Nursing jobs
The reason I don't work in th ER is simple. I can't stand things sticking out of people; like bones sticking out of skin, and intestines....well, you can fill in the rest. There is just something about that. I will gladly take the helm when people are so ill or injured their survival is questionable or in doubt. My love in nursing had always been the most complex and difficult patients that are in my area, what ever that may be. The more tubes, wires, medications, IV's, monitors and machines the better for me. But that is me.
Nursing is a profession that is one of the most versatile, flexible, creative, advancing, and sustainable around. There will always be a need for nurses. There never will be an end to those who need medical care. As the population grows, so do future requirements for those who can care for them. As technology advances, so does the need for experienced people to run the equipment AND still keep the individual in the bed the primary focus.As medical costs continue to balloon, so does the necessity of finding workable and cost effective solutions to continue to provide care.
These situations stretch across the board....they effect all sectors and levels of governments, businesses,
charities, educational institutions, socioeconomic brackets, and the list goes on. Every single individual is effected by a health care need in their life. Some more than others. And it is well known that there is a huge outlay of resources for people late in life regardless of how healthy they have been. Because of all of this, our profession stands to be one of the most important links in the chain.
There are nursing jobs everywhere. Not only in a geographic sense, but also in the way in which nurses are used to achieve a purpose. There are school nurses, insurance company nurses, nurses who do physicals, travel around and draw blood, nurses who work in the home health care sector, skilled nursing facilities, psychiatric facilities, doctor's offices, ambulance companies, flight transport nurses, hospital nurses,nurses who work in medical research, drug company reps and sales personnel, and I know there are more but I just can't think of them.
My point is this....you can do anything pretty much anywhere with this profession. Now most of the time you do have to work with people, so enjoying that would be a benefit. The money is decent...better in some aspects than others and the more experienced you are the more money you make. With that experience, the windows of opportunity expand.
I know that I can go anywhere and have a job very quickly. Within 24 hours most of the time. I can go anywhere....a-n-y-w-h-e-r-e. So in the winter when the weather may be dismal, if I choose Florida or Hawaii to Arizona could work for me. Wyoming in the summer? Vermont in the fall? Southern Utah in the spring? The Navajo reservation? These are all real possibilities with a nursing job. This job is for me.
Nursing is a profession that is one of the most versatile, flexible, creative, advancing, and sustainable around. There will always be a need for nurses. There never will be an end to those who need medical care. As the population grows, so do future requirements for those who can care for them. As technology advances, so does the need for experienced people to run the equipment AND still keep the individual in the bed the primary focus.As medical costs continue to balloon, so does the necessity of finding workable and cost effective solutions to continue to provide care.
These situations stretch across the board....they effect all sectors and levels of governments, businesses,
charities, educational institutions, socioeconomic brackets, and the list goes on. Every single individual is effected by a health care need in their life. Some more than others. And it is well known that there is a huge outlay of resources for people late in life regardless of how healthy they have been. Because of all of this, our profession stands to be one of the most important links in the chain.
There are nursing jobs everywhere. Not only in a geographic sense, but also in the way in which nurses are used to achieve a purpose. There are school nurses, insurance company nurses, nurses who do physicals, travel around and draw blood, nurses who work in the home health care sector, skilled nursing facilities, psychiatric facilities, doctor's offices, ambulance companies, flight transport nurses, hospital nurses,nurses who work in medical research, drug company reps and sales personnel, and I know there are more but I just can't think of them.
My point is this....you can do anything pretty much anywhere with this profession. Now most of the time you do have to work with people, so enjoying that would be a benefit. The money is decent...better in some aspects than others and the more experienced you are the more money you make. With that experience, the windows of opportunity expand.
I know that I can go anywhere and have a job very quickly. Within 24 hours most of the time. I can go anywhere....a-n-y-w-h-e-r-e. So in the winter when the weather may be dismal, if I choose Florida or Hawaii to Arizona could work for me. Wyoming in the summer? Vermont in the fall? Southern Utah in the spring? The Navajo reservation? These are all real possibilities with a nursing job. This job is for me.


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