Questions about hospice

Specialties Hospice

Published

Hello. I'm an experienced palliative care nurse/CHPN (inpatient) and wanting to move into hospice nursing. I have applied to some local hospice positions, but I know it is a little different role than inpatient palliative care/end of life care. Can you tell me what a re-visit RN does? How many patients is reasonable for a "case manager?" What sort of orientation would a new hospice nurse expect? What questions would you ask of a potential employer? I am really excited about making the transition, and my heart is telling me it will be a good match, if I can find a reasonable work schedule/pay. I have only done inpatient nursing, so it will be very different, but hopefully in a good way.Also- I have two small children, so being on call won't work for me. Though, I hear not all hospice RNs take call?? Thanks for any advice you may have! I am both excited and nervous!

Specializes in PICU, NICU, L&D, Public Health, Hospice.

Sometimes you can get into a job and negotiate a reduction of hours after 6 months...

Thanks. In my heart, I feel like hospice is the place I want to be. I just put in an application for a 32 hr/week case manager position to a local hospice, but it's variable shifts, and it's more hours than I want to work (I want less because of my young kids at home). I feel stuck because I have been looking for over a year now and can't seem to find a job that works for my family. I am getting so burned out on med/surg, and am overdue to try something new (have been for some time). I don't know if I can stand another 6 mos- year on med/surg while I wait for a job that may or may not materialize. I might move into another area of nursing for now, but I still dream of working for hospice. Well, we'll see what happens. If I can't secure a position now, maybe I can try per diem later. It's such a tough job market here! Thanks for all the positive feedback. I so admire the work that you do.

Are there any inpatient hospice units in your area? Maybe working part time or prn at one of those might help you get your foot in the door with a company? Then you would be the internal candidate taking the job!

wow--that consideration of patient acuity is HUGE. I am a CM and I am on my way to having a full caseload of 10--now I have 7 and one patient in transition or a pain crisis can destroy your whole day! I feel like I shortchange my more stable patients--and sometines I get handed an absolute trainwreck of a patient and I don't have the time to get a handle on them and that's bad too. I like when I was a float and saw other people's cases. We have an LPN who does that--he's amazing--saved my butt the other day during a "poopstorm"....

Thanks Tewdles. I think this is a nice organization to work for, but sadly, I don't think my family can afford me taking the the pay cut right now. It is good to know what is a reasonable work load, though. I appreciate the replies. I might look into casual pool or per diem hospice opportunities if I can't find a part time permanent position. ;)

+ Add a Comment