Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I'm 43 and have worked as a nurse for 20 years. It's been a rewarding and interesting career. I went back to graduate school, worked as a nurse practitioner for a number of years and am now in a very flexible work-from-home job.
The only downside is the pay. I would never be able to live in NW DC on what I make alone. I make less ($95K, 20 years into my career) than most people on DCUM seem to make their first year out of school. Nursing is a great starting salary,
it's a very, very dependable salary (there are always jobs anywhere in America) but it's difficult to raise a family, buy a house, etc. on this salary in many urban areas. In DC every nurse I know who works at GWU or GU or WHC lives an hour
or more outside of the city because they can't afford to live any closer. Or they're married to a higher income earner. In contrast, nursing can provide a great life in much of rural and middle America.
This is a good point although I would say there are opportunities for higher pay as a CRNA or more in nursing administration. Nurses can be hospital CEOs (may need an MBA) or other leadership positions.
yes, there are. But these positions are few and far between. Not everyone wants to be a CRNA and be in the OR 40 hours a week. And the CRNA job market is saturated. Not everyone wants to be a hospital CEO (which essentially is a business job). And there are a very, very small number of these jobs out there. Most nurses don't even consider these jobs "nursing".
It's like saying that a teacher can make more money being a principal or the CEO of a curriculum development company. Sure, there are teachers who do this but the jobs are few and far between and their salaries are irrelevant to the 99% of teachers who are in a classroom. They're so removed from the classroom they might as well be different careers entirely.
I actually really like nursing and I think it's great that it always gets such a positive response on DCUM. But I do think people over estimate the wages and the salary (for actual nursing-not becoming a CEO) is limited and doesn't support owning a house, raising kids, etc in an urban area.
I've become far more sensitive to this in my older age..it's not something I focused on throughout my 20s and 30s.