Nurse Practitioner Jobs Offer as Much Professional Opportunity and Earnings as Regular Nurses Plus More Independence


by Karen P Williams - Date: 2010-08-01 - Word Count: 518 Share This!

The Independence of Being a Nurse Practitioner

If the job you have currently as a registered nurse does not allow you as much independence as you would like to have or if you feel you would like to bring the practice of your profession down to a more personal level with your patients, what you need is a nurse practitioner job.

How to Go About It?

To qualify for furthering your studies as a nurse practitioner, you should already have a Bachelor's certificate in nursing (bsn). Additionally, you should have passed the nursing board exams. Besides that, having one or two years of experience in nursing work, not necessarily specialized, will be a great advantage for you. If you already have all those aforementioned prerequisites, you have to earn a masters degree in any of the fields of specialization for nurse practitioners. Naturally the school you get this certificate from has to be accredited.

Possible Areas of Specialization

Some of the areas of specialization that are available in nurse practitioner jobs are:

1.Giving specialized care to patients suffering acute physical conditions. These illnesses are characterized by pronounced symptoms and short duration. Such conditions are met with in emergency rooms and transient health care facilities. This type of nurse practitioner job is called "Acute Care Nursing" and has top opportunities waiting for the nurse practitioner.

2.Providing long term health care for grown-ups. This type of nurse practitioner job is called "Adult Nursing" and involves the practitioner in researching and planning for the prevention and elimination of health problems in the persons he/she is looking after. In this type of job, the nurse practitioner usually has a dedicated staff of assistants working under him/her.

3.Providing health care services and plans for the elderly. This type of nurse practitioner job is called "Geriatric Nursing." The practitioner focuses on the ailments that often affect the aged. Therefore, he/she has to create health plans for dealing with all the chronic illnesses that are common with old people.

4."Occupational Health Nursing" involves the nurse practitioner in detecting health hazards in specific work environments, proposing plans to eliminate such hazards and devising means to improve conditions in the work place and prevent other hazards from realizing themselves.

5."Parish Nursing" incorporates spiritual health with physical health and makes the nurse practitioner responsible for promoting both of them in the parish she serves. This line of nurse practitioner jobs is ideal for people who are spiritually inclined and who perceive a close inter-relationship between the good we do and the health we have.
6.Another type of nurse practitioner jobs involves the practitioner in the care of people who are psychologically disturbed or mentally ill. This line of work also extends to looking after those who are prone to depression, such as lonely elderly people, and keeping them in a positive state of mind.

The Best Option for Self-Motivated People

In some states the nurse practitioner is as independent as physicians in diagnosing and treating their patients. In others, they need the endorsement of a physician for all their diagnoses and treatments.

Either way, if you are an independent minded nurse, this is the way for you to proceed with your career.


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