Anonymous wrote:I once knew a nurse who was wild.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A psychiatric nurse practitioner with his or her own practice can easily make 200,000 a year seeing patients two days that week. But as with any provider there is work that you do after hours such as calls and labs
https://www.glassdoor.com/Salaries/psychiatric-nurse-practitioner-salary-SRCH_KO0,30.htm
Average pay for a full time psychiatric nurse practitioner is 117k, decent money but nowhere near 200k.
Obviously if they have there own practice they can make more, but that is out of reach of most nurses and has more to do with being a small business owner.
NPs or PAs cannot have their own practice. They have to work under/with docs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A psychiatric nurse practitioner with his or her own practice can easily make 200,000 a year seeing patients two days that week. But as with any provider there is work that you do after hours such as calls and labs
https://www.glassdoor.com/Salaries/psychiatric-nurse-practitioner-salary-SRCH_KO0,30.htm
Average pay for a full time psychiatric nurse practitioner is 117k, decent money but nowhere near 200k.
Obviously if they have there own practice they can make more, but that is out of reach of most nurses and has more to do with being a small business owner.
NPs or PAs cannot have their own practice. They have to work under/with docs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A psychiatric nurse practitioner with his or her own practice can easily make 200,000 a year seeing patients two days that week. But as with any provider there is work that you do after hours such as calls and labs
https://www.glassdoor.com/Salaries/psychiatric-nurse-practitioner-salary-SRCH_KO0,30.htm
Average pay for a full time psychiatric nurse practitioner is 117k, decent money but nowhere near 200k.
Obviously if they have there own practice they can make more, but that is out of reach of most nurses and has more to do with being a small business owner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have an in-law who is a nurse and makes $200k a year working 2 days a week, without the student loan debt and insurance that a doctor needs. Anyone who looks down on that is an idiot.
What kind of job does s/he have? That sounds very unusual.
I suspect that they left out some major details or simply inflated the numbers. I know many nurses and not one would come close to 200k @ 2 days /week.
Looks like a duck, sounds like a duck ... probably a duck.
https://money.usnews.com/careers/best-jobs/registered-nurse/salary
"The BLS [U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics] reports the median salary for a registered nurse was $68,450 in 2016. The best-paid 10 percent of RNs made more than $102,990, while the bottom-paid 10 percent earned less than $47,120." And that's for full-time jobs, not less than half time work.
Yep, once you add in shift differential, weekend differential and overtime, hospital nurses make significantly more than that.
I guess all the best paid nurses are in this area.
I know quite a few nurses. None of them with more than 5 years of experiences make under 100K
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have an in-law who is a nurse and makes $200k a year working 2 days a week, without the student loan debt and insurance that a doctor needs. Anyone who looks down on that is an idiot.
What kind of job does s/he have? That sounds very unusual.
I suspect that they left out some major details or simply inflated the numbers. I know many nurses and not one would come close to 200k @ 2 days /week.
Looks like a duck, sounds like a duck ... probably a duck.
https://money.usnews.com/careers/best-jobs/registered-nurse/salary
"The BLS [U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics] reports the median salary for a registered nurse was $68,450 in 2016. The best-paid 10 percent of RNs made more than $102,990, while the bottom-paid 10 percent earned less than $47,120." And that's for full-time jobs, not less than half time work.
Anonymous wrote:A psychiatric nurse practitioner with his or her own practice can easily make 200,000 a year seeing patients two days that week. But as with any provider there is work that you do after hours such as calls and labs