| Continued from Page
1
Location, location, location
Finding your passion is one thing. Finding a
place to practice it is another. Marilyn Stewart,
manager of human resources and operations at Saint
Anthony’s Health Center in Alton, Ill.,
and president of the St. Louis Area Health Care
Recruiters, suggested nurses start their search
by looking at rankings and other lists of top
facilities.
One of the most coveted awards in terms of nursing
services is the Magnet designation, which is given
out by the American Nurses Association’s
American Nurses Credentialing Center. The Magnet
designation is the highest level of recognition
the ANCC gives. To earn Magnet status, organizations
must prove they meet or exceed specific rigorous
standards for sustaining excellence, improving
professional practice, and transforming the workplace
culture.
For the complete list of all Magnet facilities,
visit www.nursingworld.org/ancc/magnet/facilities.html.
Each year, U.S. News & World Report ranks
the top hospitals in the country in several categories,
including cancer, digestive disorders, geriatrics,
and pediatrics.
The magazine’s list is available at www.usnews.com/usnews/health/hosptl/tophosp.htm.
You can view it by state or metropolitan area
by clicking Advanced Search.
If you’re looking for a facility that’s
on the cutting edge, The Health Forum’s
magazine Hospitals & Health Networks lists
the top 100 “most wired” hospitals
every July. The magazine features several of these
hospitals every quarter. To read these features,
visit www.hospitalconnect.com.
Stewart added that visiting the nursing adviser
would be a good choice. She also suggested that
nurses contact the facilities that interest them
and ask to shadow their potential counterparts,
too. If you do this, be sure to ask specific questions
about the facility as well as questions about
the field in general.
Mary Jane Brecklin, RN, MA, BSN, coordinator
for recruitment and retention sservices at St.
Louis-based SSM Health Care, agreed.
“Your best resources are the people inside
the building — they’ll tell you the
story,” Brecklin said.
She said you can find out how an organization
takes care of its employees by asking the staff.
“It’s important for nurses to ask
critical questions: What is your orientation like?
What is your turnover? If you have a high need
for education, find out what the benefits package
is,” she added.
But be sure you do more than merely scratch the
surface of an organization’s structure and
compensation/benefits package. Brecklin said nurses
today might have a harder time discerning which
organizations treat their employees best because
of the competitive marketplace.
“Because of supply and demand problems,
we have many carrots out there for the younger
nurse that pull people away from the focus,”
she said.
Brecklin also said investigating the mission
and values of an organization will help you find
the right place to work. Going online and finding
the facility’s website is a great first
step. You can learn a great deal of basic information
in a few mouse clicks.
Presentation
Your mind is now overflowing with relevant information
to find that perfect job, but you’re still
not done. Those who know what they want to do
and where they want to do it have some final preparation
that they often overlook, said Desbra Husberg,
president of Chicago Area Healthcare Recruiters
and a human resources generalist at Rush North
Shore Medical Center in Skokie, Ill.
“[It] comes down to how they present themselves
in an interview,” Husberg said. Some students
come to interviews dressed as, well, as students,
she said. Dressing professionally for a job interview
is as essential as practicing coherent answers
to relevant questions that may be asked, she said.
Husberg also has noticed some people pay scant
regard to their résumés. résumésThis
is a mistake. résumés should look clean and
have no typographical and grammatical mistakes.
Furthermore, they should include entries for all
relevant work experience.
“We’re seeing more people who had
previous careers going back into health care,”
Husberg said. “They’re bringing a
wealth of information.”
No matter what the previous career, whether it
was in information technology or retail, Husberg
said some part of it probably will be relevant
to nursing. This is especially true for those
who have worked with people or have managed any
kind of workload. Those skills will translate
well to the bedside. Husberg also encourages people
to list their volunteer efforts on their résumés.
“A lot of people volunteer with their church
for a health fair,” Husberg said as an example.
“That shows added interest of the person
to give back.”
Tracking down the perfect position can be a great
deal of work, but it is worth it when you consider
how much time you spend on the job. With a little
gumshoe effort, you can turn the daily grind into
the best-ever find.
To
comment on this story, send e-mail to editorhl@nurseweek.com.
|