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Hospitals accepting nurse trainee or volunteer in NCR
Is it true that this hospital issues COE for their volunteers?
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My experience in Capitol Medical Center
How long after the 44th skills training were you called for casual status? I read in other threads that they will place you on casual status for 3 months, then probationary for another 3 months and become a regular employee thereafter. Is there a possibility that you'll be placed in a special area like ICU?
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Metropolitan Medical Center currently hiring staff nurses
Hi! What are the requirements for Metropolitan Medical Center? How did your exam and interview go?
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Nurse Hiring 2014 Manila Area
Anyone who tried applying to VRPMC recently?
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Diliman Doctors Hospital
Hi! What are the requirements for Diliman Doctors Hospital?
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My experience in Capitol Medical Center
We're you called for interview already? When did you submit your requirements? :)
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AFPMC RN Residency 2014
Do you have to undergo their RN Residency even if you have paid hospital experience in the past?
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My experience in Capitol Medical Center
Hi nurses! Any news from CMC this month?
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How long is NMC UK application?
Hi everyone. I just sent my pack 1 two weeks ago. But none of my documents were notarized. I had a friend who started his NMC application last November. He got his decision letter after 6 months. His pack 1 documents were not notarized as well. I'm now worried that the NMC might ask me to send them notarized copies of my documents.
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Clinical Instructors and lecturers with no hospital experience?
though i'm on the side of allowing newly grads in nursing education..i don't think i agree with them teaching without having post-graduate units first before being employed..coz that's one credential that a nurse has to meet right?! after passing the boards, you can enroll for post-gradute studies and finish in a year and a half if you're a full time student..12 units for 3 semesters plus 1 summer of 6 units......the university where i came from still ranks as one of the top nursing schools in the country, yet they hire newly grad alumni as clinical instructors..i believe i got my money's worth..
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Clinical Instructors and lecturers with no hospital experience?
yes..that's was the only thing i'm trying to point out..newly grads can teach what they were taught..i believe that's why not all newly grads can qualify as clinical instructors..they also need to qualify to certain standards..i'm not saying that they will be better than those who spent years already in the nursing profession..but they do present better lectures..easy but book-based..but the skills i guess can be better taught by nurses who spend time in the clinical area 'coz even senior nursing professors are not that reliable anymore in that aspect since they're spending much of their time in the academe rather than on the floor..
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Clinical Instructors and lecturers with no hospital experience?
the goal of any nursing school is to produce competent generalist nurses..but i guess, the measure of competence is quite relative..im not saying that experience is not needed, that's vital to any profession or occupation..im just trying to point out that newly graduate nurses can teach with quality..coz i've experienced that when i was a student nurse..if quality related learning experience was given to these newly graduate nurses, then i believe they would be able to teach their students well..'teaching and learning' is part of the nursing management curriculum offered during the last semester of the BSN curriculum..it is ENHANCED during post-graduate studies which is required when you land a job as clinical instructor.. the sad truth for a lot of nursing schools lately is that, they focus more on quantity rather than quality..i heard that some universities cater nearly 2000 students per year level..how in the world can you be assured that each and every student that got her nursing diploma from that school has the knowledge and skill of a competent nurse.. as they say..you cannot teach what you don't have..garbage in..garbage out..
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Filipino Nurses who passed the NCLEX without the help of Review Center
1. What are the materials that you used? fundamentals of nursing by potter and perry, maternal and child care nursing by adelle pillitteri, prioritization delegation and assignment by linda lacharity, kaplan trainer, saunders comprehensive review 2. How many hours per day did you study? how many questions did u answer per day? 4 hours a day for 4 months while waiting for my eligibility to test..i only started to answer questions when i was done reading all my reference materials..i did 100 a day for a week until my exam day.. 3. How many days or months in total you studied before taking the exam? 4 months..once i got my eligibility, i scheduled for an exam right away.. 4. What are the specific strategies that you used or the the test taking skills you applied during the exam? ABC, maslow, prioritization, nursing process.. 5. Take one or take two? 75 at take one.. GOODLUCK!
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hiring of staff nurse in year 2009
hi..if you really want work and with compensation, a friend of mine informed me that their hospital - riyadh national hospital is currently in need of nurses..coz a lot of their staff are resigning due to the difficult work load..it's definitely a work experience right?! and with salary..well..i know the middle east is not an enticing option to new graduates but it's the only place where fresh RN's are accepted..well as long as you have good credentials and trainings..i guess they also consider the school where you came from..the better the school, the better the chances..good luck!
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Clinical Instructors and lecturers with no hospital experience?
my university offers clinical teaching jobs even to fresh graduates only if they graduate from our school and has acceptable credentials..i was taught by clinical instructors who were just a few years ahead of me, some of them were my student nurse seniors during my RLE's..but as far as im concerned, they were able to teach as well..well enough for us to be confident to feel that we can be efficient staff nurses right after we graduate..i guess it all depends on the quality of nursing education given to these newly graduate clinical instructors and how the dean of the college of nursing deals with their clinical skills..maybe that's why they don't hire graduates from other schools..so as not to jeopardize the quality..i believe it was easy for my clinical instructors to teach us since the 4th year nursing students in our school who undergo RLE's for nursing management act as clinical instructors for the 3rd year and 2nd year students..the lower years are the staff of the seniors..so when you graduate, managing a staff and teaching them won't be such a difficult task.. i was surprised to read here that some fresh graduates were not able to experience COMMON nursing skills as suctioning?!?! does not all nursing schools have a skills checklist to accomplish?! when i was in my senior year, we were required to accomplish the whole list of common nursing skills else we wont graduate..so skills such as suctioning, feeding, ngt insertion, ifc insertion and the like are not new to me when i graduated..and we were supposed to do it to actual patients, not dummies..our school did not have enough funds to buy us high end types of dummies thus we were required to do skills on actual patients.. i do believe that experience is the best teacher..but basics are taught in nursing schools right?! and basics can be taught by any other REGISTERED NURSE..you graduated from a BSN course and became registered because it means that you're competent enough to handle patients..in the BSN course, we are being prepared to be nurse GENERALIST and i believe that general nursing can be taught even by a newly graduate nurse..