Re: Question for Any of You That Have Switched Careers to Nursing?
I was in similar shoes once. My advice, in addition to that of other replies to your thread, is to go do some volunteering first while you hold your current job. It can get you the hands-on helping opportunity, the feel-good-about-helping feelings you want, and the pay and benefits (and respect and other intangibles) you now have.
For me, it acted as a good multi-year test-drive of a potential new career. I volunteered in several settings to learn more about healthcare, and learned a ton about the careers and myself.
If that works out, consider a next step: getting a part-time nurse-aide or medical-assistant job. It will let you test-drive being truly hands-on in a paid position, which is different than volunteering. Again, you can keep your day job while you test the waters.
For anyone coming from the IT world, nursing's first two years (after school) are far worse than the worst project or "Luser" users or bug-filled POC you've ever supported. You might find it a shock to your system... But with two years' experience, you can think about informatics or some other specialty that suits you. Most of the time now, I feel like "I am helping people" or "making a difference in someone's life". I must say it is a different feeling than the pure joy of compiling without errors and passing every whitebox/blackbox test. My thought is that nursing is more satisfaction of helping others while programming and engineering are more joy of pure design. Just choose your jollies wisely, as nursing pays less per actual hour spent doing it than most programming/engineering.
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