career –
Please Help me decideRating: (votes: 0) I would move and do the ER. More experience, more opportunities. Just get up and go! Sounds exciting. Comment: How small a community is it? If is real rural- you may come in as an outsider unless you fit their mold. Did this once, it was tough. Of course, time are different now.Comment: The rural ER would be considered "acute-care" or "inpatient" experience, which is what almost all hospitals will want from an applicant. SNF- full time or not- is not considered acute-care or inpatient, so it will not be as beneficial. Take the ER job. Short term sacrifice for long term gain.Comment: The ER position without a doubt. Acute care settings will enhance and improve your assessment skills with a wide variety of patients: infants, peds, adults, geriatrics as well as a variety of illnesses and traumas.Comment: I agree, ER position without a doubt!Comment: Take the ER job! You will be introduced to so many new experiences, and you will undoubtedly grow and blossom in a rural ER setting. You will learn a completely new skill set and will be exposed to a plethora of illnesses and injuries. You will also learn how to quickly triage patients and how "disaster teams" are set up. You just had a goldmine of learning/experience dropped on your lap, Amy! Go for it, and let us know how you are doing.Comment: ED, without reservation.Comment: The town is very small, I think only 1200 people. I think the hospital is like a 25 bed unit. Being this small, do you still think I will learn enough to transfer to a larger hospital at a later time?Comment: Yes you will. I am working in a rural hospital as my first job after grad and I am learning and seeing so much. Definitely go for it! The city will always be there for you but a job opportunity won't.Comment: Quote from BlueDevil,DNPED, without reservation.Comment: Do not do the SNF. You will gain great experience in a small rural ER because all sorts of crud will come in there before it is transferred out. You will learn HUGE amounts. Plus you can use the time to simply get all those pesky certifications out of the way, ACLS, PALS, CEN, TNCC, possibly even CCRN. I worked as a traveler in 2 hospitals with 6 inpatient beds (Critical access hospitals) I got experience there with: toxic ingestions (children eating mushrooms in the yard), a day when 3 anaphylactic reactions all came in within 30 mins of each other (2 nurses on only, ED packed...in a large ED you would have so many people you might not even know there were 3), major trauma, lots of cardiac and stroke...as well as the usual kidney stones, kids with fevers etc...really this is a no brainer given your goal to work in acute care. Going to a SNF does not forward that goal in any way, shape or form.Comment: Definitely the ED position!
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