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ProBeeRN

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  1. I moved from home care to a wound /ostomy nurse position in acute care (after obtaining my wound care cert). I was asked about my lack of hospital experience and I sold myself by talking about the acuity / variety of patients I handled in home care (many inpatient managers are not aware of the acuity in today's home care patients), and played up my autonomy, decision making, and critical thinking skills. In my opinion the nursing skills that you don't encounter in home care (for example, IV push meds, complex drips, inserting NGs) are pretty easily picked up if you have a strong base in assessment and critical thinking - which home care does provide. You may want to ease your way in through a skilled nursing facility or subacute rehab associated with the Healthcare system that you want to get into. After 6 months you can usually bid on an internal acute care facility and have some inside connections. Good luck and keep applying. NYC is a very difficult market. Move upstate if you can relocate!
  2. I left the company last year, some years they would take a couple new grads, some years they did not. I was basically on my own after 4 months, on probation for 6, but linked with a designated mentor for the remainder of the year. It was a great program. I got really lucky, like all of us as new grads, I didn't know what I didn't know then.
  3. I'll bite. I'm no historian but I did go straight into home health as a new grad. The large HH company near me was piloting a new grad program- it required a BSN, several interviews, a successful summer internship, and a full year of orientation. Not many home health companies are able or willing to devote that much to a new graduate, and in home health any less than that is disservice to the patients. Going to acute care after HH is difficult too. HH is not always respected by nurse managers in acute care (wrongly imo). So be prepared to possibly spend time "working yourself back up" to acute care through sub acute rehab or similar if you ever want to leave HH.
  4. I agree with karen4164 about pouching the peg. Is the tube stabilized? Sometimes if the tube is stabilized properly the tract will shrink and stop the leakage. Try a commercial stabilizer, Hollister has one.
  5. I wear a lab coat as a wound care RN (as per my boss's request) . It helps staff and patients distinguish me from a floor nurse - at my facility we are considered part of the education department.
  6. The wound should have been debrided first. A VAC won't do much on a 100% slough wound bed. If regular granufoam is used then Santyl can be used underneath if there is some (less than 25%) necrotic tissue present. Santyl cannot be used with silver products. If the patient is not a candidate for surgical debridement you can suggest a 7 day trial with Dakins to see if it cleans it up a bit.
  7. I have a husband, I have small kids, I have a dog. I'm busy right now with a bunch of home improvement projects. I'd like to make more time for fitness and running. I like to cook and I like to travel. I enjoy my job but it doesn't fulfill me...my job isn't my life. My life is very full right now. I find many friends my age (early 30s) feel the same way regardless of their fields.
  8. When I worked 7-3 I had my son enrolled at a daycare that opened at 6. Some of them offer before/after school care as well.
  9. I like to color my hair a deep purple and I'm working on a half sleeve, but I recently started a new job and before I interviewed I colored my hair to a dark brown and currently I make sure my tattoos are covered while working (which isn't difficult since I wear a lab coat in my current setting). First impressions are everything! My current job entails a lot of one on one patient teaching and I'm not doing the nurse-patient relationship any favors if the little old lady in the bed is intimidated by her nurse at first sight, or feels like I am not professional/competent.
  10. It took me a while to learn to "just say no". I still have problems with it sometimes. Screen your calls from work, if it's important, they will leave a voicemail and you can call them back. Or get a cheap prepaid minutes phone to use for work calls only and turn it off while you're sleeping. Much easier to avoid them that way :-)
  11. After reading the first 20 posts or so- Guilt is not an effective motivator. However, I find that sometimes a good dose of fear (aka a reality check) is not necessarily a bad thing. For example- the noncompliant diabetic that just had a toe amp-I've not no problem pointing out that once the doc runs out of toes, he's going to start working his way up the foot to the leg. Of course this is coupled with lots of disease process teaching and positive reinforcement for good health behaviors. I've had some discussions about weight with obese patients. I'm honest about repercussions- and then we talk about ways to manage their weight. But I don't try to guilt them into anything. You can't guilt change. For the record, I'm a size 10-12, so I'm no skinny chickie either.
  12. He took Kaplan/ used the q-bank prior to the first time and then continued to use the q-bank through the second time. The key to him passing was slowing down and reading the question- he was rushing through and not figuring out what the question was actually asking. For what it's worth I took Kaplan before I took NCLEX and found it incredibly helpful
  13. The market is tight... my advice is to try and at least keep a toehold in the field- you have an active license and no sense letting it go to waste- and if benefits aren't an issue you might have an easier time not looking for full time? Can you continue with the peds HH and substitute school nursing? Look into per diem hospital work? How about intermittant peds visits? If you leave the field entirely to be a SAHM you're going to have a lot harder time getting any job with a huge gap in your resume. I mean, even 1 shift every week or two is enough to keep up an employment history. At least until you figure out what that "something else" is. Good luck!
  14. We're in Western New York- Buffalo area
  15. "People come on this board and ask "should I quit" when they've got a no-win situation going at some crappy job it took a year to get" It was such a hard decision for him. He felt like a failure, and like he was letting me down...and after that experience we're nervous about any offer --- "what if..." you know? This unit is very small with 12 patients- he may be the only RN but there will be experienced LPNs working with him. I keep telling him- worst case scenario- it's 12, not 40!

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