hands deep in the chest of trauma victims, and just about any place else you can imagine. Delivered babies in the parking lot, got shot at while on the ambulance for my MICN time. It was high adrenalin at times. Got cussed at, cried with Moms who lost their babies, hugged by grateful families whose loved ones I had just saved with the rest of the team. Would not have given up those years for anything. When it was time to go, it was time to go.

Specializes in Family Practice, Med-Surg.

My only regret about nursing is that I turned down an ER job way back when.

I'm an ED nurse at one of the, if not the, busiest ED's in the state of Ohio. We have 98 beds and two level II (we take I's when needed) trauma bays. I could not agree more with your description. I was fortunate enough to start my nursing carrer in the ED as a new grad. I was hired into a fellowship that allowed that to happen. I LOVE MY JOB!!! The biggest thing that we are is a family. You have to be. MD's, RN's, PCA's, Medics, Pharm, RT, we all work as one. I truly love my coworkers. I have their backs and they have mine. EVERY DAY!

It's so hard to explain to people what it's like to work in the ED. Getting 3 rescues at once and they all have to be triage fast while you monitor your DKA patient in the next room. Controlled chaos is the way I describe it to people. From overdoses to people who have been nauseous for the last hour. We see from the top acuity level to the bottom. Besides loving the ED it is very entertaining. I feel like I can make a difference right now with patients and that's why I could never be a floor nurse. Too slow of a pace for me. I see 20-25 patients a day and love it. Always something new and different and you need to have a good team around you. The only way to survive.

I LOVED the ER. Spent over 10 years there on the trauma team. I only left to try out the OR, where I stayed for another 10 years, again on the trauma team.

Specializes in ER, Open heart, Long Term Care,Camp.

Yep that was me for 25+ years...I loved my job & learned so much about all aspects of nursing & medicine. Never a dull moment!

Specializes in ER - trauma/cardiac/burns. IV start spec.

Would never have worked in any other department. I loved the ED and nights too. The wicked sense of humor is spot on. However the saying is "Greet 'em, treat 'em and street 'em."