Published
Not to rain on your parade, while it seems to have been made right, there is the possibility, however slight, that you could be remembered when you apply again. It might not turn out well. Slight possibility, but possible nonetheless. The nursing world is small and some elephants have those super memories.
I know in my hospital system, there is specific "rehire" policy in that the manager, once you resign, marks you as "recommended for re-hire" or "not recommended for re-hire". I would call HR and ask them what the rehire policy is, particularly when it is a different type of job, because you will be applying as a nurse and not a sitter.
Prospectivenurse2018
6 Posts
Hello, I'm going to be graduating this year and then taking the NCLEX.
I took up a "sitter" position while at a hospital that is linked to other hospitals through a system. It's a per diem job that pays a little above minimum wage and doesn't involve hands-on clinical experience or patient care. It's one of the most least engaged/hands-on position, but it is within the umbrella term of nursing care. You can not touch the patient on a 1:1, you can only call the nurse and let them do their thing.
Here's the situation: This hospital system has MANY other hospitals under their system, and I didn't hand in my 2-weeks so I was terminated. I had to call out and resign because I'm finishing my last two semesters and I needed as much study time as I could to pass the exam.
What I am wondering is if I can screw my chances of getting a job because of this termination completely. I already know it looks bad but HOW bad?
Personally I'm of mind that this isn't a huge big of a deal, but then again, I'm not the one hiring me. Thanks.