experience –
Clinical Ladder Dream or Deception?Rating: (votes: 0) As a student, I'm not familiar with clinical ladders. What would be the advantage of voluntarily dropping down the ladder? Comment:
We had the clinical ladder years ago. I think it was a crock!
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Not my experience at all. Rather than demoting, we are encouraging promotion to Level IV with a 7.5% raise rather than the 5 % for other levels. Now we are striving for Magnet status and level IV includes BSN and national specialty certification. My hope is that this will continue.
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Quote from bugsy2902each year they make the ladder harder for rn iii-iv to maintain always with the option of going back down to rn ii voluntarily with the cut in pay of course!
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Well, I'm on tele step-down so new skills, knowledge and training are a constant. Training is mandatory and paid for and so nurses have up to date skills and recert for ACLS, BLS on a regular basis.The changes to the ladder are system wide, it has nothing to do with our manager. It just seems that ever since it was initiated they just come up with more hoops to go thru just to maintain your RNIII, RN IV and the threat of demotion with pay cut was there from the beginning; so I never bought into it and just stayed a level II and I'm glad I did! Every year the nurses are stressed and running around trying to keep up with the latest demands just to keep that one time raise years ago. It involves being on committees and doing research projects and a lot of unpaid time just to keep your one time raise. I just didn't feel it was worth all the hassle for a one-time raise with the constant threat of demotion. Only in nursing would they come up with a raise and then threaten to take it away in the next breath! I've known several people who were demoted against their wishes, just seemed like if your manager had it in for you, then you could kiss your raise goodbye. Only in nursing! It's so ridiculous and insulting how they have the nerve to treat us!It turns out I was glad I stayed a RN II. Now I hear they are adding even more requirements for RN III, RN IV just to maintain so it seems obvious to me they are going out of the way to make it difficult for people to maintain and it seems they want to people to step down to save the hospital some money. Otherwise why make it such a hassle. If it was a yearly raise then I could see that all the hoops might be worth it, but the way its set up now it just insn't! In fact, it's just an insulting joke on us nurses!
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We have a clinical ladder application process where I work and so far it's a bear! I have submitted my application three times now - first rejection - not enough info, second rejection - not professional enough, third rejection - not within guidelines and not enough info. Problem? - no guidelines, no format, no guidance. We have had only one person ladder up to an RN III in the last year and she spent two years on her application. The applications are reviewed and passed by our "peers". I believe that I have enough to be a RN III - I'm a charge, nightshift supervisor, have TNCC, CCRN, and am an ECMO specialist. I also orient new employees, serve on a shared goverance council, the unit practice council, and am active on the unit. These hoops are getting smaller and higher up each time - I'm tired of it.
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