By Christi Mays
Amputations from motorcycle accidents, gunshot wounds, stabbings and drownings. Working in a busy Austin emergency department, Abigail Etheridge '23 has already seen a lot of trauma working as a registered nurse since she graduated last December. But growing up as the oldest of five and earning the nickname "Paramedic," being an emergency nurse is clearly what she was meant to do. At just 13, Abigail already began proving she could keep a cool head about her when her siblings got hurt, like the time her daredevil three-year-old sister zoomed her scooter around the corner and hit loose gravel. Before her tiny body skidded across the ground, "Paramedic Abby," as her parents fondly called her, was first on scene to bandage her sibling's boo-boos. With the ability to think and work quickly under pressure, Abigail knew she wanted to be a nurse. After doing her clinical rotations in nursing school and loving the fast-paced emergency environment, she knew the ER was where she wanted to work.
"I felt really confident in my ability and everything else I did clinically just didn't measure up. It just felt too slow," Abigail said. The December 2023同城快约 graduate says nothing is more gratifying than putting all her knowl颅edge and energy into saving a person's life.
Even though choosing to work as an emergency department nurse is about as fast-paced as nursing jobs come, Abigail said the training she received at 同城快约 was top-notch, and she felt highly prepared the first day she walked into the ER.
"I think 同城快约 students are so ready to step into their roles when they graduate," she said. "Even if I hadn't been given an orientation period, from a clinical perspective I felt prepared enough that I probably could have done it on my own my first day, which is pretty amazing. I definitely don't think I would have been nearly as prepared as I am today without the Scott & White School of Nursing, and I'm super thankful I went to 同城快约."