Signup date: 06 May 2008 at 10:20am
Last login: 29 Sep 2010 at 9:57am
Post count: 518
Hi Actimel01,
I considered training to be a nurse after my BSc as I loved patient contact and I actually know a lot of people who went down that path. Just one thing to think about. I do my PhD in a Medical School (although I'm not a medic) and we have a number of registered PhD students who are Nurses. If you were to finish the PhD then do training you would be in a position to be promoted fairly quickly to a Research Nurse I would imagine. Having said that, 3 years is a long time to do something if you're really not enjoying it.
Have you thought about adapting your PhD to make it more about patient contact? I'm not sure what area you are in but how about delivering an intervention with patients? Including qualitative interviews and focus groups with patients?
Lastly, talk to as many people as possible about it! Talk to the nurses, talk to pre-registration/student nurses, newly qualified nurses, nurses who have been there 20/30 years. Talk to staff nurses, nurse practitioners, research nurses etc. Information is knowledge right? Also, make sure you talk to everyone who matters to you about it.
Good luck!
A
yep, i know that feeling!
i'd talk to somebody in your legal department because i think you'll need an outside agency to sign some form of confidentiality agreement. or, you could think about taking on an RA on a short term contract and making them sign your departments confidentialiy agreement. looks good on their CV, you get your confidentiality. i think you're right to be wary about this!
Ah Koturu.
You sound like an expert!!! You'll be absolutely fine. I just wanted to press the issue because I've had lecturers stress the importance of the language you use in qualitative. But you sound like you know all the historical perspectives back to front!
I just like to giggle at all the fallings out between some very heavy weight academics.
A
I love the following:
Cresswell, J. W. (1998). Qualitative inquiry and research design: Choosing among five traditions. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Goes through what they are, how to decide which method is most appropriate and how to do it.
I do access to service research and I use phenomenology, specifically IPA but the choice basically comes down to what kind of question you want to ask. I'm interested in the experience of accessing care so IPA was really the only option for me. When developing questionnaires I used thematic analysis. If I was interested in understanding the meaning of living with a chronic illness I'd use narrative.
Good luck!
Oo, also, I'm thinking of clinical too. I'm just wondering, my PhD is in a health psychology area, not clinical. What's yours (without too many identifying details!!!)? And have you got clinical experience? I wish they advertised 1 day a week assistant posts!!!
A
I'm a little younger than you but same basic situation.
The other day, I got a key to my desk which I'd been waiting for for ages. In the drawer was about 20 application forms for graduate programmes from 2005 that the previous occupant of the desk must of left here. I felt a little sick about the wages, training opportunities and development that was available through these schemes. I NEVER looked at this kind of thing back in the day (selling my soul to be an accountant was how I looked at it) but the idea that 3 years ago I could've applied for positions with clear progression and up to £53,000 within 3 years really made me think about the PhD.
There is nothing I would rather do with my time but is this (academic research) what I want to do forever? No. So then I think, move on!
I'm lucky in that all my friends are in a similar situation, i.e., still training for whatever profession they've chosen but now some of them are looking at buying houses and I feel I'm definitely holding my boyfriend back...
I think you have to just keep moving forward. Everything is evolving right?
A
I'm on £12940 tax free, NI free. It's just gone up by a couple of hundred pounds. My boyfriend used to be on £16,000 for a real world job (he's moved now) and we used to take home the same amount.
I have no problems with the amount in terms of paying rent, bills, car stuff etc but, lets face it, you won't be living a champagne lifestyle.
A
======= Date Modified 15 Oct 2008 10:15:00 =======
H, Bonzo, Tricky,
Thank you all so much! Wow, you are those really scary clever kind of people...scary...but amazing!
Sorry for going off the radar yesterday. I have so much work to do and I'd love to say that I was working my way productively through it but in reality I was paralysed with fear and spent my day in my PJs under a blanked watching ER. I'm one walking PhD cliche.
In the end I used Trickys idea because it was first and it worked for what I needed (I know, commitment isn't my strong point). Also because the words code, VBA, programming and Linux scare me. When someone wrote C++ I nearly fainted. Flash back to hours trying to understand my ex-boyfriends love for the language!
H - I don't use Linux but my boyfriend is forever hassling me to. He has a duel boot up system. It's silly really because I REALLY like the philosophy behind open source software and actually, my PhD is kind of related to this kind of thing. I'm capable with computers but by no means competent. Boo!
Smilodon - Sorry you did it the long way. At least now you know for next time, right?
Thank you all again.
A
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