Full-Time

Registered Nurse

Posted on 5/9/2026

Rogers Behavioral Health

Rogers Behavioral Health

1,001-5,000 employees

Specialized psychiatric treatment with outcomes measurement

No salary listed

Madison, WI, USA

In Person

Category
Medical, Clinical & Veterinary (1)
Requirements
  • Licensure as a Registered Nurse by the State Board of Nursing in the state of employment, and license in good standing.
  • Bachelor’s degree in nursing (BSN) preferred.
  • American Heart Association Healthcare Provider CPR certification or completion within thirty days of date of hire; bi-annual re-certification required.
  • Formal training in management of the aggressive patient required within sixty days of date of hire; annual re-certification required.
  • At the Hospital’s discretion, may be required to hold a qualified medical professional (QMP) designation; must be deemed competent to serve as a QMP, as outlined in the Medical Staff bylaws of Rogers Memorial Hospital.
  • Previous psychiatric experience with children, adolescents and adults is preferred.
  • Employees at the Child/Adolescent Day Treatment programs licensed under HFS §40 are required to have either training in psychiatric nursing, including training in work with children with mental health disorders, or one year of experience working in a clinical setting with these children.
Responsibilities
  • Complete initial assessments and documents as required.
  • Collect, record, and analyze, within prescribed timeframe, pertinent data for admission assessment according to Hospital policy, including: patient strengths and limitations that can be addressed in reaching health goals; cultural, spiritual, and ethnic factors that may impact on patient’s course of treatment; patient needs that are to be addressed at discharge; medical/physical status; history of medication compliance, reactions, and current schedule; and age-specific data regarding the patient’s individual needs.
  • Involve patient’s support systems (family, friends) in assessment and documentation.
  • Observe and document the patient’s interaction with family and friends as it is pertinent to the patient’s treatment.
  • Obtain assessment data from support systems, when appropriate, regarding the patient’s history and individual needs.
  • Act as an advocate for patients; explain patient’s rights so they can understand and obtain appropriate signatures; provide the patient with information and obtain their signature on necessary consents; act as a patient advocate, use knowledge of patient rights and responsibilities, and protect patient’s privacy and confidentiality; assist in patient orientation process.
  • Know and employ Hospital policies and procedures regarding unit safety, the necessity of gown/contraband search on admission, and carry out the process in a respectful manner; remain sensitive to individual patient/family stressors upon admission while providing pertinent unit information.
  • Initiate and update treatment plan and documentation as required; participate in planning and modifying the patient’s plan of care; evaluate data obtained by others by reviewing patient’s treatment plan and multi-disciplinary assessment for assigned patients; participate in care conferences (staffings) and represent the nursing care component of the treatment plan to others at the staffing; develop and interpret plan of care with the patient/family, updating it as indicated; write clear, concise, and obtainable treatment goals on the treatment plan for each problem; review the treatment plan as goals are achieved, changed, or updated.
  • On an ongoing basis, identify, interpret, and document information collected in nursing interview, observation, physical assessment and diagnostic data, and confer with other health care professionals, as appropriate; review current lab data and follow-up with doctor; evaluate potential for falls and initiate fall precautions, as indicated; identify potential for self-abuse, suicidality and/or assaultive behavior; develop age-appropriate interventions for the patient’s plan of care; assess changes in patient status and document interventions accordingly.
  • Implement patient care; demonstrate safe and correct medication administration by: accuracy in medication administration; maintaining current knowledge of the medication’s purpose and effects; accurately transcribing and implementing physician medication orders; maintaining a continual awareness of monitoring adverse drug reactions, drug interactions, or other unexpected consequences; regularly conducting and documenting patient education about medications; maintaining current knowledge about new pharmacologic products.
  • Identify potential patient care problems, abrupt changes, or impending instability in the patient’s condition, and exercise leadership to intervene appropriately and prevent adverse patient outcomes; use de-escalation techniques; re-evaluate safety level; identify alcohol withdrawal syndrome; identify extrapyramidal side-effects or neuroleptic malignant syndrome signs; identify significant cardiac and/or respiratory symptoms requiring immediate intervention.
  • Identify health education needs of the patient/family that will be addressed before discharge; implement age-appropriate teaching interventions to meet these educational needs; document in the patient record and treatment plan; organize patient care activities and interventions according to patient priorities and preferences, unit needs, and time constraints; implement patient care based on established care plans, hospital policies and procedures, and unit standards of care, incorporating age-specific and cultural needs as appropriate; ensure EMTALA compliance as requested by qualified medical professional.
  • Adhere to the Nursing department and Hospital’s standards of nursing practice and standards of patient care; protect patients, visitors, and staff from environmental hazards by adhering to safety and infection control standards; participate in continuing education and in-service programs to increase clinical competence; report information obtained from continuing education programs to unit staff; attend 100% of required in-services, as scheduled; participate in the Performance Improvement program on an ongoing basis.
  • Assist in the development and implementation of unit standards of care, such as safety levels of patients, unit safety/hazardous items, Kardex, standard care plans; identify problems with unit systems, communication patterns, and unit resources that impact patient care and suggest possible solutions to Clinical Services manager; identify unit educational equipment and supply needs; serve on one unit-based committee or participate in unit-based projects on an ongoing basis; participate as a project leader.
  • Carry out leadership function in patient care, staff operations, and department organization; contribute to Nursing and Hospital functions through active participation on committees and attendance at designated meetings; take initiative in evaluating and upgrading unit standards of care.
  • Assume charge nurse role: coordinate unit activities; take a leadership role in crisis situations; facilitate the admission process; communicate pertinent information regarding unit status and projected needs; manage the therapeutic milieu and use sound clinical judgment and decision-making skills; plan patient care assignments that facilitate continuity of care within the unit guidelines and are based on patient needs, unit activity, and nursing staff qualifications; ensure the unit is kept in an orderly fashion; serve as a role model for peers and others in effective use of communication, teaching, and leadership skills; supervise and delegate tasks to LPN/psychiatric technician, taking into account their educational preparation and demonstrated abilities; provide complete acuity monitors to the Patient Accounts department, to assist in accurate billing; maintain a primary caseload, according to unit standards, and provide direction for patient care.
  • Participate in projects, tasks and continuing education opportunities to improve professional skills and unit/department systems; develop goals and objectives for professional growth and discuss ways to achieve them with Clinical Services manager; take initiative to develop professional skills through continuing education; discuss progress toward work improvement goals with Clinical Services manager; seek out projects and/or extra tasks to complete, based upon the needs of the unit or the immediate shift.
  • Promote department goals and the mission of the hospital; communicate goals to fellow staff members; demonstrate measurable goal achievement; maintain department policies and procedures; include requirements and guidelines from external agencies; educate new staff regarding regulations or requirements; demonstrate acceptance and training of student interns in the department.
  • Demonstrate understanding of Joint Commission and other regulatory agency compliance regulations; involve self in the learning and application of standards relevant to the Nursing department; participate in in-services/seminars and other meetings; involve self in the education of other disciplines regarding Nursing department regulations.
  • Participate in Hospital committees, performance improvement team meetings and team projects, as directed; demonstrate punctuality and preparedness; demonstrate effective communication and organizational skills; contribute in a positive, solution-focused manner.
  • Participate in the Performance Improvement program; gain understanding of the performance improvement process; apply the PI model to your department’s activities; participate and/or create PI teams that lead to improvement in other Hospital areas; educate and involve self in the Hospital and Nursing department’s performance improvement plans.
  • Conduct self in a professional manner; demonstrate organizational skills that promote timely response to inquiries and task completion; communicate with all individuals in a positive and professional manner; resolve issues with peers in a positive manner; communicate concerns and provide solutions; attend seminars; maintain professional attire; comply with policies; accept reassignment; adjust work schedule; recognize need for support, seek appropriate assistance when needed, and offer assistance to peers; project a professional image.
Desired Qualifications
  • Previous psychiatric experience with children, adolescents and adults is preferred.
Rogers Behavioral Health

Rogers Behavioral Health

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Rogers Behavioral Health provides specialized, evidence-based psychiatric care for children, teens, and adults. It treats OCD, anxiety disorders, addiction, depression and mood disorders, eating disorders, trauma, and PTSD through a growing national network of programs. Treatments are delivered using measurement-based care, with clinicians tracking clinical outcomes to guide treatment decisions and improve results. The organization operates as a not-for-profit with more than a century of experience, distinguishing itself by its focus on proven therapies, outcome data, and access to care across multiple communities. Its goal is to deliver high-quality, data-driven psychiatric care that helps patients achieve better mental health outcomes across the country.

Company Size

1,001-5,000

Company Stage

N/A

Total Funding

N/A

Headquarters

null

Founded

1907

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Oconomowoc expansion increases eating disorder and OCD capacity to meet growing demand.
  • New Chippewa Falls behavioral health hospital expands access in underserved Wisconsin regions.
  • Participation in clinical research on ADHD supports evidence-based treatment advancement and reputation.

What critics are saying

  • Lyra Health partnership threatens margin compression on outpatient referrals through lower-cost competition.
  • Rising clinician wages 15–20% since 2023 threaten ROI on $44-bed construction project.
  • Concentrated Wisconsin footprint exposes admission volume to regional economic downturn and insurance contraction.

What makes Rogers Behavioral Health unique

  • Specialized residential treatment for eating disorders and OCD with 44 new inpatient beds.
  • Board-certified psychiatrists lead treatment teams across 10-state inpatient and outpatient network.
  • AI-powered Limbic chatbot streamlines patient intake and initial assessments at multiple locations.

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Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

Life Insurance

Disability Insurance

Health Savings Account/Flexible Spending Account

401(k) Retirement Plan

Employee Stock Purchase Plan

Tuition Reimbursement

Wellness Program

Employee Assistance Program (EAP)

Company News

PR Newswire
Feb 6th, 2025
Recovery.Com Unveils "State Of Recovery 2025" Report Highlighting Key Patient Search Trends And Insights From The Behavioral Health Experts

Platform with 20,000+ providers positioned to share recovery insights for 2025 and beyondMADISON, Wis., Feb. 6, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Recovery.com, a global platform that connects patients, loved ones, and providers to mental health and addiction treatment options, has released its first-ever State of Recovery report.Based on Recovery.com search data and Google Trends data, this report offers insights into what those seeking recovery are searching for, changes in clinical treatment approaches as well as expert-backed predictions on where the recovery landscape may be heading in 2025. Topics covered in the State of Recovery 2025 include:Growing Interest in Alternative Therapies: Psychedelics like ketamine and ibogaine are gaining mainstream attention for mental health treatment, though legal and regulatory challenges remain.Psychedelics like ketamine and ibogaine are gaining mainstream attention for mental health treatment, though legal and regulatory challenges remain. Rising Demand for Flexible Treatment Options: Increased searches for outpatient and virtual care reflect a shift away from traditional residential treatment, driven by cost concerns, accessibility issues, and work-life balance needs.Increased searches for outpatient and virtual care reflect a shift away from traditional residential treatment, driven by cost concerns, accessibility issues, and work-life balance needs. Expanding Executive Recovery Services: Executives are increasingly seeking specialized recovery programs that balance the ability to work and long-term well-being.Executives are increasingly seeking specialized recovery programs that balance the ability to work and long-term well-being. Nontraditional recovery groups are bringing community to a previously lacking market, offering outlets like active sober groups for practical and personal connections that support recovery.are bringing community to a previously lacking market, offering outlets like active sober groups for practical and personal connections that support recovery