Group Forums >> Jailbirds >> What do you like about corretions?
What do you like about corretions?
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Posted about 1 year ago I'm thinking of working in correctons, and wanted to hear from nurses who work(ed) in corrections. Pros? Cons? |
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| Posted about 1 year ago One of the good things is that you do not have to take any shit from inmate/patients. The officers will be all over them and insist that you be treated with respect. If you tell the inmate/patient to do something, they better do it. You really get to boss them around. Ginny |
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| Posted about 1 year ago hello,
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| Posted about 1 year ago Pat, do not take me wrong. I am being sarcastic when I say you can boss them around. Ginny |
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| Posted about 1 year ago LOL, got ya girlfriend,however,you would be surprised by how many nurses actually believe they can do those things i mentioned sweetie.........you would think there true calling was in "security vs nursing".........sorry for coming across to bold,i guess i have seen too much of it and i know it truely exsist...........thanks pat |
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| Posted about 1 year ago No, not to bold. I have seen it myself and not just in corrections. The most disgraceful to me is hearing it in a nursing home. Ginny |
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| Posted about 1 year ago hey cdnurse,
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| Posted about 1 year ago I often wonder why some people get into the healthcare industry when they clearly do not like or respect people. I grandfather is in a nursing home and we had to move him from the last one due to elder abuse that we suspected. I don't know that it was ever proven, but more than one member of my family saw some things that they didn't feel where right, not just with my grandfather, but also with other residents in the facility. The key word in healthcare is CARE, if you don't get out! Isn't this how it should be? I understand exactly what you both are saying. If I ever feel the need to be mean to a patient, I hope that I have the couarge to quit. Thank you both for the insight to prision nursing. It sounds just like alot of other types of nursing as far as patient care goes.
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| Posted about 1 year ago The agencey that staffs the jail I am in is very good. In fact, the care is better than the hospital I came from. It all depends on the jail, the COs and the staffing agency. Some are awful. The inmates in this jail are babied. I think they are in most jails now for fear of las suits. We went to the other extreme. So many of the jails were very corrupt and inmates were treated awful. Ginny |
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| Posted about 1 year ago Thank you for the info. cdnurse. |
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| Posted about 1 year ago dmchaucer. keep in touch and let me know how you make out. I love my job in the jail. So far it is the best job I have had in nursing. Ginny |
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| Posted 8 months ago I would love to work in a jail. I got one ? do u know if it's true that when the inmates go on lock down the nurse cant leave they have to stay. |
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| Posted 8 months ago We have lock down often and we can come and go as we please. There are very rare times that no one can go in or out of the jail. A nurse I work with has been there for 14 years and it has happened only twice in 14 years. Ginny |
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| Posted 7 months ago I like Labor & Delivery, Pediatrics, and ER. If I do not go into one of those areas when I finish nursing school, I am thinking about corrections nursing. |
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| Posted 6 months ago My starting pay is 4 dollars an hour more than the local hospital offers LPNs and the benefits are much better. |
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| Posted 6 months ago I had the opportunity to visit a women's prison not too long ago and the experience was different than I had expected. It's an eerie feeling to have the gate lock behind you as you go inside. The women were different than I had expected too. Though, I work with inmates in my own hospital department, seeing them in their environment was not the same. Hearing them tell their stories, being accountable for their actions and talking about their guilt, made them much more relateable to me. Like imaginging, one bad choice and ending up there myself. I would think that it could be very rewarding having this group as your patients. |
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| Posted 6 months ago shelle: it is very rewarding. at times it is very frustrating. But, what job is nursing is not like that? Ginny |
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| Posted 2 months ago I waiting for my letter to be able to set for state boards! I'm not to for sure what i want to go into yet! Thats why I joined!! In the City, Country at heart! |
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| Posted 2 months ago You would love this. I wish that I had done it when I first thought of it. Ginny |
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| Posted 2 months ago This looks like a fun group and an informative topic Karen Swift Jackson RN |
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| Posted 2 months ago This looks like a fun group and an informative topic Karen Swift Jackson RN |
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| Posted 2 months ago CD, I am being wooed by a staffing company to work in a correctional facility here in CA. I have always been interested in it....I plan on going into Travel nursing in Jan.09, can you tell me what the physical duties are there for nurses? Do you have to lift? Do you treat the pts. in the clinic area or go to their cells? Lots of bending or standing? And here with me having chronic pain I'm thinking about Travel????? arghhh need to figure out where I belong!!!!!!!!! So many opportunities in travel though........ Shauna |
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| Posted 2 months ago I have done some PRN work at a correctional facility in NYS. The work is not very demanding at all and the medium security correctional facility is like a country club. There is sick call where they all come and complain and try to get out of going to program, or they want OTC medications for generalized problems. You have the insulin run, flu shot season, blood draws, and the draft where new inmates come in. There is also emergency sick call and doctor call outs. It is more like a parent taking care of their kids medical problems. Most of the time out of the 1500-1700 inmates there are 200 - 300 that are in the infirmary all of the time. At the facility where I worked there were inmate nurse aids that took care of the patients in the infirmary so there really was no hands on care. There were some nurses there who came to work in white jeans and heels LOL to try and impress the officers. There is usually a lot of drama so beware. |
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| Posted 2 months ago You are so right about the drama. And, manipulate, manipulate. It is the best job I have had since being in nursing. Ginny |
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| Posted 2 months ago I've worked in corrections as an R.N.. What I like about the same is the increased professional responsibility and authority that I experienced as a corrections R.N.. Togeather with the same, I enjoy knowing that this same professional authority and responsibility has been very efficacious in alleviating the physical, emotional, ethical, and spiritual anomalies, often interrelated,of prisoners.As in home health and hospice nursing, you can address the individual patient rather than having the dilemma of addressing a plethora of patients simultaneously. However, as per the above, you have more professional responsibility and authority which allows you to address the problems presented in a manner that utelizes your nursing and intellectual skills to the utmost. |
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| Posted 2 months ago hi everyone mary here and i am in nursing school almost finish but i worked in the sex offenders prison the only people we housed were child molesters and rapers. I was an officer then for a few years until they moved it out of joliet to springfield i could not move there so thats when i finally went to school for nursing i always wanted to be in health care actually i wanted to be a coroner but to many years to learn at my age so I became the next best thing to me a nurse i hate to say this but i am divided about being a nurse for those type of people. I had to read about each prisoner acts that put them in prison in DETAIL I can not by law call names but i can say this one case a child molester molested his little BABY 3 months old he said he did these horrible things to his baby because the mother left him. I will just say this and i want you to still ask yourself could you still be able to honestly treat these men health wise with all you got inside your heart and soul. The man started first he said sticking his penis into the baby mouth because babies has sucking motion to drink his bottle after a while he became even angry the mom would not come back home so he let me just say the baby insides was moved around inside the baby body of course the baby died.. I just being a guard had such a hard time still treating him fairly despite of what he did not just that case but so many others that was so worst so I still ask myself even as a officer I still treated them with respect because the law required me to no they did not respect me all the time but that was expected but to ask me can i treat them medically after all i know about there crimes toward babies children and women i would be lying if i said i could still do my job 100% for those type of prisoners i know i am not god and should not judge but i am human and a mother aunt sister etc... when i do my clinicals at nursing homes i am in AWE from what i see the way our elders or handicap are treated when i am there i give my all i try to give all the patiences i see or have everything i can do but i get in trouble because i have only a certain amount of time for each one could i do that for the sex offenders the jury is still out . |
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| Posted 2 months ago I have worked in corrections before, actually earlier this year. The job itself was not bad, it could be very overwhelming @ times though. When I went to work in the prison system, I done it for the state benefits. I didn't have a problem with the inmates and @ first I didn't have a problem with my co-workers. Until I was assualted by an inmate who worked in the clinic. My health administrator did not back me, neither did the warden and very few of my co-workers. One RN was extremely pissed @ me, she even went out of her way to dismiss this inmate from his duties @ the clinic. When it was none of her business. My DON tried to back me but the health administrator got her way as with the RN also. The inmate himself was charged with assualt and 2 yrs max added. I really caught a hard time about alot of stuff. And the sad thing is I wasn't covered under the civil rights act because I was still in probation. There were some very hard lessons learned re: me working as a correctional nurse. I tried to give respect to the inmates and do my job to the best as I could. I guess I just didn't fit in with that type atmosphere. And the only thing was I just wanted the state benefits and to do my job. |
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| Posted 2 months ago Working as a health care provdor you do not and should not know the charges. I have some inmates, I know the charges because they are high profile cases, and I just can't treat them. i have to let one of the docs see them. It is best to not know, then, you can treat them all the same. Ginny |
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| Posted 2 months ago I have been considering nursing at a correctional facility. Problem is that I see no openings in my area (spfld., MA), even though there is a jail in my own town. Any advice on where to find job listings. I've tried the internet, newspapers, etc. Thanks.
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| Posted 2 months ago Hello All, I truly became a nurse when I worked in corrections. It is a type of nursing that make you face yourself and make you answer the tough question. Who am I really? If I had my druthers I would l be a corrections nurse, but the pay and the support sucks. Correctional officers are treated like kings while we the nurses are treated like 3rd class dropouts. Hopefully they can improve in this area nurz4life
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