Becoming a Nurse Practitioner
The field I am going into is very versatile and large. I plan on going into the nursing field; I will be majoring as a nurse practitioner and minoring in orthopedic nursing. I plan on doing this because I have always been fascinated with the way the body works and how God designed us. When I was in eighth grade, I had patella tendonitis, and in eleventh grade I was diagnosed with clinical rheumatoid arthritis. Those events were what steered my dreams of being a nurse into a specific place. I am going into the field of nursing to learn about the problems my body has, to figure out how to help people with the same problems as me, and help people who face other diagnoses. In this paper, I will be describing the backstory
I am Amanda Selich, 27 years old, and have been living in San Francisco for roughly 10 years. I grew up in the East Bay with my 3 siblings and was raised by a single father. Much of my childhood was spent taking care of my younger siblings. This responsibility was so demanding I was forced to drop out of high school and become their “surrogate mother”. However at the age of 24 I was able to get my GED and finally attend college. In fact this past May I graduated from City College of San Francisco with highest honors in Science and Math.
There are many different fields to choose from while working as a Registered Nurse. “Registered nurses work in hospitals, physicians' offices, home healthcare services, and nursing care facilities. Others work in correctional facilities, schools, or serve in the military.” (bls.gov). You can also specialize in a specific type of nursing by seeking employment in that individual line of work or by taking a certification test. “The Nursing2011 Salary Survey reports that nurses certified in a specialty earn an average of $10,200 per year more than nurses who are not.” (pncb.org). If you choose to go further with your education you can continue past a bachelor’s degree and get a master’s degree becoming a nurse practitioner.
If you plan on taking a career of becoming a registered nurse here's what you need to know, registered nurses provide care for patients with so many different medical conditions. Nursing provides both professional career path as well as personal satisfaction that comes from giving healthcare services. As one of the fastest growing careers in the United states with large increase in the healthcare facilities throughout the country the demand of registered nurses is extremely high.
During my four years as an RN I’ve had the chance to care for many interesting and wonderful people, many of them during the worst days of their lives. Many of the people you meet are sad, angry, anxious and very scared.
Nurse practitioners are advanced practice registered nurses who have received special courses and training. They usually work closely with doctors and can perform many high-level primary care tasks. They often specialize in specific types of practice such as pediatrics, psychiatry, or obstetrics. Some establish private practices; however, most work in doctors' offices, hospitals, or neighborhood health centers. Their duties often include taking detailed medical histories and performing complete physical exams, providing diagnoses and recommending treatment plans, treating common medical conditions, illnesses, and injuries, prescribing limited medications, and counseling patients and families. They also care
The medical field has to be ran by the utmost wonderful nurses. Nurse Practitioners (NP) are Advanced Practice Registered Nurses who provide care to patients throughout the lifespan, all the way from premature newborns to the elderly. Physician Assistants (PA) practice medicine on a team under the supervision of physicians and surgeons. A nurse practitioner has a more rewarding career then a physician assistant because of the education requirements, commission, job abilities, training and advancements in career.
The reason why I think I would be a good nurse practitioner because I like to help other children. The duties of a nurse practitioner is you have to do treatment on adults or children they also give check ups. They take care of sick people and do more thing like surgeries.
In 1965 the first Nurse Practitioner (NP) training program was created by a physician Henry Silver and a nurse Loretta Ford. There was a shortage of primary care physicians due to increased specializations in medicine. The shortages were very evident in rural areas and the creators of the program realized nurses had the potential to fill the primary care gap within their communities. This NP training was informal and lacked credentials, leading to criticism and mistrust of those providing care. The first master’s program for NP was established by Boston College in 1967.
As a native Mainer, I have adopted the mentality that all things worthwhile require hard work. Growing up on the rocky, briny coast taught that lobster shells must be cracked, fiddleheads must be plucked from their bristly nest in the cold spring earth, and blueberries are easier picked when you are young and closer to the ground. Maine is a difficult state, but not without rewards. Becoming a Nurse Practitioner through USM's options program will also prove challenging and intense, with the lifelong reward of a career that has meaning and value to me.
I was excited to read that you are an instructor for a licensed practical nurse program. The state of Maine currently does not have any licensed practical nurse programs; the last facility that taught offered course in Licensed Practical Nurse closed down about a year ago. I am unfamiliar with the nursing workforce in Massachusetts, but here in Maine we already struggle with a nursing shortage. Licensed practical nurses have played a big role in my state in filling nursing needs in doctor's offices, community programs and long-term care facilities. Actually in my experience the nursing homes in the state of Maine are predominately staffed by Licensed Practical Nurses. I find that in my healthcare career that Licensed Practical Nurse role in
From the 1920s through the 1940s, some doctors were continually on call, causing states and accreditation councils to place 80-hour limits on residents' workweeks for the first time, Kernahan says. Rules were implemented nationally in 2003, and tightened in 2011. Physicians' paychecks were also high, and the country's emphasis on lower costs prompted more hospitals to create new, lower-paying jobs for people to take on some of the responsibilities that used to fall to doctors alone. Those roles, including that of the nurse practitioner, began to emerge some 45 years ago. A Nurse Practioner is a registered nurse with a master's or doctoral degree that can diagnose diseases, prescribe medications, and initiate treatment plans, according to
It takes a lot to faze me, blood, guts and bodily fluids are of no exception. I'm looking into the health field, as a registered nurse. My ASVAB score pointed to more of a social and realistic career, which pointed to more health related careers. I'm currently in the Lycoming Career Technology Center for health careers and I'm in my third year. I knew I wanted to pursue a career in field and I knew it would be a Nurse. Being in any occupation of the health field isn't easy the same goes for nurses. Countless hours of college education, repetitive relearning classes, semi-high salary and long hours, doesn't sound fun for some, but for me, it sounds great.
Major role in the Medical Field; Becoming a Nurse Practitioner “To do what nobody else will do, a way that nobody else can do, in spite of all we go through; that is to be a nurse” (Williams, Rawsi, 2014). Nurse practitioners are nurses who are qualified to treat certain medical conditions without the direct supervision of a doctor (Google, 2015). NPs require a lot of education because they are an important job in society. Their level of education is much higher than most nurses. They go to school to be able to do more than one occupation in the medical field and they put it all together to become a Nurse practitioner.
“When you’re a nurse you know that everyday you will touch a life or a life will touch yours” ("Home"). Pursuing nursing, specifically Registered Nursing (RN) was never a question, I have always known that is what I would become. Registered Nurses work for patient care, and explains and teaches patients about their health care needs. Nursing has been in my family now for three generations and I am here to carry out the legacy. It is important to understand the education and training requirements, skills and talents needed, salary benefits offered, and the duties when committing to this career.
So many people say saving lives takes hard work and extensive training, but are they really dedicated to do the work it takes. Medical school takes hard work and so much time to do the work as being a nurse. Being a nurse you have to have the heart and the great skills to be the best care giver you could be to a patient in need for help. Not only are you impacting someone else life but you are also impacting yourself with the great benefits they offer you, the way the patients acknowledge you by your hard work. Nurses make sure they have the care they need. Nursing is one of the most longest working shifts in the medical field you will ever experience.