Published
I have told prospective employers about my references (whatever the situation: old, gone, not type asked for by the application, etc.) and have been told it is only a formality anyway, as they verify the employment and rehire status and that is it. I would not be concerned. Put down who you would have listed at that time, and let the process take care of itself. If there is a problem, they will let you know and you can just explain. Nobody expects you to become lifelong best buddies with someone from work 15 years ago, that is unrealistic.
KristiMS
16 Posts
I have not worked in the nursing field for almost 7 years. I took some time off to stay home with my children and now I'm ready to head back to nursing.
The last position that I held was on the resource pool for the local group of hospitals. So...I worked on multiple units between 3 different hospitals. Other than the manager of the resource pool (and I haven't even checked to see if she is still the manager), I don't have any sources for a reference from that position. Prior to that, I worked on a med/surg floor at one of the 3 hospitals. That hospital became a stand-alone ER/urgent care after the new hospital was built...and all of the current employees were moved to various units at the new hospital. I know for a fact that the manager of that unit is no longer working at the new hospital.
I am still in contact with a couple of the nurses that I worked closely with as a new grad (10 years ago) and I know that I could use them as references, but wouldn't a prospective employer want a more recent nursing reference?
Any suggestions??