fun you soald try it
Assuming you are talking about a career in nursing and not the act of breastfeeding an infant, the best way to prepare for nursing is to either get a job working in a hospital, nursing home or whatever kind of setting you think you would like to work in, and see if you really like it. Even volunteering at a hospital or nursing home could give you a good idea if a nursing career is right for you.
working in the kitchen of a nursing home do you need a cooking certificate?
Working with people, the communication, stories and all around when you go home at the end of your shift(s) you feel like you helped someone.
Well, It depends. if it is just a local nursing home... probably not. but if it is like a nursing home for people who have strokes and can live at home and serious stuff like that, then most likely (:
I suggest going with any nursing home you have seen in your area. Since you need to have a license to be a nurse, you shouldn't be worried about the people working there.
If you are interested in working in a nursing home the best thing to do is just go around town and apply in person at ones you want to work at. You can also go to the unemployment office as they would have nursing home jobs as well.
If your grandmother has several bruises while in a nursing home, it is possible that she is a victim of elderly abuse. If you're unsure that your grandmother is getting proper care in the current nursing home she's at, either talk to the professionals working there or switch her to another nursing home.
with people
You do neet any specific form of training to get a job working in a nursing home. Nursing homes usually train you on the job.
He suggests a job for him working at a nursing home(mentally infirm institution). Ironically, he ends up in the nursing home (mentally infirm institution).
sittercity.com has an option for caring for the elderly.
In the UK the main ones are children's nursing, learning disabilities nursing, mental health nursing and adult nursing...obviously in each of these there are different roles, like in children's nursing there are things like neonatal nursing and working with teenagers etc. what qualifications do you need to be a dental nurse?