Originally Posted by 7starbuck7
I am relatively young (29). The MSN/FNP will take me 3 years and from what I have seen thus far, the DNP would take an additional 2 years after that.
The cost-benefit ratio is of great concern for me. From my research I will not make much more money as a FNP than I am as a RN. I am doing it because FNP is the job I want. But I can't pretend money doesn't come into play-esp when you are looking at large student loans for these degrees. Also the stress me being in school puts on my family is another consideration. I always considered the MSN a terminal degree for me so this is throwing me for a curve-ball and really making me reconsider my choices.
Thanks
I have similar conversations with nurses at my hospital. When I tell them my ideal salary as a NP many of them smirk and say they can make double that as a bedside nurse... here's the thing... they're working nights, weekends, holidays, overtime... I made the decision to become a NP so I could mostly avoid this sort of nightmare. I'm done working night shift and every other holiday and every 3rd weekend and 12 hour shifts. To each his own... but I'm more than happy to share the same schedule as my husband once all this is over! At this point, we hardly see each other!
The MSN will most likely be my terminal degree with a potential post-masters certification to increase my chances of rounding through the ICUs since this is my primary passion. While I would be tickled to be known as Dr. Yellow Finch, it's not my ultimate goal in life.
No, student loans are not ideal, but if you can find alternative sources of income. My hospital pays an average of one semester's worth of education, then I apply for every scholarship under the sun, and save my pennies for the remainder.
This is possible! I'm all for advancing our knowledge of nursing and truly enjoy the challenges I put myself through each day with clinicals and coursework.
Lastly, I was talking to another RN yesterday who was just tired of being the fallguy for problems that occur with patients. It's like when you don that lab coat and play the role of the mid-level provider, your respect goes up a notch. There are plenty of brilliant bedside nurses in my department who, despite all attempts at indicating their intelligence, are still "just a nurse" in the eyes of some docs. It's really depressing.
Don't give up on yourself!
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