Published August 19, 2024
Making the leap from a clinical role to a non-clinical one is a journey full of surprising revelations, adjustments, and, let’s face it, a few “What was I thinking?” moments. For those who’ve made the switch, here are ten things that will hit home:
Scrubs were comfy, practical, and had all the storage space you needed. Now you’re stuck wondering where to put your phone, pens, and that random snack without those trusty pockets. Also, picking out clothes to wear to work is hard! Especially when you spend years picking out the closest pair of clean and ironed scrubs.
Remember when lunch meant
inhaling food in five minutes between patient rounds? Or worse, over 2 hours between the call lights going off? Now, you’re sitting down for a full 30 (or even 60!) minutes, actually enjoying your meal. It feels so wrong, yet so right. But remember, those new coworkers might not have the stomach that your former coworkers did- you might not be able to swap cool work stories from past jobs, especially during lunch breaks.
Whether it’s mentally diagnosing a colleague’s cough or still speaking in medical shorthand, that clinical mindset is hard to shake. You may not be caring for patients anymore, but old habits die hard. But don’t worry- people will still come to you for medical advice!
Even if you’re thriving in your new role, a little part of you still feels like you’ve “abandoned” your calling. But hey, you’re helping in new ways now, and that’s just as valuable, and in many ways, so much less stressful!
Whether it’s documenting meetings like you used to chart patient notes or overloading on details in your reports, those old habits sneak back in. I laughed when I was shown our documentation system at my last job- nowhere to free-type anything! It was all point and click.
Meetings are the new rounds. Instead of checking in on patients, you’re checking in on projects and strategies… and there’s always that one person who loves to present just a little too much.
When you casually drop terms like “d/c”, “prn” or “s/p” in meetings and get blank stares, you remember that not everyone speaks fluent healthcare. Time to work on that non-clinical vocabulary!
Sure, there’s a weird sense of missing the adrenaline rush that comes with clinical work, but not so much the sheer exhaustion. That trade-off for a (usually) calmer work environment? Worth it.
“So… what do you do now?” Trying to explain that your non-clinical role still makes a difference in healthcare can lead to some confusing (and amusing) conversations.
No more night shifts, weekends, or holidays! Your body clock is thanking you, even if it still expects to be woken up at 4 AM.
What do you “miss” about the clinical life? Drop a comment and tell me all about it!