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Really need to leave my NHS job, just don't know if I can

17 replies

minipin · 13/10/2015 23:36

Hi, have been a band 7 healthcare professional for past 11 years, 28 hours a week, and don't think I can do it any more. The job has totally changed and I now feel that the cons outweigh the pros. Had a period off sick with work stress 2 years ago and headed that way again .
In an ideal world I would eventually be an HLTA in a local school, as I know I would love it and would be able to really help a teacher, but don't know how to start. Will be volunteering in a local school, but how to move forward from there? Also a part time nannying opportunity has arisen, but this would be a huge paycut.
Has anyone else made this drastic a career change? Would especially love to know if there is life after the NHS!

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CountryLovingGirl · 18/10/2015 20:03

Hi,

I am NHS too. I have also considered a career change lately but to reduce commuting time (my role was moved to the other hospital within the trust last year). I volunteered in schools for a while and was offered a place on a primary PGCE. I backed out and then applied for secondary (again, offered a place). I backed out again after realising that I just could not take a pay cut like that, and pay the £9k fee, and start again (we, not until the mortgage has been paid off) AND that I still had strong feelings for my current career.
It is so difficult as I think most roles in the NHS have changed and morale is low (thanks to pay cuts etc.). You can apply for a teaching assistant course (for September) if you like the voluntary work. I take it you have children of your own? School holidays would be fab and NO more working over Christmas!
I feel really fed up lately (NHS) due to the amount of out of hours work plus commuting I do. I am part time so I don't feel like it is worth it. You are not alone. PM me if you want.

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CountryLovingGirl · 18/10/2015 20:05

TA pay is rubbish compared to a band 7 btw. I don't think they get paid in the school hols either.

Do you no fancy university teaching? I am looking into that.

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CharleyDavidson · 18/10/2015 20:14

A HLTA can spend a lot of their week being in front of a class on their own, while the teacher has their non contact ppa (planning, prep and assessment time). Our HLTA teaches for 4 half days a week, then supports children in their class and runs intervention programmes the rest of the time. There's less planning than a teacher and less stress as there's no pastoral care, parents' evenings etc. But... it has a low rate of pay compared to a teacher, but is still a lot of work.

Volunteering is def a great way to start, if you want to go into school though.

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minipin · 19/10/2015 20:45

Thank you for your responses! They are much appreciated. Am still considering, having an interview as a housekeeper/nanny part time tomorrow, may also try a day a week for nhs and a day volunteering in school. Just don't think I am psychologically tough enough to continue as a band 7 in today's Nhs, sadly.

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Hedgehogparty · 23/10/2015 23:24

Know what you mean. The NHS now is very tough to work in. I'm hoping to leave before Christmas

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yorkshapudding · 24/10/2015 11:25

OP, I know how you feel. I'm only band 6 but the level of risk and responsibility I'm carrying is (by my Line managers own admission) ridiculous for my grade. I feel as though the job is breaking me. My health is suffering. But with a mortgage and bills to pay I can't just walk away from it and I haven't found any non NHS jobs I'm qualified for that wouldn't mean taking a big pay cut. I wish I could just say "sod the money" but I don't think our house being repossessed would help my stress levels.

Watching this thread with interest as I haven't found any realistic options and feel like I'm trapped in my current job until retirement.

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yorkshapudding · 24/10/2015 11:26

Hedgehog, if you don't mind my asking, have you another job lined up? If so what are you planning to do?

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annandale · 24/10/2015 11:28

i'll be honest, I found being a TA (not even a HLTA) much more stressful than working for the NHS. Hope it's the opposite for you.

Could you not get a band 6 job instead, perhaps in a different setting? It would be substantially less of a pay cut and might mean you could carry on better than you feel now?

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annandale · 24/10/2015 11:29

Or could you consider some form of private or locum work for a while?

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Wishful80smontage · 24/10/2015 11:36

I was band 6 nhs and hated it- redundancy came at exactly the right time for me to be able to have a break- now at home with dc and retrain in different field next couple of years. If you can afford to move into a different field now I would go for it- maybe you could volunteer to help out a few hours here and there to make sure its what you're hoping it will be?

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annandale · 24/10/2015 11:42

I'd think about a million times before even applying for a band 7 job these days, I have to say Sad I think our manager just gets a dustbin of shit dumped over her on a regular basis.

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Faye12345 · 24/10/2015 16:43

Feel your pain im a band 7 and have been signed off as the stress and abuse is awful. On the upside i have a new role at a lower band and feel optimistic. I hate letting people down and feel ive done that but i need to put myself first and be well for my new job Confused

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Nonnainglese · 24/10/2015 16:49

Sadly, having been there, I quit several years ago.
I now work in the voluntary sector in salaried post, and I love it! Yes, it's less pay but far higher job satisfaction, no working over Bank Holidays and great people to work with.

Might be worth considering, Third Sector Jobs is a starting point.

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Hedgehogparty · 24/10/2015 18:28

Don't want to out myself with too much info, but basically did a RTP course a few years back, returned to NHS P/T as kept my other job P/T in voluntary sector. Have done 3 years back in NHS.

Every shift agency staff- some are great but no stability. Not much support- our Band 7 manager never on ward, staff stressed and lot of sickness.Ive decided its just too much, don't want to make myself ill.

Agree with other poster, look at voluntary sector jobs.

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yorkshapudding · 26/10/2015 16:01

I am seriously considering taking a band 4 (non clinical) role purely to save my sanity. It will mean increasing my hours (from 22.5 to 30 per week) and a longer commute but it will mean less stress and I simply can't carry on as I am.

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minipin · 29/10/2015 19:24

Looks like I will be a part time housekeeper and nanny! Will be asking to keep one day a week in nhs but also enquiring re private work too. Keep reminding myself there is more to life than money, just need a simpler, calmer life with a renewed sense of job satisfaction. Sorry to hear other people are struggling in nhs too, it just isn't what it used to be, is it?

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Hedgehogparty · 30/10/2015 20:32

Agree that things have really changed..
A lot more pressure now and much higher turnover of staff. People who can leave seem to be doing so.
I'm working with someone only just qualified, she already wants out.

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