Reviews and Ratings For Evans Memorial Hospital :: TravelNurseSource.com

Evans Memorial Hospital

4 Reviews

172

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200 N River St
Claxton, GA 30417

Details

Number of Beds 195

Walkthrough State NO

Compact State NO

State License Fee $60

License Wait Time 25 days

Temporary License n/a

License Website Visit

State Hourly $29.98 (non-traveler)

State Annual $57,840 (non-traveler)

National Hourly $33.23

National Annual $69,110

County

Evans

Population

10,495

Studio (Rent)

$478

One Bedroom (Rent)

$520

Two Bedroom (Rent)

$577

City

Claxton

Population

2,289

Homicides (per 10,000)

0.00

Rapes (per 10,000)

0.00

Assaults (per 10,000)

39.00

Robberies (per 10,000)

4.00

Average Commute Times

Temperature Info

Average Age

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Reviews

January 26, 2015

by Anonymous

I WORKED IN MEDICAL RECORDS AND LOVED IT

CHART ANALYSIS CLERK WAS JUST THE JOB FOR ME. I ANSWERED PHONES TOOK REQUESTS SCANNED COMPLETED CHARTS INTO THE COMPUTER. CO- WORKERS WERE MORE LIKE FAMILY. SUCH A JOY TO WORK WITH AND FOR.

January 19, 2015

by Anonymous

Great work environment

Great work environment! The most caring medical professionals and the best learning environment. Just taken over by new management, so I'm unsure how they are. The hospital is located in a great community that is small and caring. The doctors who practice there are very nice and are great to work with.

August 21, 2013

by Anonymous

Productive and friendly work place

Shadowed a student Rad Tech in her externship where I learned:CT ScansMRIX-Rays

May 11, 2020

by Kelly Archambeault

Just how far does our Emergency Room compassion go, before it becomes a thing of the past?

When you work in two different hospitals, you have a unique prospective that most other people do not. You are able to see things that you might not otherwise see. As an employee you would think that you would be treated differently than others that may visit a hospital’s emergency room. From my experiences tonight (today), I can safely say that this is not always the case. I want to talk about two experiences that I have had tonight, from two different hospitals, you be the judge as to who had the most compassion. I seldom abuse the emergency rooms, for several reasons. (1). I honestly can’t afford it, (2). I understand what the emergency room staff goes through on a day to day base. (3). my primary doctor is just a phone call away. When I do go to the emergency room, I do expect to be treated with compassion, a bit of understanding, and let’s be honest some help, even if it is nothing more than a bit of reassurance and perhaps a prescription or something, anything that could make a difference. I have a cyst on my back, first one. The first hospital I went too, the doctor on duty immediately told me that if it was a cyst that he didn’t do them, but he would be happy to look at it. I immediately felt like I had wasted my time to travel to the ER, I thought what was the point; if you are not going to do anything for me, but I let him look anyway. As soon as he saw it, he basically said “That’s a cyst, I can’t believe you firkin came to the emergency room at three A.M. for that”.. He said it a little differently, but that was what I heard. Anyway, I felt like he was refusing to treatment, something that I know goes against everything that I have seen in the ER, so I left and went to my other hospital. This experience was much better than the first, not only did I get seen, but the doctor on duty, reassured me, basically told me the same thing as the first doctor, but it was done with compassion, he explained what I needed to do and even wrote a prescription for an antibiotic, something he said I needed. He even told me to return once the cyst had formed a head and he would take care of it for me. I was so upset with the first doctor, the second time he has failed me as a doctor, but the second one, despite the fact that it was 3 A.M. treated me the way a patient should be treated, regardless the time, or condition. While I understand the side of the doctors and nurses, they need to put their frustration of seeing patients aside and do more than just medical treatment and show more compassion and the willingness to help someone.