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Hi it’s Patrik Hutzel from INTENSIVE CARE AT HOME where we provide tailor made solutions for long-term ventilated Adults & Children with Tracheostomies and where we also provide tailor made solutions for hospitals and Intensive Care Units whilst providing quality services for long-term ventilated patients and medically complex patients at home.
In last week’s blog, I talked about,
CAN YOU GO HOME WITH INTENSIVE CARE AT HOME WITHOUT 24-HOUR INTENSIVE CARE NURSES?
You can check out last week’s blog by clicking on the link below this video:
In today’s blog post, it is directed at intensive care nurses, specifically in the Melbourne Metropolitan area, but also country Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland.
Addressing ICU Nurses in Melbourne
Hi, it’s Patrik Hutzel from intensivecareathome.com with another quick video blog.
Now today’s question is about when is it time to leave ICU nursing and go into the community? Now, this video blog today is different to what we normally do. Normally, I answer questions for families in intensive care, but this video today is directed at intensive care nurses, specifically in the Melbourne Metropolitan area, but also country Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland.
So when is it time to leave intensive care nursing and go into the community? Well, the time is now because as you would’ve all seen Intensive Care at Home is expanding. It’s a new form of intensive care nursing. It’s a very exciting branch of intensive care nursing far away from the hustle and bustle of intensive care. And if you’re ready for a change, you should absolutely look at Intensive Care at Home as a new career opportunity.
As we all know in intensive care nursing in the last two years have been horrible in ICUs and work conditions for intensive care nurses have deteriorated. Nurse to patient ratios have deteriorated despite the unions rhetoric, at the end of the day, the unions did nothing to stop that deterioration. And it’s just shocking to see.
Now on the contrary, look at Intensive Care at Home, we guarantee a one-to-one nurse to patient ratio because we bring the intensive care into the home. You can’t double up patients in Intensive Care at Home. You can’t just send ward nurse to someone at home. We guarantee the one-on-one nurse to patient ratio with Intensive Care at Home because that’s what our clients need and want. And there’s also most of the time, a support worker there to support you. So now is the time to look at community nursing with Intensive Care at Home.
If you are an intensive care nurse with a minimum of two years ICU experience and ideally a post-graduate critical care qualification, we have exciting opportunities. We’re also looking for a nurse manager. We’re looking for a clinical liaison nurse, and now it’s really the time to look for a career change in 2022. Leave intensive care and, look at working conditions with Intensive Care at Home that are more stable, more sustainable and not have working conditions deteriorate such as it happened in ICU in the last two years.
So go and check out our career section at intensivecareathome.com or simply send me an email to [email protected]. Or you can also call me on 0410942230.
This is Patrik Hutzel from intensivecareathome.com and I’ll talk to you in a few days. Take care.
Now, if you have a loved one in intensive care and you want to go home with our service intensive care at home and if you want to find out how to get funding for our service and how it all works, please contact us on one of the numbers on the top of our website, or send me an email to [email protected]. That’s Patrik, just with a K at the end.
Please also have a look at our case studies because there we highlight more about what we can do for clients, how clients can live at home with ventilation and tracheostomies and you can look at our case studies as well at our service section.
Intensive care at home Case studies
And if you are at home already and you need support for your critically ill loved one at home, and you have insufficient support or insufficient funding, please contact us as well. We can help you with all of that.
And if you are an intensive care nurse or a pediatric intensive care nurse with a minimum of two years, ICU or pediatric ICU experience, and you ideally have a critical care certificate, please contact us as well. Check out our career section on our website. We are currently hiring ICU and pediatric ICU nurses for clients in the Melbourne metropolitan area, Northern suburbs, Mornington Peninsula, Frankston area, South Gippsland, as well as Wollongong in New South Wales.
www.intensivecareathome.com/careers
So we are also an NDIS, TAC (Victoria) and DVA (Department of Veteran affairs) approved community service provider in Australia. Also have a look at our range of full service provisions.
Also, we have been part of the Royal Melbourne health accelerator program in the past for innovative healthcare companies.
https://www.thermh.org.au/news/innovation-funding-announced-melbourne-health-accelerator
https://www.melbournehealthaccelerator.com/
Thank you for watching this video and thank you for tuning into this week’s blog.
This is Patrik from intensive care at home, and I’ll see you again next week in another update.