So, I worked in a CVICU for four years. I will be the first to admit that I did a lot of sitting around. But guess what? That is what I was paid to do. I sat there for 12 hours straight so that the doctors didn't have to. I did what was needed when it was needed. I did not go in the rooms and bug/bother patients that did not need anything just so people like you would think that I was busy. If you end up in the hospital you will pray for a nurse that will leave you alone unless you NEED something. I know every time I have been in the hospital that is what I have wanted. I got paid not only for what I did but also for what I could do if a problem came up. Someone HAS to sit there for 12hrs and no one is going to do it for free. Especially not considering the treatment I had to endure and the duties I had to preform.
If you ever want to find out why a nurse makes the money they make, go and be one. I am sure within a matter of a week or two you will agree that NO amount of money is compensation for dealing with that crap (literal and figurative ha).
As for sitting around on call, I think I made a dollar an hour. Not $25-50
A dollar an hour? What State is that? $25-50 /hr are the rates I've heard in this area.
Nurses flex their political muscle in Sacramento and across California
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By Darrell Smith and Phillip Reese
[email protected]
Published: Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012 - 12:00 am | Page 1A
Last Modified: Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012 - 12:41 pm
Rose Ann DeMoro is always ready for another fight.
And why not? During the past decade, the leader of the California Nurses Association has won so many of her battles.
Largely because of CNA efforts,
California is poised to become the first state where registered nurses make an average salary above $100,000.
Graphic of Nurse Wages compared to all other workers in California
California nurses lose perspective on pay
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Published: Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012 - 6:02 pm
Last Modified: Monday, Feb. 6, 2012 - 2:33 pm
Re "Nurses flex political muscle across state" (Page A1, Feb. 5) I understand wanting increased wages, but doesn't a mass nurse walkout put patients at risk?
Who takes the place of the nurses in hospitals when they're on the picket line? The article says nurse's average salary grew from $57,855 in 2001 to $88,714 in 2011, a 21 percent increase.
It can't be an easy job being a nurse, but $88,714 per year salary isn't chump change.
I could live like a king on that salary and wouldn't complain.
Try getting by making $24,000 a year like some of us doing meaningless work. Do these people get into the nursing profession simply for the money, or because they want to help people? I'd much rather help people than complain about only making $88,714.
-- Michael Baumgart, Roseville
Consider this, 1st year nurses in Northern CA make $100k+. That's an RN with an ASN (2yr degree) or BSN (4yr degree).
Compare to the World's Top MBA programs:
http://officialmbaguide.org/top40.php?rnk=salary [4yr college + 2yr MBA]
Compare to starting salaries for Engineers:
http://www.eng.lsu.edu/news/2009/7/engineering-starting-salaries-rank-high-in-new-national-survey and
http://www.payscale.com/best-colleges/best-engineering-colleges.asp [4yrs college though usually takes 5-6 to complete]
Compare to starting salaries for Lawyers:
http://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/2008/01/national-jurist.html [4yrs college + 3yrs JD]
It's no wonder the ABSN program around here have a pipeline of MBAs, lawyers and engineers! Lets see, a 2yr associates at a community college or 5-8 years of college and grad school... hmm, tough choice.
🙂
Top that off with patient to nurse ratio (I love it!!!)
😀
"In 1999, they persuaded the state Legislature to pass a first-in-the-nation law setting nurse-to-patient ratios: the maximum number of patients assigned to a licensed nurse at any one time.
The staffing ratios, implemented in 2004, range from
one nurse for every patient in a trauma unit, to one nurse for every four patients in a specialty-care unit."
"It's a huge cost for hospitals," Spetz said, estimating about
one-sixth of a hospital's total budget goes toward compensation of registered nurses, licensed vocational nurses and nurses aides.
Highest nursing pay in U.S.
For many CNA members, there's a more potent measure of the union's success: Nursing pay, already higher in California than anywhere else, is rising fast.
The average salary for a California registered nurse grew from $57,855 in 2001 to $88,714 in 2011, according to the state Employment Development Department.
Adjusted for inflation, that represents a 21 percent pay hike, compared with an 8 percent pay bump for other California workers during that span.
At the current pace, the average salary for a California registered nurse will eclipse six figures in three years.
The arguments, the walkouts, the pay increases all are likely to continue as long as demand for nurses remains strong. In 2010, as the state buckled under 12 percent unemployment,
the jobless rate among nurses was 1.8 percent, census figures show.
"We're still seeing demand," said Terri Carpenter, the agency's spokeswoman. "But
we can only train so many a year. There's only so much space at the colleges."
You bet you're seeing demand !
Can't wait to take 60-80hrs of call a week (70-80hrs a week w/o OT pay was fairly standard in my private sector experience) and spend it watching TV! Woo-hoo!
Keep going CNA boost those salaries to $125k! $150k! Go, go, go! I'm on my way!