Nurses can also make $$$$ in surgical equipment sales, insurance, pharmaceuticals, or moving on to being practitioners or CRNAs. The school you go to DOES matter for many of the same reasons it matters for any other field. Going to Penn or Hopkins is going to a vastly different experience, and filled with different types of students than is you go to community college and get your associate’s degree/RN. |
Unless she is lying in her official resume which would be bizarre: Dr. Cunningham is an accomplished nurse executive, scientist, and educator who has made significant contributions to advancing nursing practice and clinical care. Cunningham is currently Chief Executive Officer at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and Adjunct Professor and Assistant Dean for Clinical |
Dr. Regina Cunningham received her BSN from College of St Vincent
Kevin Sowers received his BSN from Capital University Schol of Nursing I'm not trying to minimize them in any way but neither of these two accomplished nurse executives started out at Penn or Hopkins. |
I feel sorry for your kids. Also, your disdain for nurses shows when you seem to think the alternative to going to Penn or Hopkins is 'going to community college and get your associate's degree'. Most DC area hospitals require BSN prepared nurses. |
Distain for nurses? What are you talking about? Of course there are benefits to going to a better school, regardless of major. |
If you have the funds to throw at a nursing degree from a prestigious school or will get a ton of financial aid, sure, go for it. For the majority of the people, though, it doesn't matter. |
1000x yes. True across all majors /career fields. Not every parent or student puts saving $ at the top of the list for selecting a college. Selection for peer group and possibilities at the better schools is valid. For the least wealthy families the top schools can be free, but even for those of us who are full pay we may encourage fit over $ |
In a hospital setting, nurses do not work for doctors. they work for the hospital. Nurses are not subserviant. As another poster mentioned, healthcare is a team sport - and that is part of the reason it is an awesome field. Hospitals will often have a director of nursing. That person typically has a doctorate. There is often a director of medicine.
A BSN matters and will open up jobs that an associates degree won't. But there are many ways to complete a BSN after earning an associate's degree. Pick the program right for you. As in other majors, doing well will matter if you want to go to graduate school. |
“ In a hospital setting, nurses do not work for doctors. they work for the hospital. Nurses are not subserviant.”
You do what the doctor says. If you disagree with the doctor, the doctor’s opinion will prevail. Yes, you are subservient, and should be. |
What? Again it's a team. Nurses use their education and clinical skills to care for patients. Doctors write orders. The pharmacists, nurses, physical therapists, nutritionists all have the ability and responsibility to ask about them. The nurse is with the patient in the hospital more than anyone else. The doctor isn't the person who knows how to use the IV pump on the MRI machine...these attitudes are exhausting. May you never need medical care. |
I'm a nurse and frankly this frustrated the crap out of me and is a big reason why I left bedside nursing fairly early on. I was a Hopkins grad, worked in a university teaching hospital and was taking orders from 21 year old residents who knew nothing. YES, nurses are free to question orders and they are the eyes and the ears at the bedside and in critical care they function under a lot of standing orders (If XYZ, do ABC) which gives more autonomy than floor nursing but ultimately as an RN in a hospital you are not making the decisions or calling the shots. You are following the orders and the decision-making process of another person and may times that person is an idiot. |
The Doctor drives the Garbage truck and the nurses pick up the garbage. We get it big shot. |
Thank you. Glad you saw the light. A lot of nurse wannabes here pretending this is not the case. |
Nurse executive here. No one cares where you went to school unless your goal is to get a PhD and do nursing research. Hospitals have a set scale that is based on experience. The pay is what it is. |