Associate Degree

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How hard is an associates degree in nursing to get? And also I hope I get some honest answers did those of you who have an adn degree notice any differences in knowledge between you and a bsn? I know I completely changed what I had written if anyone saw my original post. It didn't come out the way i meant, so i will post it later.

Ok, is there a question been asked ?

A) Yes, it does sound immature.

B) Please don't take up a space in a nursing program just to prove to someone else who called you a name that you can, if you have no serious interest in nursing. Other people who actually want to be nurses could use that space.

C) A nursing degree won't really mean much or help you as an attorney without some actual nursing experience to go with it.

D) If law is what actually interests you, why not just focus on getting into and completing law school. Most people find that more than enough to say grace over,

E) Welcome to allnurses, and congratulations on your recovery and other challenges you have overcome! Best wishes for your journey.

Actually I do want to focus on medical malpractice so I was thinking I could work as a nurse while going to law school at night, also I have no time limit. I agree that it's wrong but it hurts when someone calls you stupid and a scumbag, but like I heard before the best revenge is a life well lived. Thanks for telling me straight up

I actually have more reasons to become a nurse, I am going to ask another question and this will explain another reason I want to be a nurse as well as a lawyer.

Specializes in ICU.

I'm extremely confused as to why you would need to become a nurse to be a medical malpractice lawyer. Why? I've dated a couple of lawyers in my day, one who became a lawyer when he was 40 and you can just specialize in an area. And you don't have to have a degree in that area to be a lawyer in that area. Just go to law school.

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