Acute dialysis nurses primarily work with chronically ill patients in a hospital setting, where they will administer hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis, continuous renal replacement therapies, and apheresis treatments in a suite location or one-on-one fashion.
Advantages of being an Acute Dialysis Nurse:
Variety
No two days are the same. Depending on the location of your patients, you could provide treatments in critical care or a wide variety of floors, including telemetry, general medicine, neurology, orthopedics, pediatrics, and post-partum.
Autonomy
As a highly specialized and trained acute dialysis nurse, you will often be the only dialysis nurse on the floor or in the entire hospital on any given day. You must notice subtle changes in your patient's well-being and adjust the treatment as needed. This responsibility can be stressful but can also create a tremendous sense of job satisfaction.
More Time with Patients
In the hospital setting, patients are often new to dialysis and have many questions. Because dialysis treatments typically last 3-4 hours, you have extended time to provide thorough education and ease their concerns.
What we offer
Culture
Values and Purpose
Communication and Transparency
Collaboration and Teamwork
Diversity and Inclusion
Work-Life Balance
Foster Innovation
Flexibility
Flexible working hours
Compressed work week
Personal Time Off
Training and development opportunities
Support
Training and development programs
Regular feedback and recognition
Mentoring and coaching
Employee assistance program (EAP)
Full Benefits Program
Welcome to the place where you'll increase your experience, learn and have fun.
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