Outpatient Surgery Magazine - Subscribers

Sleep Apnea - Outpatient Surgery Magazine - October 2018

Outpatient Surgery Magazine, providing current information on Surgical Services, Surgical Facility Administration, Outpatient Surgery News and Trends, OR Excellence and more.

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That's why we fill our ORs with nurses whom we hope will stay with us for years, not weeks. We did so by working with a local hospital to create a "Periop 101" training and clinical orientation program for aspiring OR nurses who have a strong desire to work in surgery. I oversee the training program, which pulls candidates in 2 ways: • In-house. Through our internal transition program, our HR depart- ment reaches out to and interviews nurses who have an interest in working in the OR. With this group, our hospital will pay for them to take the coursework and the 5-day rotation through the OR. When nurses complete their clinical training, they simply transfer to surgery and begin their formal orientation in the OR. • Remotely. Non-employee nurse interns from our partner college go through a similar program, but instead of 5 days in the OR, this group spends 24 days in the OR (2 days per week over 12 weeks) at different local hospitals within our region. While our interns don't orient as quickly as the internal RNs, they might be more motivated because, unlike folks in the internal transition program, these nurses pay $3,995 out of pocket for the 12-week program, which is essen- tially equivalent to a college semester. Since we launched the program in the Fall of 2016, we've added 13 new OR nurses to our team, created an invaluable pipeline of poten- tial candidates and, most importantly, cut our travel RNs from 17 to 8. Here are 3 keys to our success. Pick the right leader. For a recruiting-training program like this to work, you need to appoint the right leader. She must be a pas- sionate, hands-on instructor and an uber-organized administrator. What's more, you must give her the time she'll need to do the job. It's a lot of work, especially while you're trying to figure out the clinical 1 O C T O B E R 2 0 1 8 • O U T PA T I E N T S U R G E R Y. N E T • 2 1

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