Thursday, August 4, 2011

A Range of Nurse Practitioner Jobs for Certified NPs

There are a ton of jobs that are available for a qualified nurse practitioner. Practitioners work in a ton medical institutions, some of which are hospitals, clinics, airlines, cruise ships, military, operating rooms, emergency rooms, neonatal department. To work in these places, there is absolutely one thing that each practitioner must be, they have to be qualified. 
Qualified practitioners can even deliver babies and perform sutures during a surgery.

Becoming a qualified NP is a serious journey. It's like a long ladder that is going to take some time to climb. A practitioner is an former registered nurse who is now an advanced level nurse. NPs perform tasks that are able to perform tasks similar to a MD. To tell the truth, there are states that have rule and regulations that dictate what a practitioner can do within their scope of practice, the biggest of which whether or not they can work without the supervision of a doctor.

Some states allow this, some states let practitioners work independently with a private practice whereas other states make it mandatory for a NP to work with licensed physicians. Registered nurses and LPNs aren't given the privileges and benefits that a practitioner gets, and they most definitely don't have the freedoms and responsibilities that a nurse practitioner has. This is a rewarding and fulfilling career for passionate people who get a sense of fulfillment helping people, and it most definitely pays well with practitioners making on average $80,000 a year.

Some can make up to six figures depending on specialty, experience and location. So the big question is, "how do you become a NP?" To put it simply, you need to get your bachelors of science in nursing so that you are a working registered nurse. No practitioner program is going to take an applicant who isn't an experience registered nurse, or at least I've never heard of it. The second thing you have to do is get your masters in nursing degree from an accredited institution and you need to complete a practitioner specialization program. Almost every NP program there is will focus on a specialty. Whether it be oncology, pediatrics, family care, or neonatal. There is no exam that is required for you to take so that you can become a certified practitioner. Just finish NP program and get your state license to practice.

A Nurse Practitioner has a higher salary than a RN as I already mentioned. Don't expect to be a practitioner who works a simple 9 to 5. Practitioners work on calls that can come at any time, especially when there aren't doctors available for patients. Because of the fact that practitioners have the training and education that allow them to do tasks similar to doctors, they can be relied on when doctors aren't around.

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