That is a very antiquated view of nurses. The field has and is changing, thankfully for the better in terms of more respect for the work nurses do.Anonymous wrote:I'd say the lab technician and the nurse is pretty comparable. Many are not college graduates but an increasing number are. And both have a professional type skill but are subordinate to the "higher" professional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RNs are to physicians what lab technicians are to scientists.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems like a lot of nurses are married to cops, another white collar/blue collar hybrid.
My circle of friends find that firefighters and police officers seem to marry teachers and nurses. I'm an rn, dh is an officer. BFF is a teacher, her dh is a ff. We know lots of couples like this
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RNs are to physicians what lab technicians are to scientists.![]()
Anonymous wrote:White collar. They have to get at least a college nursing degree and they have to know a poor medical facts.
Anonymous wrote:Who the F cares?!
If I am in a hospital, I want to be seen by good nurses. I could care less about their collar color.
Yes, I understand this line of thinking but nurses be they BSN or ASN educated are all tested on the same material. Those extra courses are more management, community health etc slanted in a BSN. Besides, really the first year of nursing is where the real education comes in. I would take a community college experienced nurse over a brand new yale educated one for the care of myself or my family anyday! Another thing is pass rates for the licensing exam- a local community college has a waaaay better NCLEX pass rate and reputation than a local BSN program. You can't always take it at face value that just because it's community college it's poor education or 'lesser than' a BSN program.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LPN blue collar, RN white collar
The Penn poster got me thinking...I think the "problem" (not that it's really a problem but) is that an RN encompasses a very widddeee range of education levels. You can have an RN that has an associate degree from Bob's Trade School, or an RN that has their bachelor's from Penn or Columbia. I mean granted they're not probably not doing the same job (I don't know much about the nursing field) but it's not like say, a lawyer, where every lawyer has the exact same amount of education, or say, an investment banker, where you can be reasonably certain that they have a strong educational "pedigree" or are otherwise brilliant.
Doctors can graduate from Harvard or Middle Tennessee State U. A lawyer could graduate from Yale or from Bob Jones U and pass the same bar.
True, but all doctors have to complete the same (number-wise) four years of undergrad, four years of medical school, however many years for their specialty, residency, etc...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LPN blue collar, RN white collar
The Penn poster got me thinking...I think the "problem" (not that it's really a problem but) is that an RN encompasses a very widddeee range of education levels. You can have an RN that has an associate degree from Bob's Trade School, or an RN that has their bachelor's from Penn or Columbia. I mean granted they're not probably not doing the same job (I don't know much about the nursing field) but it's not like say, a lawyer, where every lawyer has the exact same amount of education, or say, an investment banker, where you can be reasonably certain that they have a strong educational "pedigree" or are otherwise brilliant.
Doctors can graduate from Harvard or Middle Tennessee State U. A lawyer could graduate from Yale or from Bob Jones U and pass the same bar.
True, but all doctors have to complete the same (number-wise) four years of undergrad, four years of medical school, however many years for their specialty, residency, etc...