+1 |
Lab technicians aren't respected? |
Nurse/cop marriages make sense. They're both attractive jobs to the upwardly mobile from working class backgrounds. |
+1! Give me a break!! |
Right. And if the oil magnates are White collar then so are the roughnecks. |
And nurses aren't much without doctors. We need both. Medicine and nursing are related but separate disciplines. Nurses are trained differently than doctors. Nursing is a blend of social work, psych, medicine, and nutrition. They have a different scope of practice. Doctors diagnose and prescribe. Nurses treat and case manage. Doctors are specific and specialized. Nurses are generalized and holistic. If you want to know what you have and what to take/do, see the doctor. If you want to know how to handle living with your illness, ask the nurse. |
Fools don't live through nursing school. My nursing class was 100% Hermione Granger types -- smart, hard working, a little neurotic about grades, tough, and brave. |
Most of the nurses I know married men that make less than them. Not sure why? |
They aren't really "lumped in" with those professions anymore. |
Not all nurses have a 4-year degree. Some have an associate's degree. And a lot of hospitals employ "medical assistants" to do all of the things that nurses used to do. The medical assistants aren't required to have any degree. I think of nursing the same way I think of the trades (electricians, plumbers, et cetera). It's skilled labor that requires training but not necessarily a traditional 4-year degree. |
| It's a field that's growing in prestige and scope, and has become more grounded in research and evidence-based practice. It requires critical thinking and toughness. It's one of the professions I respect the most. I work in health care in provider education and work with MDs, nurses, hospital staff. I would be thrilled if one of my children chose this as a career path. There are so many directions nurses can take their careers, from bedside, to research, to OR, to public health, to health care admin, and for women it can offer priceless flexibility. |
| They are angels. |
| 20 years ago nurses were white, today blue collar. Smart women become doctor's and lawyers. |
I'm a Jewish nurse with a master's degree. We exist! My family has been very supportive of my career choice. I work at the bedside, have earned certification in my specialties, and care for patients who require advanced cardiac/pulmonary life support (ventricular-assist devices, ECMO, etc.). I chose nursing over medicine for many reasons (holistic approach to patient care, more lifestyle flexibility, ability to change specialties without obtaining a new degree, less student loan debt). I'm not sure what "collar" you would call me, but when sh!t gets real, the team I work with (MDs, PAs, NPs, and bedside nurses from all educational backgrounds) can save your life. I'm married to a "pink collar" librarian, FWIW. |
You sound out of touch, and you can't control your rampant apostrophe use. Maybe you're old, or jealous of a nurse in your life for some personal reason? Many docs and lawyers do fine, but I know plenty of JDs who can't get a job, or dropped out of the workforce and can't go back. And plenty of MDs who are drowning in 6 figure debt. |