I have been unhappy at work for a long while. Have been considering changes for a while... but life has had other plans. Two kids later, I'm back in the same role and unhappy. I always thought I'd stay at my present employer (even if they are being slandered in the news ATM for sacking people... Meh, I'm happy enough with them, just not my role... ) and try a different pathway here, like HR or training... something working more with people.
However... A random conversation with a colleague here has sent my thoughts off onto a completely different tangent... she said I should do midwifery.
We were talking about my breastfeeding counselling training that I am currently undertaking and how I'd love to be an LC but you need to be a MW first. And so she said "Off you go then, be a MW!" Strange because when I did year 12 I wanted to get into medicine but my score wasn't high enough... and then at Uni I decided I'd have to study too hard and feel into something completely unrelated
So anyway... am I insane for considering such a massive career change at 32? As colleague pointed out, I could have 30 odd years of working ahead of me still... do I want to be unhappy for 30 years??
And who can tell me about Midwifery in Victoria? Which unis? Full time, part time? What is the course load like? How is studying Midwifery with small kids? Do you have to do nursing first?
I'm looking at some uni websites but thought I'd ask those who have BTDT...
You have to study nursing at uni and then specialise in midwifery. My SIL is in the progress of becoming a MW now. She has her first nursing class at uni this wednesday, so proud of her! Hopefully she'll see this and pop in and give you a run down...
I think you should definitely go for it!
And how sucky is that LC thing? I looked into it too as I was interested... but i have no desire to be a midwife, while it would be lovely I can think of some not so lovely aspects of the job that i'd rather not see or be able to cope with well enough for my pateints..
You can go directly into Bachelor of Midwifery without doing your general nursing. I as a RN1 would advise to do Bachelor of Nursing and Midwifery together then you come away with two qualification and work in more areas than delivery or postnatal wards.
I'm a midwife and LC-although I did it in my mid 20s after already being a nurse. My cousin at age 40 studied to become a midwife, she had no other medical backgroud, she also had her 4th baby while studying so it can be done and you are definately not too old! The average age of midwives is in the 50s anyway so you will be considered a spring chicken.
You don't have to be a midwife to be an LC but I think you have to be working with childbearing women or babies, so doctors, paediatric nurses, etc are sometimes LCs.
I don't know how the courses work now, its changed heaps since my day, but it is defintaly do able and I dont' think you always have to do nursing first- my cousin didn't . I think you would be great- go for it! Its a hard job and the money isn't fantastic but for a change of career its a great idea.
The other thing is the courses get heaps of applicants so its hard to get in I think.
HotI, I'd love that! Could you check with her and then hook us up? Let me know how that goes.
Saffy - thanks for that! I had a chuckle at being a "spring chicken".
Bub 3 - I see what you mean about general nursing. Is it bad if I say I'm not interested in general nursing?
I wonder how many women have babies and then go "I want to be a midwife!" I think it's probably similar to getting married and saying "I want to be a wedding planner!"
If you're insane then I am too because I've been thinking about it for a few years now and I'm 33 (almost 34!)
My biggest worry is fitting it in with two kids, I have no idea what the workload is like. Also I live in outer eastern suburb of Melb so I'd have to a bit of travelling to uni as well. But its something I know I would love so I'm planning on going to some Uni open days this year and checking it out. Also I have a science degree so I want to suss out if I could get credit for any of the biological science type subjects which would be a bonus! I'm keen on ACU as well. Good luck!!!
It's funny, I'm contemplating a similar thing - whether to study nursing after I have my next baby rather than go back to work fulltime. I may later do a postgrad in midwifery, I'd like to but am a little worried about how I'd handle some of the sadder aspects emotionally. Here in Perth you don't have to do nursing first, midwifery exists as a stand-alone degree as well as a postgrad option. I'd probably be 32-33 before I get started, all things being equal
No thats not bad not wanting to a general nurse however and i dont know but just the extra knowlegde you would get would doing the nursing side would be beneficial in emergencies drugs etc etc but as i said i dont know what they teach with the direct entry midwifery course so i could be completely off the mark!
Definately not too old. As Saffy said you would be a spring chicken in the midwifery field.
I too did Bachelor of Nursing first, worked as an RN for 2years and then went on to do midwifery. And like the others said you can do midwifery without doing nursing. I would recommend doing both if you can for a few reasons. As a child/Teen I wanted to do midwifery so did Nursing first as at the time that was the only way to become a midwife. Now my child bearing years as basically over my interest in midwifery isn't as great as it once was and I find myself drawn to other areas in nursing not midwifery that I can relate to in my own life (like mental health, palative care etc) Been an RN also means I can swap and change between the two. You may find years later that been a LC isn't as rewarding anymore for example and if you have more then one qualification your able to select a much larger choice in careers. Nursing does open so many doors where as midwifery only a few incomparison.
I had DD1 when I was still in highschool. She was a baby when I started nursing and I was soon doing it as a single mother. I was 18. It took 3.5years for me to complete and I finished when I was 21. I started midwifery when I was 23 and fell pregnant with DD2 when I had just started it. DD was born 10months into it and I completed it when she was 12months old (took some time of in the middle) It is definately do-able with a young family.
I too have been quietly considering a career change. I too would love to know exactly what needs to be done to become a MW. Quietly stalking this thread now.........
Not insane at all, i went to my local Uni open day last year and got a bit of info. I have 3 young children at home at the moment so decided now is not the right time but i sill believe that my time will come. When you think about going back to Uni for another 4 or 5 years (maybe i think....) it's nothing when you look at having another 30 years of work ahead of you. I say it's definately worth your time and effort.
If there is something that you want go out there and get it
While you might not be interested in general nursing, it might make you more employable. There was an article recently about how graduates from the bachelor of midwifery were finding it hard to get jobs. It might be something about how hospitals put in their contracts about how even though they have been employed in one area, you may be required to work in other areas.
I am studying the combined degree at deakin (Bach of nursing/Bach of Midwifery). This will be my second year of 4 years. I have 3 kids, 6 4 and 2. The work load is not too bad, its about 15 hours of face time at uni each week which I have so far managed to timetable mostly in the mornings. I am usually home no later than 3pm. I have good back up and a DH that is a shift worker so he is quite flexable.
I came into it as a 33y/o with no medical back ground at all, just a lot of self aquired knowledge about birth that I didn't want to waste.
It's definatley do-able. The tricky bit is all the placement we have to do. Because it's a combined degree you do twice as much as the nursing students and during 3rd and 4th years we do 2 to 3 midwifery shifts a week during the semester to make up the required hours for registration. This year I won't have any mid semester break which means no time off during school holidays either.
It will get full on because somewhere in amongst all that you have to fit in appointments and births of your follow through mums. But I will take that as it comes and juggle as much as I can.
But the whole point of my post is that it is definatley do-able
Well I'm planning a career change at 42 so if you're too old, then I must be completely insane. Not to midwifery but I'll be studying for my Masters so job hunting for an entry level position in my late forties.
While this is a bit scary, you only live once and I'd rather take the risk than carry on doing same old, same old for the next 20 years as I don't find it fulfilling any more.
Bookmarks