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Sep 25, 2002, 03:16 PM
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EASY ADMISSION CRNA PROGRAMS not ICU advice!
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Yes, I understand everyone is saying don’t hurry and lot of ICU experience is good. I got it! Thank you. No one seems to be listening to what I am asking which is about admission!
Hello out there!!!!
Does anyone know specifics about admission preferences? You know the easiest schools to get into (easy admission). Easy and good schools? Easy but expensive? Easy but generates lots of killers? I want to know.
There's a saying "knowledge for knowledge sake" which means it's good to know as much as possible about everything, including admissions into CRNA programs, even if that knowledge is not going to lead to an immediate action.
So let start again!
Please if anyone knows anything about admission into CRNA programs I would like to hear from you. I am particularly interested in "easy" admission schools for personal reasons. Please stay on topic!
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Sep 25, 2002, 04:59 PM
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Most schools want a year of critical care experience. Some say that has to be ICU. Some will accept ER, PACU, and other units if you can convince them you are competent in the critical care areas(hemodynamics, pharm, etc.). If you have some experience in one of these other areas, then you can use that and apply to the schools that accept them. If not you have to go on your ICU experience.
Another consideration is that application deadlines for 8/03 are now or very soon. You can't apply to school before you graduate.
With that said, 8 months in any area ain't gonna get you in. We all understand that you want to start in Fall '03, but it can't happen. The fact is you don't graduate until 12/02. That's when you happen to have come into the system. So easy admission does not mean 8 months of experience in any program. Easy admission may be an option for 01/04 or 05/04, but not for 8/03.
MUSC-Charleston, SC starts in Jan. CAMC- Charleston, WV starts in May. There are others that I don't know right off hand.
We all understand the question and the answer is you are going to have to work in the ICU (if that's where you have a job already) for a full year.
Last edited by AL bug : Sep 25, 2002 at 05:02 PM.
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Sep 25, 2002, 05:24 PM
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Thats the question everyone wants to know, there are no easy schools. Getting in is only a small part of becoming a CRNA. School is hell and expensive no matter how you cut it. Lee
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Sep 25, 2002, 05:27 PM
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If it were easy, everyone would be doing it....right?
I plan on starting the admission process in 2-3 years. I know it's gonna be tough, no matter where I go. Also, since I'm not going to travel a distance, I only have two options.
Keeping my fingers crossed.
Anne
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Sep 25, 2002, 06:32 PM
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Why don't you visit www.anesthesia-nursing.com . There are links to all CRNA schools and you can find out about each schools admission process on your own, just like everybody else did. And if you look at your other thread, you'll see that Craig posted something about some school that's supposed to be easy to get into although, he stated that it's only a rumor. Being a CRNA is not easy, so what makes you think the application process and the schooling will be? It's serious stuff....You're keeping somebody alive!!
My $0.02
Brett
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Sep 25, 2002, 07:07 PM
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I couldn't agree with you more meandragonbrett. I wish you AnnCRNA luck and understand your enthusiasm to get going with CRNA school, but your attitude about it is kind of scary. I don't think I would want my CRNA to be the one whose priority for chosing the school is "the easiest one to get in to". Really, there shouldn't be "easy ones" out there. Otherwise everyone would do it!!!! If you do a simple search on google or yahoo you can find tons of info about CRNA schools.
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Sep 25, 2002, 07:17 PM
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Reality check. Why do you want to be a CRNA, and what is the purpose of the question you have asked? I am also troubled by someone looking for "the easiest school."
First, it's going to depend on how you define "easy." Second, understand, it does not matter how easy or hard the school is, we all take the same boards at the end. And rest assured, boards are TOUGH. So, a school that was easy to get into and easy to get through might initially look good, the reality is that if its easy, you won't pass boards, and you won't be a safe practitioner.
As for selection of students from candidate pools, all the schools do it pretty much the same way (see thread on Becoming a CRNA from one who did). So, bottom line, all the schools teach pretty much the same thing, all the schools have pretty much the same selection criteria, and all the schools are the HARDEST FREAKIN THING YOU WILL EVER DO!
Since I have applied, been accepted, started the program, talked to students from several other programs, completed the program, and passed my boards, I am pretty much one who knows. The other folks here are somewhere in the same continuum, and they are aware of what's happening, too. Repeating a question, rudely, I might add, because you didn't like the first answer will get you no where.
Kevin McHugh, CRNA
Last edited by kmchugh : Sep 25, 2002 at 07:22 PM.
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Sep 25, 2002, 08:02 PM
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The simple answer is that NO programs are easy to get into.
Every person that interviews for a slot has a high GPA, a high GRE, adequate acute care experience, and has done absolutely every thing they could to make themselves a competetive candidate.
In essence you are competing against those people for admission, no school is "easy" in those circumstances.
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Sep 25, 2002, 08:13 PM
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Just wanted to say that I could not agree with you more kmchugh. Considering you can now say....been there, done that (which by the way is awesome, congrats!--hope to get there one day) your input is most valuable.
What is with the rudeness by the way....you aren't gonna get your way by repeating yourself in a rude manner. Not to mention the fact that non one wants to help someone who wont help themselves.
There is no "easy route" to being a CRNA...it is such a great profession/route to go with sooooo much responsibility there really shouldn't be any other way!!!!! That is what (in my opinion) makes it so interesting....your decisions are life and death...you are keeping that person alive....it better be damn hard!!!!
Just wondering "knowledge for knowledge's sake", what makes you so confident that 8 months out of nursing school provided that you pass the boards for RN which you wont be taking til at least two months after December, so even less than 8 months of experience is going to have you prepared to enter CRNA school? Good luck on the interview (if you can get one while still in school....) when they start asking you the explain Swan #'s, indications for Dopa and its mechanism for action, how to titrate, dosages and concentrations, as well as parasympathetic, sympathetic innervation and so on. If you already know all that....well, good for you. I am shocked.
My suggestion for you would be to relax a little, spend some quality time doing your own research and when you know a little more about CRNA school, the application process, requirements, what a CRNA does, your reason behind wanting to become one ask an intelligent question.....but right now you are just posting the same thing kind of like when a kid throws a tantrum.
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Sep 25, 2002, 08:15 PM
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PS Perhaps you could call the Director of Admissions at each school and ask them if their school is "easy" to get into...I'm sure you will get great results.
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