Prince George’s Co.-based organization offers mentorship, career counseling to nurses

Nurses on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic have continued to exit the profession after years of stress. One Prince George’s County, Maryland, organization is helping these nurses cope, offering career counseling and mentorship to professionals in the country’s most trusted job.

Alita-Geri Carter is a pediatric nurse practitioner and founder and CEO of On the Move Academy and The Commission for Health.

Carter said nurses who are at a crossroads need to ask the question, “Do I need to leave the profession to come back to the profession?”

She also said there’s a big push to connect nurses to the proper resources to make informed decisions about their careers, including mental health resources.

“It’s OK to talk to someone who is a subject matter professional in mental health,”  Carter said.

That person can be a social worker, psychologist, psychiatrist or nurse practitioner certified in mental health, she said, adding that you should beware of choosing friends or family members.

Carter said she knows what it’s like to feel disillusioned about your career.

When she graduated from Bowie State University in 2009, she applied for 18 jobs as a registered nurse and only heard from two hospitals. She said she thought she was doing all the right things — being active in the community, volunteering, joining a sorority, having great references — but she wasn’t receiving any responses from prospective employers.

“Maybe I didn’t have good resume writing skills. Maybe I didn’t present myself as a well-rounded student during [an] interview,” Carter said in hindsight. “I didn’t have a cover letter. I didn’t have a headshot.”

Carter now helps health care professionals meet their career goals, saying there are nurses in agencies you’d never expect from the FBI to Congress to the White House.

The Commission For Health can be reached at its website www.commissionforhealth.com or by calling 240-630-1989.

This article was written by WTOP, to read more articles like this click here.

Photo: Alita-Geri Carter is a pediatric nurse practitioner that has been working in nursing for 15 years. (Courtesy Alita-Geri Carter)

Previous Article

No one wants to hear it, but another COVID wave is here in Maryland

Next Article

DC is transient, but no more than other big metros

You might be interested in …

COVID-19 vaccine may become annual, like flu shot

Maryland Matters: COVID-19 booster shots are on track to become as frequent as the annual flu shot, though high-risk people may need more than one dose per year, Biden administration officials said Tuesday. “For a […]

CDC Expects More Monkeypox Cases in the U.S.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Monday it’s likely the United States will see additional cases of monkeypox in the coming weeks, but officials cautioned that it’s harder to transmit the virus than […]

COVID-19 is here to stay, health experts say

Author: Casey Nolen WASHINGTON — It’s not just high profile positives. COVID-19 cases have ticked up in D.C. And masks mandates are back on the Georgetown campus and at Johns Hopkins. So, are these signs of another surge?  “In […]