Im on a No rehire list at a hospital does this include my future self as a physician?

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premed_mamba

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a few years ago before i started medical school I worked at hospital at my home town as an emergency room tech. Long story short I ended up quitting without giving a two week notice ( i know dont need a lecture on this lol) and was subsequently put on the no rehire list. does anyone know if this means that once I finish residency I wont be able to go back to my hometown to work as a physician? its the only hospital in the town.

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That sounds like a policy specific to that hospital. You would need to call and ask.
 
a few years ago before i started medical school I worked at hospital at my home town as an emergency room tech. Long story short I ended up quitting without giving a two week notice ( i know dont need a lecture on this lol) and was subsequently put on the no rehire list. does anyone know if this means that once I finish residency I wont be able to go back to my hometown to work as a physician? its the only hospital in the town.
Its up to them but I really doubt that they're going to care about your 7+ year old pre-medical school issues.
 
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a few years ago before i started medical school I worked at hospital at my home town as an emergency room tech. Long story short I ended up quitting without giving a two week notice ( i know dont need a lecture on this lol) and was subsequently put on the no rehire list. does anyone know if this means that once I finish residency I wont be able to go back to my hometown to work as a physician? its the only hospital in the town.
First get into medical school and finish residency before worrying about this. Your "for hire date" is a minimum of 7-10 years away.
 
If they're actively looking for doctors in your specialty and you're a competitive candidate, they'll probably laugh with you over a coffee about that incident.
 
Me too, hope I don't get the itch to quit and go back to being a barista, Starbucks won't have me. :sorry:
I’m a Barista. What the heck did you do? Short of burning down the store, it takes a lot to get fired. You can miss shifts, no call no show, be a true one trick pony stuck on POS (point of sale [front register], or drive through order) and not know how to make drinks and still not get fired.
 
I’m a Barista. What the heck did you do? Short of burning down the store, it takes a lot to get fired. You can miss shifts, no call no show, be a true one trick pony stuck on POS (point of sale [front register], or drive through order) and not know how to make drinks and still not get fired.
After weeks and weeks and weeks of abuse from a new manager, we got into a big argument and I left in the middle of a shift. (Sbux was a second job and I worked two-three shifts a week so it was a big case of “this isn’t even worth it anymore, I’m not doing it.”)

About 2 months later a coworker texted me to tell me that the manager was let go, but that probably doesn’t erase that I walked out.
 
After weeks and weeks and weeks of abuse from a new manager, we got into a big argument and I left in the middle of a shift. (Sbux was a second job and I worked two-three shifts a week so it was a big case of “this isn’t even worth it anymore, I’m not doing it.”)

About 2 months later a coworker texted me to tell me that the manager was let go, but that probably doesn’t erase that I walked out.
I think it’s justified. You would be welcomed at my store.
 
Quarantine week 1: I'm starting to miss my daily Starbucks ice coffees and cold brews 🙁. Homemade stuff just ain't the same.
What state are you in? Currently just drive through open at my store. For iced coffee we literally just brew drip coffee into a cube of ice. Cold brew you can get any coffee, grind for french press, add water, let sit for 10 hours. We do 14 L water for a 5lb bag of coffee. Adjust for how much you wanna brew.
 
To answer the OP (@premed_mamba ) question

Most likely it won't affect you in the future should you want to return to that particular hospital, because most physician hires are not through HR.

If you join a group that either contracts with the hospital, or have privileges at the hospital - you don't even go through HR. Most of your paperwork goes through the hospital physician credentialing committee (which usually falls under the medical execute committee, chief of staff, hospital executives, etc). You're not working FOR the hospital but AT the hospital ... and you're not getting paid by the hospital (you do your own billing)

If you join the hospital as a hospital employee (ie hospitalist, or specialist in a group owned by the hospital/heath system) - you interact mainly with the physician recruiter initially, then interview with the relevant parties (mainly doctors whom you would be joining). The job offers come from them. Once accepted, that's when you start to go through HR, as a legal formality (background check, W4, etc). They don't really interview or have a say in physician hiring. Now they might find you on their black list ... and bring it up to the hiring group ... but unless it is egregious, likely won't block your hire . You still have go through all the credentialing paperwork as well, but usually not through HR

If it's a small hospital, maybe the function of physician recruitment and HR are one and the same. But most hospitals the roles are separate. However, every hospital is organized slightly differently, so check to see how your hospital of interest is organized ... and when you are ready to seek employment as a physician ... you will know whom you should contact. My only interaction with HR so far was to get a new hospital ID badge and a parking sticker (for the physician parking lot)
 
To answer the OP (@premed_mamba ) question

Most likely it won't affect you in the future should you want to return to that particular hospital, because most physician hires are not through HR.

If you join a group that either contracts with the hospital, or have privileges at the hospital - you don't even go through HR. Most of your paperwork goes through the hospital physician credentialing committee (which usually falls under the medical execute committee, chief of staff, hospital executives, etc). You're not working FOR the hospital but AT the hospital ... and you're not getting paid by the hospital (you do your own billing)

If you join the hospital as a hospital employee (ie hospitalist, or specialist in a group owned by the hospital/heath system) - you interact mainly with the physician recruiter initially, then interview with the relevant parties (mainly doctors whom you would be joining). The job offers come from them. Once accepted, that's when you start to go through HR, as a legal formality (background check, W4, etc). They don't really interview or have a say in physician hiring. Now they might find you on their black list ... and bring it up to the hiring group ... but unless it is egregious, likely won't block your hire . You still have go through all the credentialing paperwork as well, but usually not through HR

If it's a small hospital, maybe the function of physician recruitment and HR are one and the same. But most hospitals the roles are separate. However, every hospital is organized slightly differently, so check to see how your hospital of interest is organized ... and when you are ready to seek employment as a physician ... you will know whom you should contact. My only interaction with HR so far was to get a new hospital ID badge and a parking sticker (for the physician parking lot)


Exactly. More than likely the EM Docs are not hospital employees. Med staff is completely separate from HR. Completely separate departments and they never talk to each other.
 
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