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jeannie

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Sun Jul 13, 2014 12:07 pm

Hi,

I would like some advice. I completed a GNP a year and a half ago and have not returned to nursing because of personal issues. I would now like to return, but only have one years experience through a grad program. I can not get into community or general practice as jobs advertised specify at least two years exp. If I can get back into ward based nursing are there preceptor programs that will get my skills back up to scratch. I live in WA. I do not want to apply for agency nursing and when I applied to the pool at the hospital I did my GNP with they said that I was not suited to changing from ward to ward but was suited to the one ward. Thank you

md9999

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md9999
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Jul 13, 2014, 01:36 pm

You could perhaps try to look for a research nurse job. If it is a trial which is sponsored by a pharmaceutical company they have clinical research associates who offer training to research nurses on the specific trial and how the data is collected and how the trial is managed. There may be private practices who are running trials or you could look in the areas where you worked in your new grad year, eg. if you worked in renal, look for renal clinical trials.

If you thought the sound of research is OK but nothing out there at this time and you are otherwise not working, many research groups would be happy to take someone voluntarily to help with their data (data entry, data cleaning) or paperwork, you could try approach a group or practice that does this and see if you could gain some experience from the data/trial administrativion side. You could then make reference in your CV regarding the trials you worked on voluntarily. It is just a thought, it may not fit with your personal situation though. 

jeannie

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Jul 13, 2014, 02:09 pm

Don't you need to do a research degree at university to do this job?

md9999

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md9999
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Jul 13, 2014, 03:40 pm Last edited Jul 13, 2014, 03:40 pm update #1

Hi Jeannie,

This is copy and paste of a cross post (sorry for duplication), however it answers your question. The short answer is no. The long answer is this:

I have had PM messages regarding clinical research and thought I would share my answer because it is something I am often asked. The question was essentiallywhat qualification do you need to be able to do a research job. Another part of the question also lead to me explain where nurses can also go within research outside of the usual hospital/clinic setting.

I'll preface by saying the type of research I'm involved in are sponsored clinical trials (eg. by a pharma company or a disease foundation) and investigator initiated trials (research thought up and headed, usually, by a medical doctor, at a particular site).

In NSW there is no specific qualification you MUST have to be in clinical research, however it may be dictated by the actual area the research is being done. Eg. If you are doing research in ICU, then usually you would need to be an RN as EN's are not in ICU.

You don't necessarily need to have experience in the particular area you are going to be doing research in, although it can help. It depends on the requirements of the position. For example my area is ophthalmology and our basic requirement is that you've had some hospital or clinic experience and must be an RN (this is because the hospital we are attached to needs an RN when they assist the doctors in some of the eye injections, also they inject IV fluorescein dye during the retinal angiogram, so again it needs to be an RN according to our local requirements). You also MUST have a good command of IT/computer literacy otherwise the job will be a big struggle due to the data/admin load. 

You might be interested to know that many companies (pharmaceutical and secondary organisations called contract research organisations, CRO's, who oversee research) offer "Clinical Research Associate" (CRA) jobs.
 These CRA's come to each research site and check (monitor) all the data and how the research is done. People who can do this type of job are nurses, doctors, ppl with life sciences degrees, allied health, pharmacists. So this is also an option. It tends to involve quite bit of travel around Australia and sometimes to New Zealand or occasionally other countries. Depending on which trials they "monitor" and the requirement per trial.
To get a CRA job, you usually have to start as a Clinical ResearchAssistant and then progress to a CRA. Often in the same company, but not always. If you have already been a research nurse, sometimes you can go straight into a CRA job.

Hope this information is interesting! People involved in nursing research specifically might want to add their own views (this is where perhaps higher degrees are needed)

modified: Sunday 13 July 2014 3:55:19 pm - md9999

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