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Nursing as a second careerRating: (votes: 0) Comment:
I am soo glad that you posted your story. It is an inspiration to me. I also am pursuing nursing as a second career. After 25 years providing technical support in the communication industry I am finally getting the opportunity to pursue my true dream career. AT&T decided they wanted all of the support managers to live in Texas, so the job moved without me. Anyway it gives me the opportunity to go to nursing school. I do not have a degree already, so I am in the traditional BSN program. I can relate to your comment about being older than alot of the students, I think I am older than some of the professors . It is really scary for me but I want to stick out. Thanks again for your post, good luck to you in all that you pursue. Hopefully I will get the chance to join the ranks of you and all the good people who's posts I have had the pleasure of reading.:bowingpur
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Thank you for your article. It confirms my decision to change careers too! I am also in the midst of changing my career from fitness to nursing. I will be attending an accelerated BSN next month and plan to resign from my fitness manager position next week. However, I intend to keep fitness "gigs" here and there and continue to motivate and educate others to move! Exercise is medicine! The fitness industry sure has changed over the last 10 years and I see a degree in nursing as a way to expand my expertise as there are hardly any "apparently healthy" people anymore. We are an unhealthy country --much of it attributed to sedentary lifestyles. I am ecstatic to explore a new career and a new persective in the health industry. Much kudos to you and thanks for the inspiration!
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Its interesting to me that you all are combining careers. I am a massage therapist and at 50 years old I am back at school getting my BSN. I too hope to be able to merge the two proffesions. So far my interest is swaying toward oncology because cancer patients seem to be more interested in merging alternative and traditional medicine. I am looking forward to the new career and new opportunities and working through my old age.
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Quote from tammyca1Its interesting to me that you all are combining careers. I am a massage therapist and at 50 years old I am back at school getting my BSN. I too hope to be able to merge the two proffesions. So far my interest is swaying toward oncology because cancer patients seem to be more interested in merging alternative and traditional medicine. I am looking forward to the new career and new opportunities and working through my old age.
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Sorry to sound so dismal and cranky here folks, but it must be said. Accelerated nursing programs is a number one reason fewer nurses have jobs right now. Nursing schools are churning out too many new grads at too high a rate. What you have is a field that is oversaturated with nurses. New nurses are carrying high student loan debt and cant find work. Old nurses like me transitioned away from hospital work and SNFs because of the working conditions and found meager wages, prn work and no benefits. Trying to transition back is like climbing the great wall of China. New grads, old grads and middle grads are all have a tough time finding work. I am really not sure there is any benefit to an Accelerated program, other than to race to the front of the job line. I went to a traditional nursing school as a second career, and the traditional program was grueling. I cant imagine what an accelerated program was like. As an aside , I had a Masters Degree in a different field when I entered nursing school, and thought nursing school would be a breeze. Wrong I was. A 3.9 GPA in my Masters degree, but only a 3.4 in Nursing.
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Let me just add another comment to this thread. I found that my experiences as a brand new nurse are almost exactly the same as they are today. The older , more experienced nurses are not retiring. These are the nurses that are the ones to "precept" new nurses almost all of the time. Instead of being welcomed in as a new nurse, my "newness" to the field was viewed as a threat to the existing staff nurses on my hospital floors. As new grads began to flood the gates, I believe with certainty, most existing staff became fearful for their jobs. True to some extent, more nurses usually means less job security. The more hospitals hired new grads, the greater the threat to the older nurses. This equated to back-biting, eating one's young, and personal sabotage among peers. Every single one of my nursing school colleagues faced this challenge in their new careers. Most never transitioned out of orientation due to the upside- down and backwards way that these orientation programs were set up. Having said that, I think most hospitals have stopped hiring new grads because they dont stay put long enough to justify the high cost of training. This is because the new nurses get de-railed and picked on for stupid things, get discouraged, and leave. It is my hope that one day, retirements will begin to happen, and more doors will open up for new nurses to get a fair shot. Its not happening right now. Think very carefully before you sign loan papers to get into this profession. Sorry if I have offended anyone, or have broken your dreams of being a nurse. I had the same dream, and it turned into a royal nightmare.
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My cousin first earned a BSN, then 2 years later went to law school. Now she works for a major corporation that utilized the two professions defending them against medical claims.
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I really wish I did that
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@ looking for work - yes I believe the nursing shortage that was reported was just to saturate the market and bring the wages down. My program is not accelerted - Its a four year program that actually has an extra semester tagged on to it! My school is expensive - I will be in debt for about 80,000 in school loans when Im done. Im doing this because I thought one day gee if I died tommorrow what have I contributed to the world and I didnt feel I was doing enough. I think nursing will open the door for me to fill that void. I am a person that always tries to look outside the box. That said, I know I will take the first job offered to me when I get out of school just so I can start to pay off my loans!
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I really did things backwards and went into nursing later in my career. If I had to do it all over again, I would have skipped the Bachelors and Masters, and nursing degree and went straight to med school. Life is a labriynth of twists and turns. I have to do the best with what I have. 20K still in loans outsatnding, and I have hung up my nursing shoes for awhile, maybe for good. Best to you when you finish, and I hope the jobs come around
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Quote from looking for workI really did things backwards and went into nursing later in my career. If I had to do it all over again, I would have skipped the Bachelors and Masters, and nursing degree and went straight to med school.
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