Originally published Sunday, March 23, 2008 at 12:00 AM
Job Market
Hospital offers nurses training for OR jobs
Southwest Washington Medical Center is growing its own qualified nurses. Instead of struggling to find qualified applicants to fill nursing...
The (Vancouver) Columbian
Southwest Washington Medical Center is growing its own qualified nurses.
Instead of struggling to find qualified applicants to fill nursing positions that demand experience, hospitals are providing that experience on site.
Nursing internship programs aim to give registered nurses the necessary experience to take positions that hospitals such as Southwest Washington Medical Center in Vancouver, Wash., might otherwise find difficult to fill.
Five nurses recently completed an 18-week perioperative internship at Southwest and are now undertaking a four- to six-month orientation. After that, they will work as full-time operating room nurses.
"We have to grow our own," said Theresa Mazzaro, nurse recruiter at Southwest.
It's the fourth class of interns at Southwest since the program started in 2005. The medical center hopes to train as many as 10 RNs through the program each year.
Legacy Health System also offers perioperative nursing internships, as well as internship programs in acute care, critical care and emergency services.
Denise Reese, a clinical educator for the program at Southwest, said operating-room nursing is so specialized that it can take as long as two years for a nurse to feel comfortable in the role.
"It's hard to get into specialty areas without experience," she said.
Tara Dunham, a staff nurse who has completed the internship, is a recent nursing-school graduate and said she doesn't believe she could have gotten a job in the operating room at this point in her career without the internship.
"I don't know if any of us caught a glimpse of the OR in nursing school," she said.
The most recent internship class consisted of three nurses who had just completed their RNs and two nurses with experience. None of them was previously working for Southwest, but current employees are eligible.
![]()
Kathy Wedgwood drives 2 ½ hours each day for the program. Ken Gruesbeck had been an electrical technician in hospitals for eight years before pursuing nursing. He was most interested in the operating room, which led him to apply for the internship program.
"This is definitely a specialty that you have to develop skills for, and you don't normally get it through nursing school," he said.
It's competitive to get into such programs. Around 70 applications were received for the last round at Southwest. After a screening process, 20 nurses were interviewed and five were enrolled.
Interns are hired as hospital employees, but they are also required to attend lectures, lab sessions and work with preceptors. Upon completion of the program, Reese said, they will have a job even if there is not a posted opening at the hospital. Southwest estimates that each intern receives $50,000 worth of training. In return, interns are expected to make a two-year commitment to the hospital after the training is complete.
Reese said the hospital made the decision to allow new nurses into the program because it benefited both the individuals and the hospital.
"How do we get new OR nurses if we're saying no right off the bat?" she said. "We couldn't think of any reasons why it wouldn't work."
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
UPDATE - 09:46 AM
Exxon Mobil wins ruling in Alaska oil spill case
UPDATE - 09:32 AM
Bank stocks push indexes higher; oil prices dip
UPDATE - 08:04 AM
Ford CEO Mulally gets $56.5M in stock award
UPDATE - 07:54 AM
Underwater mortgages rise as home prices fall
NEW - 09:43 AM
Warner Bros. to offer movie rentals on Facebook

nwautos
Turismo upgrade "Gran Turismo 5: XL Edition" for PlayStation 3 has features such as new car-tuning settings, new NASCAR vehicles, better replay video...
Post a comment
- Council members get briefing on arena proposal, minus details
- Lakewood cop accused of embezzling $150K meant for slain officers' families
- Social worker recounts minutes before Powell fire
- 3 big health insurers stockpile $2.4 billion as rates keep rising
- Washington men walloped by Oregon, 82-57
- Agency set to investigate handling of 911 call about Josh Powell
- Quick decisions: How Washington hired its new football staff
- Historic day for gay marriage as another fight looms
- Justin Wilcox's versatile defensive style is the right fit for Huskies | Jerry Brewer
- Wanted in Seattle classrooms: more teachers of color
- Gay-marriage bill passes House, awaits Gregoire's signature
510 - Wanted in Seattle classrooms: more teachers of color
421 - AP Source: Obama to change birth control rule
421 - Council members get briefing on arena proposal, minus details
395 - Rough road again
111 - A few late-night notes
98 - Marijuana legalization initiative set to go on Nov. ballot
77 - USA Today further spells out how Mariners, handful of clubs next in line for huge cash windfall
76 - New TV deals won't guarantee everlasting success; that part will still take work by Mariners and others
69 - UW throttled at Oregon
68
- Wanted in Seattle classrooms: more teachers of color
- State Medicaid program to stop paying for unneeded ER visits
- 3 big health insurers stockpile $2.4 billion as rates keep rising
- Economy, blogs give survivalists new reason to look to Northwest
- Bellevue College adds a third bachelor's degree program
- State's share of mortgage settlement: $648 million
- Darren Berg gets 18-year sentence for Ponzi scheme
- One man's audacious pursuit of sailing history
- $25B settlement reached over foreclosure abuses
- 'Gauguin and Polynesia': dazzling mix-and-match | Art review







