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CRNA vs AA



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  #11  
Old Apr 22, 2008, 11:19 AM
neurogeek (Female)
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Re: CRNA vs AA

Gaswork isn't an advertisement, but an actual recruiting website that displays factual employment information. I agree that there is not complete representation of all types of employment on the site, but I find it very interesting that the majority of positions displayed are for very independent CRNA positions. They do provide recuitment for both rural and non-rural settings. In fact, I have found positions listed on that site for some of the major trauma centers in our area (Parkland, John Peter Smith, Scott and White, etc.) so there is a pretty good mix of positions for review. The website covers the entire US and other territories as well, so it offers some pretty good comparisons of positions from state to state. Obviously it's not the only recruitment site out there, but it is very extensive. AA positins are also listed on the site, and as you may have found they are scarce in comparison to CRNA jobs by locale.

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  #12  
Old Apr 22, 2008, 03:47 PM
japaho41 (Male)
Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2006
Re: CRNA vs AA

Originally Posted by grifftith View Post
yes i already made up my mind to go the crna route now. I want to move around the country in the future this probably being the biggest factor, but thanks for the input everyone.
Good for you, I know that there is an international Nurse anesthesia society that is working credentialing programs so that there grads can work in othere countries. Basically what it comes down to at least for me and a lot of other CRNA's that I have talked to in the past is that key component that AA's are missing is the intensive care experience. If you are even in support of AA's that is hard to downplay the value of that experience.

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  #13  
Old Apr 22, 2008, 07:02 PM
jwk
Registered User
Join Date: May 2004
Re: CRNA vs AA

Originally Posted by neurogeek View Post
Gaswork isn't an advertisement, but an actual recruiting website that displays factual employment information. I agree that there is not complete representation of all types of employment on the site, but I find it very interesting that the majority of positions displayed are for very independent CRNA positions. They do provide recuitment for both rural and non-rural settings. In fact, I have found positions listed on that site for some of the major trauma centers in our area (Parkland, John Peter Smith, Scott and White, etc.) so there is a pretty good mix of positions for review. The website covers the entire US and other territories as well, so it offers some pretty good comparisons of positions from state to state. Obviously it's not the only recruitment site out there, but it is very extensive. AA positins are also listed on the site, and as you may have found they are scarce in comparison to CRNA jobs by locale.
Gaswork is a site full of advertisements for anesthesia groups, hospitals, etc. Call them what you will - they're ads. Gaswork, while an interesting resource, is hardly the be-all and end-all of anesthesia recruiting information in the country. Most groups don't use it for recruiting - otherwise there would be hundreds and hundreds of ads for each state. Many of the ads are placed by recruiting companies, hardly a great choice to find a quality position. There's a reason why hospitals and groups resort to using recruiters, and it's not because people are beating down their doors to grab the high-quality positions they're offering. The really good positions will rarely require recruiters.

AA positions do have a separate section on Gaswork, but many of the CRNA listings, particularly for ACT practices in states with AA's, are applicable for AA's as well. Employers for many of the listings in Georgia, Ohio, Missouri, Florida, and others, would be happy to have AA's apply as well.

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  #14  
Old Apr 23, 2008, 10:23 AM
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Join Date: Apr 2008
Re: CRNA vs AA

Well i dont see anything wrong with being an AA. I think its good because people considering being an anesthesiologist can do so much easier. Since they always have to be watched by an anesthesiologist they dont need as much exp. I just dont think you shouldnt respect them because they dont have nursing exp, after all they took tougher courses in college.

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  #15  
Old Apr 23, 2008, 03:10 PM
neurogeek (Female)
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Join Date: Mar 2007
Re: CRNA vs AA

[quote=jwk;2793892Many of the ads are placed by recruiting companies, hardly a great choice to find a quality position. There's a reason why hospitals and groups resort to using recruiters, and it's not because people are beating down their doors to grab the high-quality positions they're offering.[/quote]
On the contrary, many highly respected facilities do utilize the recruitment agencies, as you will note if you read the actual "ads" on the webiste. This is mainly because there is a very high demand for CRNA's and MDA's, and the marketplace is very competitive. Negotiating through a recuiter is a very smart move. In fact, on average the salaries and sign-on incentive tend to be higher when negotiated by a recruiter. You can give your recuiter specific items to take to the table such as benefit requirements, sign-on bonus, length of contract, loan repayment, etc. I know many CRNA's who have done it both ways and most of them say that their best outcome was after using a recuiter. As you stated, gaswork isn't the only website out there. But it is one of the few where not only recruiting agencies but also anesthesia groups, hospitals, and other facilities can directly recruit CRNA, AA's, and MDA's.

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  #16  
Old Apr 23, 2008, 09:22 PM
japaho41 (Male)
Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2006
Re: CRNA vs AA

Originally Posted by grifftith View Post
Well i dont see anything wrong with being an AA. I think its good because people considering being an anesthesiologist can do so much easier. Since they always have to be watched by an anesthesiologist they dont need as much exp. I just dont think you shouldnt respect them because they dont have nursing exp, after all they took tougher courses in college.
I think you sort of have a misconception of what being watched is all about or you missed my point of what patient care experience really means.
So you are saying the your biology degree or whatever BS degree that you had was far tougher than Nursing school. I might retink that statement considering you have not endured nursing school. I suppose that working in the ICU is also much easier than whatever job a student in AA school did prior to school. You also have to think about this as well, when you say tougher classes, multiple people in my program have additional degrees prior to nursing in addition to a range of 4-9years of Intensive care experience. You have to be knowledgable about a topic prior to throwing out comments like that.

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  #17  
Old Apr 23, 2008, 10:43 PM
jwk
Registered User
Join Date: May 2004
Re: CRNA vs AA

Originally Posted by neurogeek View Post
On the contrary, many highly respected facilities do utilize the recruitment agencies, as you will note if you read the actual "ads" on the webiste. This is mainly because there is a very high demand for CRNA's and MDA's, and the marketplace is very competitive. Negotiating through a recuiter is a very smart move. In fact, on average the salaries and sign-on incentive tend to be higher when negotiated by a recruiter. You can give your recuiter specific items to take to the table such as benefit requirements, sign-on bonus, length of contract, loan repayment, etc. I know many CRNA's who have done it both ways and most of them say that their best outcome was after using a recuiter. As you stated, gaswork isn't the only website out there. But it is one of the few where not only recruiting agencies but also anesthesia groups, hospitals, and other facilities can directly recruit CRNA, AA's, and MDA's.
You must be a recruiter, or somehow your perspective has really been skewed somewhere along the way - almost universally, the CRNA's on this particular board have stressed not using recruiters. There is a reason employers use recruiters, and it is NOT because they have stellar job opportunities going unfilled. We would much prefer to pay our anesthetists a better salary or a signing bonus than pay a hefty commission to a recruiter. You are absolutely fooling yourself if you think quality employers with quality positions prefer to use recruiters.

We get calls every day from recruiters - we hang up on them. We have NEVER used a recruiter to find staff, and have never hired an employee through a recruiter. Never have, never will. Period. If an individual looking for a job doesn't have the initiative to put together a resume', and look up or call for our address, mail a resume', and follow up, (actually, we follow up all serious inquiries) then we're really not interested in talking with them, much less hiring them. Yes - the demand is there - plenty of places need anesthesia staff. The advantage is already with the person looking for a job. That's why someone looking for an anesthesia position doesn't need a recruiter - unless they're too lazy to do it themselves.

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  #18  
Old Apr 24, 2008, 05:57 PM
jwk
Registered User
Join Date: May 2004
Re: CRNA vs AA

Originally Posted by japaho41 View Post
I think you sort of have a misconception of what being watched is all about or you missed my point of what patient care experience really means.
So you are saying the your biology degree or whatever BS degree that you had was far tougher than Nursing school. I might retink that statement considering you have not endured nursing school. I suppose that working in the ICU is also much easier than whatever job a student in AA school did prior to school. You also have to think about this as well, when you say tougher classes, multiple people in my program have additional degrees prior to nursing in addition to a range of 4-9years of Intensive care experience. You have to be knowledgable about a topic prior to throwing out comments like that.
You don't know what jobs some of these AA students had prior to school, nor have you "endured" a BS program in the hard sciences (organic, physics, biochem, etc.) And there are TONS of CRNA's with that minimum one year of critical care experience, and many have just completed it as they enter their CRNA program. And I've met very few with additional degrees (ASN to BSN doesn't count as an additional degree). You have to be knowledgable about a topic prior to throwing out comments like that.

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  #19  
Old Apr 24, 2008, 09:59 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2005
Re: CRNA vs AA

The salaries on gaswork.com seem a little outlandish. I can’t image a CRNA making that kind of $$$. (But hhhhhhhmmm who knows just my opinion)

Originally Posted by neurogeek View Post
Actually, I think you're facts may be a bit inaccurate. The majority of anesthesia delivered in rural areas is by CRNA's only, with little or no access to MDA's. Visit www.gaswork.com to view current CRNA openings & you will note that the amount of time (if any) that the CRNA will be supervised by an MDA will be listed.

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  #20  
Old Apr 25, 2008, 04:01 PM
mcvcrna (Male)
Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2008
Re: CRNA vs AA

Originally Posted by jwk View Post
You don't know what jobs some of these AA students had prior to school, nor have you "endured" a BS program in the hard sciences (organic, physics, biochem, etc.) And there are TONS of CRNA's with that minimum one year of critical care experience, and many have just completed it as they enter their CRNA program. And I've met very few with additional degrees (ASN to BSN doesn't count as an additional degree). You have to be knowledgable about a topic prior to throwing out comments like that.
Organic, physics, biochem were all required prior or taken in my program. Careful where you get your stats. TONS huh? Just one year huh?
hmmmm... those must be the CRNAs that will work along side AAs.

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