Published
Please let me know what your base pay is in your part of the country. I live in TN and where I work our base pay is 13.00/hr. And if you are a CVICU nurse, do you get paid more for what you can do. thanks
At the facility I just left I was making $45/hr plus a pm shift differential $3.25/hr between 3-7pm and an extra $1.5/hr for weekends. That was an old contract, the new contract was kicking in as I was leaving with a 9% raise. My new facility will be a little more. Keep in mind I live in one of the most expensive places in the US and jobs are VERY hard to find right now. I have been a nurse for a couple years.
I was just so surprised of what I just learned! I think it's time for me to invite everybody to come here in Canada to work! I just started working in the ICU last year without previous experience on this area, came from another country, and yet...I am earning $24.00/hour. Not too bad eh? Please...we are desperate for nurses!
Really, then many American nurses who are having trouble getting jobs should go to where you are, where is it in Canada????
Are you only looking for experienced nurses, can't you train your own nurses? I know that does take time if you can get them to stay once trained.
Dallas-Fort Worth area ICUs:
New grads (in training) = $21-22/hr.
Once you complete ICU training = $24-25/hr.
From there, $25 to $38 per hour or more, depending on experience level.
This doesn't include differential pay. Add $6 per hour for weekend differential, $2.75 evening differential, and $3.50 night differential.
In alaska (big city) anchorage most of the hospitals are union. OUr wage starts out at ~$26/hr. of course cost of living is offset by that because food/living supplies are much more expensive. I am shocked to hear that RNs are making less than $20per hour; WE ARE LICENSED PROFESSIONALS! we take care of the sick, weak, and needy!
Sorry for the rant; prior to reading this, I was thinking how a nurse who takes care of pts in a higher acuity setting should be paid greater than those who take care of "walkie-talkie" upset stomach pts. I have a somewhat different view now as others are making even less....
btw I work in a CCU/ICU and take care of very sick people....
-e
In alaska (big city) prior to reading this, I was thinking how a nurse who takes care of pts in a higher acuity setting should be paid greater than those who take care of "walkie-talkie" upset stomach pts. I have a somewhat different view now as others are making even less....btw I work in a CCU/ICU and take care of very sick people....
-e
You are so right! I'm completing orientation for my new hospital and all of us new nurses have a list of tests and competencies we need to perform prior to working independently. There are 26 critical care required written tests opposed to regular nursing's 12. The test themselves require 30 pages of reading, 30 questions on tiny details, not concepts or policies. I have 26 tests! The other nurses finished their written tests in a day!
My ICU assessment specific written competency is going to take four hours opposed to everyone else's two. My required clinical demonstration of skills is going to take two days as opposed to non-critical nursing's 4 hours.
This does not seem fair. I'm required to have ACLS, PALS, TNCC. Unofficially I was told by my manager that they expect ICU staff members to have C.C.R.N.'s, though legally she can't require it. Does the hospital offer to pay for the course? Of course not. Do they pay anymore when you get the certification? Of course not.
Is nursing the only field where the more degrees and credentials you obtain has ABSOLUTELY NO influence on your pay? All the other nurses keep saying "You get specialty critical care pay."
No, I don't. That pay went to the floor nurses to keep them happy because they were being underpaid. I'm really questioning the value of working in critical care, like risk vs. reward. I love it, love the autonomy but I study most weekends, the work itself can be unfairly demanding. Frankly, I see no reason to be on the floor longer than 5 years. I know many of my newer co-workers feel the same way. We in critical care asked to do so much more, for the same pay. 2 patients whatever, they don't use CNA's in this I.C.U. or any I.C.U. I've ever worked at.
Might as well get an easier, better paying job.
Sorry for the vent but sometimes I just wonder...
cruisin_woodward
329 Posts
holy moly!! In MI, we make $24-36/hr. I make $26 in one hospital where I work CTICU, and $36 in another where I work OR. I have been a nurse for 3 years, but was a ST in the OR for 11 years prior...