What is it like being a nurse?
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Okay I'm a 16 year old guy, who has always wanted to be a paramedic, nurse or doctor/ surgeon. I'm smart - last year I got 90%+ in four of my major exams. Being a male I'm stereotyped to become a doctor instead of a nurse, and my parents encourage me to become a doctor because of the pay, title and prestige. I'm smart, but becoming a doctor isn't just about being smart - it's also about dedication, and years of study. Even if I managed to get good enough marks to get into medical school, I don't think I could study for another 7-12 years after high school. So, do I want to become a doctor? I think it would be great and if I had the opportunity I would take it, but no, I don't want to become a doctor. Instead I'm looking at nursing - no more pressure to get insanely high marks, only 4 years of study instead of 7-12. But the reason I want a career like this is to save lives.. and from what I've been told, doctors save lives - not nurses. Nurses just care for people, that's it. This might sound harsh, but - I don't want to care, feed or clean people. I want to fix them, I want to be responsible for their life. I want to save lives, not care for them. So I guess my question is - what is it like being a nurse? What do you do? How often do you save a life? What are the different kinds of nursing like - such as ER nurse, critical nurse, surgical nurse, oncology (cancer?) nurse? Do ER nurses get to stitch people up and physically save lives like doctors? Or do they just stand back and write on charts, care for the patient, but do nothing serious? Do surgical nurses help in the surgery, hands-on with the surgeon, or do they care for the patient before and after the surgery? Do nurse anesthetists administer anesthesia in surgery and do nothing else, or does their job involve more than that? I know I've got heaps of questions, and I know that I probably have heaps of misconceptions. But if I become a nurse - a male nurse - I want to make sure that it's worth it. I want to make sure that it's the right career.. and I want to make sure that I'm making a positive difference in peoples lives, and that I do have the ability to save lives. Being an ER nurse or working in surgery sounds great because I like adrenaline and I work well in stressful situations - I'm good at being calm and thinking on the spot. Those jobs would suit me. But I want some insight on what's its really like.. so, if you've bothered to read this huge wall of text and can answer all of my questions, it would be greatly appreciated! Thank you. :D
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Answer:
Nurses are at the bedside when something happens and they are the first to initiate treatment for saving the patient's life. They don't wait for 2 hours watching the patient die while the doctor drives in from where ever he or she might be. There are many different specialties in nursing. You also have to think past just a "skill" like "stitching up someone" and the education as to why, when and follow up treatment. Almost any tech with a few hours of training can put a couple stitches into someone but they many not be able to do many other things that a doctor or nurse can due to the difference in education. Nurses would have nothing to write in the chart if they did not see the patient. Who do you think starts the IVs, gives the medications, cleans and dresses wounds and do hundreds of different procedures? If you have a problem with stereotyping, find another profession. You will carry on that stereotyping into the job and be pretty bad at whatever field you decide. This is the year 2012. Men and women have the same opportunities in medicine. It takes a team in medicine to "fix" a patient. There will be nurses of many types, nursing assistants, Nurse Practitioners,Physician Assistant, doctors, Respiratory Therapist, Medical Lab Technologist, Dietitian, Radiology Technologist, Physical Therapist, Occupational Therapist and Speech Language Pathologists. Any or all of these professionals may place a vital role in "fixing" a patient. Here is a school that has many different degrees offered for you to know what is involved. http://www.llu.edu/explore/explore-academic-schools.html This website tells you about CRNAs. http://www.aana.com/Pages/default.aspx Advanced Practice Nurses http://www.nursingworld.org/EspeciallyForYou/AdvancedPracticeNurses.aspx Critical Care Nurses http://www.aacn.org/ Here is a long list of the many different nursing specialties and the professional association for them. http://www.nurse.org/orgs.shtml To be a doctor you and your family would need to be prepared to get you through at least 12 years of schooling and over $250,000 in debt.
Dean at Yahoo! Answers Visit the source
Other answers
You have to make people better
Amy
Fyremin's answer is probably one of the most ignorant I've read in awhile. Clearly Fyremin is not in any type of medical profession including Paramedic. He sounds like a bitter EMT who didn't get into nursing school. Being embarrassed by personal hygiene is not a good trait for a health care professional. Either Fyremin is about 12 years old or just displays the maturity of a 12 year old who has watched too many Third Watch reruns. His whole attitude towards "nasty patients" further demonstrates he lacks knowledge about health care. As posted in PA4545's answer there are many, many opportunities for nurses. They can expand their scope to whatever the job calls for and extend their education to advance their career. The Paramedic is primarily limited to an ambulance or fire department. If they work in the ER, a nurse will supervise them. The few hundred hours of training limits their scope of practice and career growth unless they are with the fire department and can advance as a firefighter...not Paramedic. Paramedics also do not make a medical diagnosis. They make a field diagnosis to intiate some protocol be it right or wrong. Only Doctors, Physician Assistants and Nurse Practitioners can make a medical diagnosis. As a Flight Paramedic, they will be partnered with an RN who will have the advantage of education and critical care experience which will make them the team leader.
Buddy
This is a bit long, but if you want a good answer, take the time to read it: I've been a nurse - and I'm a veteran and a father and husband - for more than forty years. Doctors do not MAKE people better - they help people make themselves better. To do this, they use a variety of tools, one of which is nursing staff. The nurse is, among other things, the eyes, ears and hand of the physician. The arts and sciences of medicine and nursing are complementary, not exclusionary. For example: in surgery, there is a job known as "scrub nurse" wherein the nurse assists directly in the operation by passing instruments, holding retractors, preparing sutures, wielding suction devices, applying dressings. There is also the "circulating nurse" who moves about the operating suite making certain the needed tools are ready and available, fetching supplies and materials which are needed as an operation progresses, and who controls who and what enters the operating suite. The "circulating" makes sure the "scrub", the surgeon and the anesthetist and anyone else authorized to be in the operating suite is properly gowned, masked and gloved. Circulator communicates with others outside the OR if necessary during a procedure. Each of these jobs demands an extraordinary level of training and experienced, and of course, OR is a very high-stress job. I stayed for six months before deciding the stress wasn't worth it and moved to a charge nurse position elsewhere in the hospital. An RN is responsible for aftercare of surgical patients and directs caregivers such as Practical Nurses and personal care assistants - sometimes called "nurses aides". An RN is a teacher - as an RN I taught a smoking cessation class open to the public. Others of us teach diet and nutrition. Still others work with licensed therapists in occupational and recreational therapy. There is a very important area of nursing called "Industrial nursing" in which we are the daily health resource for factories and major business offices. Among other tasks assigned such a nurse is keeping track of a businesses compliance with various state and federal regulations, such as those mandated under OSHA. As an RN, I went back to college to study public health. By the time I was ready to retire, I had been nursing supervisor for a 300-bed hospital and consulted on a daily basis with business and community leaders on matters of public health. In retirement, I still consult on such matters on a regular basis. Becoming an RN is not merely wiping some old fart's butt and taking temperature and blood pressure. It's a highly skilled and respectable job - and I don't regret not having gone to medical school in the least!
Will Nickel
What it's REALLY like: Nurses wipe *** and give people baths. They are not allowed to clinically diagnose, they are not allowed to treat or even give aspirin without getting a doctors written order. You won't have to be great under stress because any time anything difficult arrises a crew of doctors and PA's are going to jump in and take over and just ask you to either chart or hand them things. Working in an ER or an OR will require you to work on a floor or in a nursing home until you get enough experience or find an open spot in an ER/OR, as most people want those positions as well. If you want to save lives, start with Paramedic school, you learn a lot more, get to do a lot more, and don't have to wipe ***. Plus you can still work in an ER as a medic if you really want to. You will still get a ton of BS calls and nasty patients, but as a paramedic if you choose to go to med school you will have a huge advantage and get in a lot easier.
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