Match the LVN Role to Your Personality

CDI Nurses Smiling with Instructor Outside

For anyone new to nursing or considering enrolling in an LVN program, it makes perfect sense that you’d have questions about what kind of LVN role is ideal for your personality. Your studies and certification will enable you to work in a number of nursing capacities at a variety of facilities. Throughout your career, you will find many opportunities that both challenge and inspire you. This breakdown below can give you an idea of the best LVN role for your personality type. 

Are You Open to New Experiences? 

If facing the unknown on a daily basis sounds ideal to you, you may want to consider a role in emergency medicine. In the ER, you’ll have to think quickly under stress, and have a high tolerance for unexpected situations. Nurses and doctors who thrive in the ER need to be ready for anything. As an LVN in the ER, you will have to prepare yourself for a day of uncertainty and be ready to think on your feet. 

LVNs do not require extra licensing to work in the ER. If a fast-paced environment where you never know what’s going to walk through the admitting doors sounds like your comfort zone, a career in emergency medicine could be ideal. 

Do People Come to You for Help?

Are you the person in your friend group that everyone calls on for that extra dose of TLC before they go to others? Is “compassionate” the first word people use to describe you? Are you drawn to nursing because you want to provide comfort and physical contact to your patients?

All nurses need compassion to succeed. However, if you answered “yes” to all three of those questions, then consider a path in palliative care. When patients are facing a terminal or long-term illness, their care team is tasked with making them as comfortable as possible. Palliative LVNs have an opportunity to give that comfort and compassion to both the patients and their families during a challenging and sometimes scary time. Palliative nurses have quite a lot of hands-on time with their patients. If you want a lot of bedside time, this may be an ideal role for a giver like you.

You’re a “Kid” Person

Fact: some people are just better with kids than others. Maybe you’ve already coached a kid’s sports team or worked in education and are ready for a change. Maybe you’re a parent who loves to organize events for your PTA. 

Pediatric nurses specialize in working with children in doctors’ offices and hospitals. You could be tasked with doing everything from taking a child’s vital signs to administering medication, including life-saving vaccinations. Pediatric LVNs also work with children suffering from chronic health conditions that range from asthma to more serious illnesses like cancer. Those kids need someone with a little bit of extra patience and kindness. Pediatric nurses also have an opportunity to counsel kids about healthy lifestyle habits and more, giving you a chance to make an early and significant impact on every kid you interact with.

Does “Organized” and “Team Player” Describe You?

How good are you at juggling a long list of priorities? Are you driven by organization and schedules? Do you have a knack for keeping a group of people focused on a single task to ensure it’s executed on time? Are you able to communicate with a wide variety of people who have different personality traits and keep everyone working together towards a single goal?

Did you find yourself nodding “yes” to all those? Then rehabilitative nursing is a natural fit for you. Rehabilitative nurses work with patients who are recovering from a debilitating event, like a stroke, heart attack, or head injury. Rehab nurses work within a team to help those people maintain and regain independence and motor function, such as speech and mobility.

Rehabilitative LVNs can coordinate the activities for clients best suited for their personalized recovery plan. Nurses are often called upon to follow up after each therapy that the client attends like speech, physical, occupational, and more. That could (and often does) mean making calls to chart feedback as well as coordinating doctor and specialist appointments. Sure, all nurses need to be organized and good record keepers. But those skills in particular are key for a successful career as a rehabilitative LVN.

What LVN Role in California IS Right for You?

LVNs are entitled to work in almost every facet of the healthcare field. Once you enroll and begin your professional training program, you will have plenty of exposure to many different environments. You’ll also get hands-on clinical experience and build relationships with mentors who will point you in a direction best suited for your unique blend of personality, experience, and instincts. 

Our team at CDI is here to help you succeed in every aspect of your LVN career. In just 13 months, you will be trained and certified as a licensed nurse. Our structured program provides you with the knowledge and training you need to enter the workforce with confidence.

Contact us today at by email or by phone at 310-559-0225 to make your appointment with a member of our admissions team today.

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