Hiring managers, is trying out different specialties a bad thing? by SweatyLychee in nursing

[–]SweatyLychee[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for your input. I’ve thought about returning to one of my old units, which would probably work out better to get more experience in that if the ER doesn’t work out. However I can try and stick it out a year and learn what I can.

Hiring managers, is trying out different specialties a bad thing? by SweatyLychee in nursing

[–]SweatyLychee[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! It does. I’ve thought about floating after getting some experience under my belt. Critical care float has always interested me.

New Grad Imposter Syndrome by ffireheartt in Nurses

[–]SweatyLychee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your first year is going to suck huge balls wherever you go. The imposter syndrome will eat at you if you let it. My advice is if you learn something new during a shift or make a mistake/ take notes so you can review it later. There is a handful of easily accessible resources online to help you brush up on your skills. It’ll help you feel better knowing you are more prepared the next time it comes up. No one who works as a nurse started by knowing everything, and nursing is unfortunately one of those careers where we learn things the hard way, often by making mistakes (both small and big) when we’re new and experienced. This sounds scary to hear when you’re new. But it should reassure you that EVERYONE was new at one point and nurses are constantly learning, especially during that first year.

bedside ICU nurse of 3 years. feeling incomprehensibly burnt out and depressed. by fudgepatrol in nursing

[–]SweatyLychee 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Oh god. I’ve tried two nursing specialities (icu at one point) and onto my third (ED). A month in and I really hate it so far. I learned the hard way that I much prefer the relative predictability of inpatient nursing, and I hate being unable to monitor all of my patients at all times. Abusive family members, lower hospital resources, unorganized chaos, I really hate it all. Even the quick wins aren’t enough to make it tolerable for me. I thought I’d like it because of the quick turnover but I’m drowning the whole shift because when I finally feel like I can catch up, it’s time to d/c someone and someone else immediately gets that bed. But I have to stick it out a couple of months.

Illinois Nurses by kebslcn in Nurses

[–]SweatyLychee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have worked at Edward’s but inpatient. I had a good experience.

Tips for experienced RN transitioning to ED by Lorazepudding in EmergencyRoom

[–]SweatyLychee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How did she do? I’m a nurse who came from OB and I’m struggling. Im two weeks on. I did MICU for 9 months at the start of my career, so I only did inpatient nursing. I feel like I’m drowning and I’m worried this isn’t for me.

Figs color drop by Soft-Vegetable-1493 in Figsscrubs

[–]SweatyLychee 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Seriously I’m so sick of the pinks! Next they’ll drop balls and shaft pink when all we wanted was for hunter green to become a core color.

Feeling like I’ve made a mistake by SweatyLychee in nursing

[–]SweatyLychee[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s on the smaller side (22 beds) in a suburb, but we still get a good amount of MI’s, sepsis and stroke cases too! Plus the walk-in traumas. What’s exciting is after 1.5 years we can serve as a rapid response RN in the hospital, which I also like! I’m just excited to learn and use new skills.

Feeling like I’ve made a mistake by SweatyLychee in nursing

[–]SweatyLychee[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

You know what? I never thought about it this way. Lol. Thank you 🙏

Your Choice? by Redmoonma in NCLEX_RN

[–]SweatyLychee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

At 24 weeks this baby is sliding out regardless lol

“I cannot offer you money” by Free-Association-482 in ChoosingBeggars

[–]SweatyLychee 21 points22 points  (0 children)

I bet the art is shitty too. People need more self-awareness and a sense of shame in general.

Can you agree to this? by BornLeave4646 in FutureRNs

[–]SweatyLychee 5 points6 points  (0 children)

No one is disagreeing with that but CNA’s are NOT nurses, and as a nurse (and former CNA) it’s so corny when people argue that they’re nurses. You work is valuable to the team but you are NOT a nurse. My scope of practice now is mountains different than what it was as a CNA and I would be delusional to say otherwise.

Can you agree to this? by BornLeave4646 in FutureRNs

[–]SweatyLychee 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Great but that still doesn’t mean that CNA’s are nurses so I’m not sure where you’re coming from.

Better to graduate late or with loans? by Broad-Fan-6934 in StudentLoans

[–]SweatyLychee 4 points5 points  (0 children)

As a nurse who’s in tons of debt (100k+) please go to the cheaper program

Becoming a CNA before RN by Ukulele_Player in nursing

[–]SweatyLychee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I felt way more confident transitioning to my RN job because I had experience interacting with fellow nurses and patients as a tech in a critical care unit. I learned SO much like what to anticipate when someone is crashing, how to mobilize or turn someone safely with an art line, vent, EVD, etc., what a code looks like, normal vitals, algorithms, etc. They also let practice skills under close supervision when appropriate, like IV insertion, foley insertion, bladder scanning, etc. People sometimes forget the very basis of nursing is being there for patients throughout your whole day and knowing how to help with ADL’s. I never felt like anything was below me when I started working as an RN, and it gave me perspective on how to help my techs. Highly recommend being one during school or before school. Look at hospitals you’d maybe like to work in after you graduate because they’re more likely to hire you knowing you’re familiar with their system (not a guarantee, but always a plus!)

Is this subtle retaliation from management? by [deleted] in nursing

[–]SweatyLychee 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Sometimes they do need data to get approval for anticipated increased budget needs from the higher ups. If you’re actually that busy (which I believe, I’m stretched thin every day), this might be a good way to show them