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Do you say you're a nurse...



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  #11  
Old Mar 20, 2008, 10:38 AM
agldragon (Male)
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Re: Do you say you're a nurse...

Originally Posted by DGood View Post
Not trying... just giving an opinion.
Question: Do LPN's take the same exact NCLEX?? I thought it was and LPN NCLEX (can't remember what it's called).

PS> I'm trying to be smart, I'm trying to learn about LPN's
It is called NCLEX-PN for practical/vocational nurses and NCLEX-RN for you.

I agree with the previous poster about you needing to educate yourself.

LPNs are licensed NURSE!!!!

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  #12  
Old Mar 20, 2008, 10:46 AM
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Re: Do you say you're a nurse...

I've been a nurse(an RN) for almost 20 years. LPNs are nurses!!!!! They pretty much do the same thing an RN does. The only difference is an RN went to school longer and has to cover an LPN but that doesn't make them smarter!!!! I've worked with alot of LPN's that would blow most RN's out of the water. And I've noticed over the years that the RNs with the "I'm better because I'm an RN" attitude are new RNs and have yet to learn that they can learn alot from an LPN


Last edited by Miami NightNurse : Mar 20, 2008 at 10:49 AM.
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  #13  
Old Mar 20, 2008, 10:55 AM
DGood (Female)
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2008
Re: Do you say you're a nurse...

Hmm the poster wanted to know what each person called themselves (OPINION).

From the National Council of State Boards of nursing.

To me (opinion), they make a distinction between the two but I can see how the term "nurse" would apply.

See, I learned about LPN's today.



https://www.ncsbn.org/nclex.htm





NCLEX Examinations



Under the guidance of its membership, NCSBN has developed two licensure examinations used by its Member Boards to test the entry-level nursing competence of candidates for licensure as registered nurses and as licensed practical/vocational nurses. These examinations, the NCLEX-RN and NCLEX-PN examinations, are administered with the contractual assistance of a national test service. The NCLEX Examinations Department is also responsible for practice analyses necessary to support the NCLEX-RN and NCLEX-PN examination development process. NCSBN has also developed and co-owns the largest competency evaluation program for nurse aides in the United States, known as the National Nurse Aide Assessment Program, the NNAAP.

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  #14  
Old Mar 20, 2008, 10:57 AM
DGood (Female)
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2008
Re: Do you say you're a nurse...

hmmm I don't recall saying anyone was smarter than anybody else...

I do recall saying I was trying to learn about LPN's though...

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  #15  
Old Mar 20, 2008, 11:05 AM
agldragon (Male)
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Re: Do you say you're a nurse...

Originally Posted by DGood View Post
Hmm the poster wanted to know what each person called themselves (OPINION).

From the National Council of State Boards of nursing.

To me (opinion), they make a distinction between the two but I can see how the term "nurse" would apply.
It is a FACT that LPNs are nurses not how you would see it "apply".
LPNs are nurses period! That's it for me. I am not replying any longer.
Whatever!

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  #16  
Old Mar 20, 2008, 11:07 AM
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Re: Do you say you're a nurse...

Originally Posted by DGood View Post
I know LPN's are licensed practical nurses but saying you are "a nurse" seems misleading. Right now I'm in "nursing school" for RN. If I was in LPN school. I would say I am in a "practical nurse school."
There is also "nurse" in certified nurse assistant, but they are still nurse assistants not "nurses".
I think people should refer to themselves with proper titles.
EXAMPLE >>There is an ARNP here where I work and everyone calls her doctor...how annoying.
Originally Posted by DGood View Post
Not trying... just giving an opinion.
Question: Do LPN's take the same exact NCLEX?? I thought it was and LPN NCLEX (can't remember what it's called).

PS> I'm not trying to be smart, I'm trying to learn about LPN's
Originally Posted by DGood View Post
Hmm the poster wanted to know what each person called themselves (OPINION).

From the National Council of State Boards of nursing.

To me (opinion), they make a distinction between the two but I can see how the term "nurse" would apply.

See, I learned about LPN's today.



https://www.ncsbn.org/nclex.htm





NCLEX Examinations



Under the guidance of its membership, NCSBN has developed two licensure examinations used by its Member Boards to test the entry-level nursing competence of candidates for licensure as registered nurses and as licensed practical/vocational nurses. These examinations, the NCLEX-RN and NCLEX-PN examinations, are administered with the contractual assistance of a national test service. The NCLEX Examinations Department is also responsible for practice analyses necessary to support the NCLEX-RN and NCLEX-PN examination development process. NCSBN has also developed and co-owns the largest competency evaluation program for nurse aides in the United States, known as the National Nurse Aide Assessment Program, the NNAAP.
Originally Posted by DGood View Post
hmmm I don't recall saying anyone was smarter than anybody else...

I do recall saying I was trying to learn about LPN's though...
Read your own posts. That's all I am going to say

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  #17  
Old Mar 20, 2008, 11:09 AM
Bx_RN2B (Female)
Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2005
Re: Do you say you're a nurse...

I call myself a nurse because that is what I am a Licensed Practical Nurse .


Yes the word CNA has nurse in it but what is important is the word that follows it.....ASSISTANT. This means that a CNA assists a nurse not that they are a nurse.

LPN means: LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSE....ok? There is no Assistant after the nurse part nor is there anything else in those three little words that say that I am anything but a NURSE . So I don't get where I am misleading anyone by telling them that I am a nurse.

I have no problem at all telling people that I am an LPN but it really galls me that some people think that the title "nurse" should be reserved for RNs. Well, whatever that is their problem because as far as my state board of nursing is concerned I am a nurse and I guess at the end of the day that is what really matters.

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  #18  
Old Mar 20, 2008, 11:36 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2008
Re: Do you say you're a nurse...

Thanks guys, I don't think LPN's aren't nurses at all, I just wondered what what the common response. It makes sense to just say nurse, unless someone would understand or asks for which type of nurse.

What about school? Did you say "nursing school" when you were in LPN school?

I think Dgood is just uneducated about what training other jobs involve: using CNA's and comparing that to LPN's just shows she doesn't understand the process of becoming a CNA vs. LPN. An LPN is someone who's been through 12-18mo of school 5days a week. The RN program I plan on attending after I finish my LPN, is only 3 days a week with a clinical. I expect the RN portion to be "easier" because it will just be two semesters vs. the LPN program which is a solid year.

I think someone here mentioned how LPN's and RN's are like the military equivalent of being enlisted vs. an officer. You wouldn't tell an enlisted troop they were not a soldier, just because they have different responsibilities and roles.

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  #19  
Old Mar 20, 2008, 12:07 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Re: Do you say you're a nurse...

Originally Posted by DGood View Post
I know LPN's are licensed practical nurses but saying you are "a nurse" seems misleading.
So when I go into my patient's room and introduce myself as their nurse, would be misleading my patient? I know the RNs (who we have virtually the same role as) on my unit don't introduce themselves as "hi, I'm your RN today" likewise I wouldn't say "hi, I will be your LPN today". We all refer to ourselves as nurses, because we are! However if our PCT went in and introduced herself as the nurse THAT would be misleading.

Right now you may not understand the differences, but once you are in the real world you will find that in many situations the lines between LPN and RN are very blurred and there is not much separation between the two. I respect the differences and would never mislead someone into thinking I was an RN.

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  #20  
Old Mar 20, 2008, 12:52 PM
kiyasmom (Female)
Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2004
Re: Do you say you're a nurse...

I refer to myself as the nurse. When I walk on a unit a a float I am asked "Are you the nurse up here today?" not "Are you the LPN or RN up here today?" If I am asked I will say I am an LPN.

I went to nursing school. I went to a school whose sole purpose was training nurses. It was quite literally NURSING SCHOOL.

I am in school now for my PA. In May I will be able to sit the NCLEX-RN. I'm taking an unconventional route and 4 extra classes that I don't need for my PA so I can get my RN. I had to get express permission from the department head and I had to test out of two fundamentals classes so I could bridge my LPN without adding an extra year to my deviation. Um....am I in nursing school or PA school? Doesn't matter. I'm still me. No better or no worse than I was 5 years ago when I was just an undecided college student.

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