Terminated the third week into my orientation

Nurses General Nursing

Updated:   Published

I’m looking to get advice from nurses this may have happened to because I’m feeling especially blue at the time being. OK, so little backstory - I graduated in December ‘19 with my ADN and got hired at my areas bigger hospital for a new grad position in the mother/baby unit. I was also offered a peds position as well as on oncology. However, I took the MBU because my passion is to be in LDR one day.

The first week went well, it consisted of class time and learning the hospital. The second week consisted of a class and two shifts in which I was placed with a preceptor. This is the where my first bad incident took place - I didn’t make it to the 6:45 huddle because my badge wouldn’t let me in through the employee door by the employee parking lot so I had to walk around the building to get in.

I made it in by 6:55 before report was given on our patients but that was considered late (which at the time they were sympathetic, but later used it against me.) I spent the two days learning my preceptors routine, figuring how to do the charting, and going solo on the steps she had taught me to do on the mommies and newborn babies. This preceptor was awesome and I appreciated how she was patient with me and helped me find my own way while teaching me.

That was about the extent of my “good” experience because the following week, I made the rather unfortunate mistake of oversleeping for a required class. I text a classmate to let her know of my plunder and that I was on the way. The text I received in return stated that they had decided to shorten the class and that the teacher claimed it wouldn’t be an issue for me to reschedule if I so chose to do. I agreed and went about my day until it was time for me to come in to shadow my charge nurse at 4:30.

That’s when I received the call from my clinical coordinator wondering why I wasn’t at the class and why hadn’t I told them about it. My exact words to her was that at the cost of sounding ignorant, I simply wasn’t aware that it was necessary to inform them and that I was told I could reschedule the class within a few weeks. I was told not to come in for the shadow and to expect a call from the clinical coordinator as well as my manager the following day. I get that dreaded call and they proceed to tell me that I cannot come to work till after they speak with HR because 1. I was late the first day, 2. I didn’t let them know I missed the class, 3. I “lied” by telling them I was told I could reschedule the class because it wasn’t the teacher who told me that but rather a fellow friend/co-worker.

It took them a week to get back to me, they ended up telling me I wasn’t a good “fit” for them, and they cut up my badge in front of me. Now, I am well beyond aware of my mishaps and what I should have done differently - I should’ve set aside time to make sure I could get in and out of the building before my scheduled shift, I should’ve set 5 alarms if that was what it would’ve take to ensure I didn’t oversleep, and I should’ve contacted my employer rather than my co-worker about the blunder. I am taking these unfortunate happenings and 100% learning from them so as to be the best nurse I can.

That being said, it’s been a week and I’m terrified I’m blacklisted from this hospital since I have been applying for other positions and have yet to hear anything. Should I wait it out? I was offered interviews at another hospital, however it’s an hour away so I’m hesitant to accept. Do I have to list this on future resumes? I don’t feel as if I got to truly “nurse” and I’m discouraged my skills will atrophy if I don’t use them. I’m also concerned that that was the only time I will ever get to experience my “dream job” as this manager is over both the MBU as well as LDR. Any advice would be appreciated. Thanks

3 hours ago, TriciaJ said:

This post gives us more information. Emergent was being blunt. Bluntness is not always pleasant to receive but often useful if one is receptive.

Responding in a retaliatory way speaks volumes. Your unreliability might not have been their only concern, just the one they used to terminate you.

Agree with this response. And your response to my sympathetic previous post tells me that you are not quite devoid of a negative approach to this entire situation. I expressed no criticism in that post but you identified so for your purpose. Victim hood, too strongly embraced, will not elicit a favorable reaction from others.

Specializes in Grad Nurse.
8 minutes ago, caliotter3 said:

Agree with this response. And your response to my sympathetic previous post tells me that you are not quite devoid of a negative approach to this entire situation. I expressed no criticism in that post but you identified so for your purpose. Victim hood, too strongly embraced,will not elicit a favorable reaction from others.

I honestly do not know what you’re referring to with the victim hood? I took your response as criticism but if it was not so, that’s my mistake for assuming. Texts are easily misconstrued.

1 hour ago, HeartbrokenBabyNurse said:

I honestly do not know what you’re referring to with the victim hood? I took your response as criticism but if it was not so, that’s my mistake for assuming. Texts are easily misconstrued.

I think the point is why did you take it as criticism? It's not about what is said, it's how you interpret it and it appears you interpret genuine sentiment as criticism. The question you have to ask yourself is why?

Specializes in NICU/Mother-Baby/Peds/Mgmt.

I think you've learned a lesson. And who among us hasn't been late for work? Anyway, now you know what not to do, you know to get another alarm or two or 3 and plug them in across the room (get ones with battery backup), and always always call your supervisor first. And might I suggest planning on getting to work a little earlier so that first incident doesn't happen again? Good luck with your career, this has been a traumatic start but it doesn't have to define you or your career from here on out.

Edit: I would stay away from LTC as a new grad. It will be VERY busy, families are difficult and I think you might get adversely labeled as only being able to do LTC. Plus you may be the only RN on your unit on nights/weekends, and I don't think that's good for ANY new grad. Get some hospital experience under your belt.

Specializes in Grad Nurse.
10 minutes ago, Elaine M said:

I think you've learned a lesson. And who among us hasn't been late for work? Anyway, now you know what not to do, you know to get another alarm or two or 3 and plug them in across the room (get ones with battery backup), and always always call your supervisor first. And might I suggest planning on getting to work a little earlier so that first incident doesn't happen again? Good luck with your career, this has been a traumatic start but it doesn't have to define you or your career from here on out.

Edit: I would stay away from LTC as a new grad. It will be VERY busy, families are difficult and I think you might get adversely labeled as only being able to do LTC. Plus you may be the only RN on your unit on nights/weekends, and I don't think that's good for ANY new grad. Get some hospital experience under your belt.

This ❤️ I am beyond grateful for your words. I will carry them through out my career, I’m sure. I never expected to be coddled but it is also hard to hear harshness on a personal situation that others are able to put their own spin on without knowing all the details. You neither coddled nor were harsh to me, you werehonest and kind and gave me solid advice. I appreciate that beyond measure. Thank you!

Specializes in Critical Care.

I think the note to the manager is a great final touch. Get back out there and start applying more. It sucks because this was your first ever nursing job, but you’ll look back at this years into your career and it won’t be such a big deal. I still think you should apply to women’s health jobs since that’s your passion/interest. I think jumping into LTC is more of a knee jerk reaction. Don’t worry, you’ll find something!

Specializes in Dialysis.
11 hours ago, HeartbrokenBabyNurse said:

And this wasn’t an actual shift per se, it was a class

From a management perspective, the class was a shift. It's considered an important building block to your growth, and it was a scheduled segment of time that you were expected to be present for. You may always be punctual any other time, but the manager didn't know that. And, barring an emergency, it doesn't matter while in orientation. I hope you keep in mind in the future to always contact the manager when you're going to be late or absent. I've never known a job, healthcare or otherwise, where it was appropriate to just text a friend to let everyone know

Specializes in Dialysis.
9 hours ago, Emergent said:

We all worked hard for our degrees. And we all have had bumps in the road.

Nursing school is a lot like pregnancy though; the real work starts after it's over.

1000%

Specializes in Educator.

This early in your career you have time to forget this unfortunate adventure and start over. You may well have to suck up the hour-long commute for the time being and take a job at the other hospital. Work on being the best nurse you can be and hopefully, you can reapply in a year or so with stellar references. I wish you the best.

Specializes in ER.
11 hours ago, HeartbrokenBabyNurse said:

I chose not to respond further to this poster for the way s/he chose to be “blunt.” I respectfully disagree that I was retaliatory compared to their response but you’re entitled to your opinion.

One thing I've learned about this site is that it's a good representation of what is also happening in the real nursing workforce. I've learned a lot here just about what is going on in the minds of nurses, and how to handle dealing with some personalities who rub me the wrong way.

You will definitely encounter some blunt people who are going to tell it like it is to a new grad. Consider this good practice to interact here, where it doesn't really count.

I wouldn't advise you to announce to your fellow co-workers that you are not going to interact with an established nurse on the unit in which you find yourself working. That would be a big miscalculation on your part.

Specializes in ER, ICU, Infusion, peds, informatics.

I disagree that the first day you were late should be held against you. You can plan on going in early, but between finding your way in a big hospital and a malfunctioning badge, a reasonable time cushion can disappear really quickly. I mean, you might plan for 30 min early the first day, but once you've got a handle on how traffic goes and all that 15 min should be sufficient. Until you have to walk around the hospital unexpectedly. Though a phone call would have been a good idea.

Your BIG mistake was texting a classmate when you overslept. You should have notified whoever your main contact was -- preceptor, manager, charge, educator.

I think the note is a nice idea as a way to maintain your professionalism and go out on a positive note.

I wouldn't be certain that your chances of getting a job at this facility are shot. I'm pretty sure you were 10 min late one day and then overslept one day? That isn't THAT big of a deal for someone new. I've had more nursing jobs than I care to admit and I've only worked in one facility where that would even be a blip on the radar. I mean, from a management perspective I'd keep a close eye on you and monitor for other issues but things happen.

If you're eligible for rehire there is always a chance. Some managers might be more forgiving than others. A lot depends on their personality and how hard it is to staff their unit. However, it will probably mean a less desirable/popular unit, so do keep that in mind.

Specializes in Grad Nurse.
1 hour ago, Emergent said:

One thing I've learned about this site is that it's a good representation of what is also happening in the real nursing workforce. I've learned a lot here just about what is going on in the minds of nurses, and how to handle dealing with some personalities who rub me the wrong way.

You will definitely encounter some blunt people who are going to tell it like it is to a new grad. Consider this good practice to interact here, where it doesn't really count.

I wouldn't advise you to announce to your fellow co-workers that you are not going to interact with an established nurse on the unit in which you find yourself working. That would be a big miscalculation on your part.

There’s a difference between interacting with someone and choosing not to respond to their negativity. Thanks for your insight! But I do believe you’re misinterpreting some things.

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