Boards.ie uses cookies. By continuing to browse this site you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Click here to find out more x
Post Reply  
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
27-04-2012, 01:30   #1
Carol2057
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 30
Nursing in a private Nursing Home

Hi ,

This could get moved, but I dont know where to write this post! I am a nurse and I am interested to know 3 things about working in a private nursing home.
  • Are the shifts/ Rota like the ones worked in the Public Hospital/ Nursing home i.e 37.5 hour shifts, ?
  • Is the pay as per the pay scale seen on the INO website?
  • And is there always 2 Nurse at least on duty (even if its a small nursing home?)
I hope a Nurse who works in a private nursing home can answer these questions for me. I dont know anyone who works in a private nursing home. I am worried about what the staffing levels would be like. Can it happen that you would be the only nurse on duty sometimes?

Thanks
Carol2057 is offline  
Advertisement
27-04-2012, 16:22   #2
Ickle Magoo
Ach, stick it up yer trakkens
 
Ickle Magoo's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Ragnarøkkr
Posts: 15,771
Send a message via MSN to Ickle Magoo
The Ladies Lounge is a discussion forum.

This is the forum for posts relating to work and jobs.
Ickle Magoo is offline  
27-04-2012, 17:29   #3
crotalus667
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 1,800
Hi I work as a HCA in a private nursing home

Quote:
Originally Posted by Carol2057 View Post
Hi ,[*]Are the shifts/ Rota like the ones worked in the Public Hospital/ Nursing home i.e 37.5 hour shifts, ?
No , it's the norm for 12 hour shifts

Quote:
Originally Posted by Carol2057 View Post
[*]Is the pay as per the pay scale seen on the INO website?
Not sure, from what i hear hospital workers get better pay

Quote:
Originally Posted by Carol2057 View Post
[*]And is there always 2 Nurse at least on duty (even if its a small nursing home?)
We always have at least one per unit (for the quiet night shift) during the dat there are more it depends on the amount of residents and the amount of care needed



Quote:
Originally Posted by Carol2057 View Post
Can it happen that you would be the only nurse on duty sometimes?
I doubt it because some one has to cover you while on your break iirc , you really need to discuess this with your employer at time of interview (or check with Hiqua)
crotalus667 is offline  
28-04-2012, 02:33   #4
Delancey
Moderator
 
Delancey's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 5,458
There is a wide divergence between theory and practice when it comes to private Nursing Homes , my information is that frequently there is only 1 nurse on duty for example.
Pay is often below the norm.

Small wonder that the industry is characterised by high staff turnover.
Delancey is offline  
28-04-2012, 22:00   #5
deedeedum
Registered User
 
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 2
Hi,

Just had to reply..I'm a nurse and have worked briefly in a private nursing home.

It was not like working on a general ward at all!!..they do not pay INO rates and was expected to work 48-60 hours per week..was absolutely crazy. Also the role is very different - more managing the care of the residents than hands on nursing care, mammoth drug rounds and lots of paper work.

It was the lack of contact with the residents that really got to me in the end and had to leave.

However, this is just my experience and its only a description of one nursing home. Others may be different and i do have one friend who works in nursing home and loves it.

You should maybe just try it out and see how you like it.

If you looking for work there is lots of work with agencies at the moment.

Hope that helps a little

And to answer your question about working alone - on nights you were on your own with a couple HCAs and during the day there was meant to be 2 nurses but that didn't always happen

Last edited by deedeedum; 28-04-2012 at 22:03.
deedeedum is offline  
Advertisement
30-04-2012, 21:03   #6
Carol2057
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 30
Thanks for your reply. I have worked in busy HSE Nursing homes which are short staffed as it is. I cant imagine working in Nursing home where id be the "one" in charge. The smaller nursing homes seem to just have one nurse at night. I dont know, i think that calls an awful lot of responsibility. No doc either. EEk!!
Carol2057 is offline  
30-04-2012, 21:43   #7
Wishbone Ash
Registered User
 
Wishbone Ash's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Dublin
Posts: 14,308
Quote:
Originally Posted by Carol2057 View Post
I have worked in busy HSE Nursing homes which are short staffed as it is. I cant imagine working in Nursing home where id be the "one" in charge. The smaller nursing homes seem to just have one nurse at night. I dont know, i think that calls an awful lot of responsibility. No doc either. EEk!!
If you were the solitary nurse on duty you would have a greater number of HCAs and wouldn't be expected to do a lot of the ordinary work. In a HSE location where there may be more nursing staff there would usually be less HCAs and therefore the nursing staff would be expected to do much of the work done by HCAs elsewhere.
Wishbone Ash is offline  
Post Reply

Quick Reply
Message:
Remove Text Formatting
Bold
Italic
Underline

Insert Image
Wrap [QUOTE] tags around selected text
 
Decrease Size
Increase Size
Please sign up or log in to join the discussion

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search