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It will count as experience, but whether it will help you land a hospital job is still questionable. Most hospitals want "acute care experience" like from another inpatient unit. However, with LTC experience you will carry more weight than just a new graduate, so that will give you an advantage over a lot of applicants.
i plan on getting my bsn through an adn bridge program but i have a question about once i have my license. from researching through this site as well as others. i see that finding a job as a new grad will be very difficult without connections. so my question, if i work in a nursing home for six months to a year will that count as experience? or am i looking at a hopeless situation. i want to work in icu and later go for my crna...
long term care is hard work, and it is nursing experience. it's not going to help you get into anesthesia school, but it may give you an edge in landing an acute care position.
If you can, try to work on a subacute unit in a nursing home, which should not be too hard if you have an RN. You will get more clinical experience working there than on a traditional LTC unit, and as long as you play that up, you shouldn't have trouble getting an interview at a hospital. I started my career that way and as I'm approaching the 1 year mark, I'm getting interviews at rehab hospitals (nothing yet from the acute care hospitals).
dcw132003
97 Posts
i plan on getting my bsn through an adn bridge program but i have a question about once i have my license. from researching through this site as well as others. i see that finding a job as a new grad will be very difficult without connections. so my question, if i work in a nursing home for six months to a year will that count as experience? or am i looking at a hopeless situation. i want to work in icu and later go for my crna...