Health Care Job Interview Questions - Nursing
If you are for a nursing job in health care, you will need to read this post. Below are some job interview questions for a General Duty Nursing job. The methods we used to develop these questions are the same ones we used as corporate HR in developing job interview questions for hiring managers. We have developed these questions by analyzing the core competencies or skills, job ad requirements and so forth.
General Duty Nurse Job Interview Questions
To be effective in this job, you will need to be good at resolving conflict. Sometimes you will need to resolve conflict when a patient is uncooperative with treatment or resisting you when you are providing care. Give me an example of a situation where you had to resolve conflict with an angry or abusive patient while you were providing care.
Name a time when you didn’t get along with another nurse or perhaps another co-worker. What was the situation? How did you handle it? What was the result?
Due to the nature of work in nursing, you will be required to handle medical emergencies. Tell me about a time when you made had to make a decision within an emergency or stressful situation. What was the decision? What did you consider and how did you handle it?
Nursing will require you to do shift work. Will you be able to meet these requirements?
Some polls have shown that Nurses are among the most trusted profession in the community. Being a nurse will require you to have the highest ethics and integrity. Describe a situation in which you demonstrated a strong ethical stance at work, despite pressure to do otherwise?
- What were the risks involved in taking the strong stance that you did?
- How did you overcome the pressure to change or weaken your stance?
- How did the position you took affect the relationships that you have with the others involved?
Nursing can be stressful at times dealing with sick patients. How do you monitor your own stress levels? How do you manage stress in your life? What was the most stressful situation you have been in?
List 5 traits of being a good nurse. Which one would you need the most improvement in?
As a nurse, you will be dealing with members of the public from various different ethnic and cultural backgrounds. Tell me about a time when you had to communicate to someone who did not speak your language? How did you overcome this challenge?
Why do you want to be nurse? Why do you want to serve this community?
More About These Questions
The interview questions in this post assess the essential soft skills for his particular job through its core functions. We focus on the soft skills because we have found that most candidates handle the questions designed to assess their technical proficiency very well only to stumble with the questions designed to assess their soft skills. For example, when we ask a programmer to explain what a certain set of code means or how best to handle a coding issue, most often their answer is a good one. Now when we ask the same candidate to “describe a time when you did not get along well with a co-worker and how you handled it” to assess their interpersonal skills, 9 times out of 10 they stumble. We see the same thing over and over again whether we are hiring for an accountant, teacher, and so on. Most candidates can handle questions designed to assess their technical competencies much much better than questions designed to assess their soft skills
Why does soft skills matter? Because 9 times out of 10 applicants are bypassed due to their soft skills. We hear this all the time when we debrief with the hiring manager to get their feedback on the applicant. Sometimes, the hiring managers will directly state that the applicant lacked the soft skills but more often it will be phrased as “no connection with the applicant”, or “didn’t get a good feel about the applicant” or “don’t think the applicant would fit in well” and so on.
In addition to focusing on the soft skills we have incorporated behavioral based interview questions. We focus on behavioral based interview questions because they are very prevalent in the HR industry. Behavioral questions focus on assessing past behavior by asking you to provide an example or describe a situation that has happened in the past and what you did. So because of the reasons stated and others beyond the scope of this post, you will likely be asked these questions in your next job interview.
How to Answer
Your response really depends on exactly the type of interview question asked. While interviewing skills as a hiring manager or job applicant can be quite an in depth topic and beyond the scope of this post, we have provided a quick lesson on how you can improve your interview skills. We have chosen to briefly cover the behavioral question because this is where we see most people struggle.
To ensure that you provide good answers consistently we advise that you follow a structured approach when responding to behavioral type questions. Two effective techniques to use are “STAR” (situation, task, action, result) and “PAR” (problem, action, result). These techniques are very similar to one another, so for illustrative purposes, we will discuss the STAR method.
To use the STAR technique, simply describe each element in your interview answer. So with the star technique, begin by describing the situation. Here you want to quickly give context to the interviewer (where, when, etc). Next clearly describe your task, that is what were you tasked to do in this situation. Now it is time to describe the steps or action you took to complete your task. Lastly, describe the results that you achieved. Sounds simple right? Well it is simple, but the secret is to practice responding following this structure. By following structure, you will ensure that you provide complete answers and do not omit vital pieces of information. For more information see our articles and courses on interviewing skills.
The Questions Are In Your Resume
Remember that another good source of job interview questions is your resume. Hiring managers will ask you questions based on your resume. For some people it’s hard to recall what you did last week, let alone what you did at work a few years ago. So it pays to review your resume before you go to your job interview.
For more see our online job interview and resume writing courses. So until our next post, we wish you much luck and success in your career search.
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Posted: August 13th, 2008 under job interview questions.
Comments
Comment from caroline fraser
Time November 3, 2008 at 5:07 pm
With regard to the example questions above for nursing interviews, do you have any sample answers








Comment from Sandy Adam
Time October 5, 2008 at 2:25 pm
I have an upcoming job interview as an R.N. in the E.R. of a hospital. Wondering if you can provide me with some commonly asked interview questions with answers related to this job. It would be a great help to me. Thank you for your time.