I'm hoping someone might have some insight or thoughts on my situation, because I feel like I'm in way over my head. So I attended an online job fair for a nearby hospital that was recruiting nurse techs and was really excited when the day after my interview, I was offered a job! They gave me the choice of working in orthopedics, telemetry, or progressive care unit. It was a whirlwind and I had to make a decision on the spot. Well I guess I'm an idiot, but having never worked at a hospital before and not really understanding the ins and outs of how things are going with Covid, I chose progressive care. It sounded like I would get exposed to a variety of things and learn a lot. Also, with the pandemic, our clinical experience have been severely limited so it would be amazing to get more time to practice things, even things like ADLs that I haven't done since last year.
So far in school, we haven't been allowed to work with Covid positive patients, and I guess my thinking was that since this was a job for nursing students we probably wouldn't be expected to work with covid patients either (again, I know I really didn't think this through). My partner is immunocompromised, but I told him "don't worry I'm not on the Covid unit!" We live in a tiny one bedroom apartment, so I can't keep any sort of distance between us when I'm home. I also have some weird health things, but I don't think any of those would put me in the high risk category.
Well, today during orientation (my second day as a new-hire, not working on the unit yet) it was casually brought up during the general PPE training that some of us might be fitted for n95s if we are working with Covid positive on my unit. My stomach is now in knots. I'm worried that I will put my partner at risk. He is constantly in fear of getting the virus because of his asthma and high BP. Also, if I get sick and miss too much class, I will have to wait until next school year to finish (our school's policy is that if you are sick and miss too much class, you are only let into the cohort behind you if there is room - the next cohort is a year behind me). I have six months of school left, and I don't want to risk ruining that - I'm so close and I've been at this for four years! But I also feel like a complete piece of garbage if I tell the recruiter that I didn't realize I'd be working with this patient population and I don't feel like I can take that risk right now. I know being a nurse means taking risks and making sacrifices, but I am already dreading my first day on the unit. I don't know how I can deal with constantly worrying that I'm going to get sick or make my partner sick while trying to focus on school. I know I'm thinking of the worst case scenario right now, but I also know that they have a LOT of employees that have gotten Covid at work, so it's not out of the realm of possibility.
Would it be completely unreasonable to ask the recruiter if I can work on one of the other units that have less interaction with Covid positive patients?