Re: Advice about NP specialties
I was in the identical situation a few years ago. I was at the orientation for the midwifery program I had applied and been accepted to, when reality struck.
For me, I had a family and a job so being woken to attend deliveries throughout 2 years of clinical at school and forever in a midwifery career completely changed my mind. In addition, the unaffordable malpractice ins. rates that I had to pay personally as a student would have been a financial hardship. The malpractice rates had forced many MDs to "lay-off" midwives in my area at that time.
Ultimately I transferred to the FNP program and have had no regrets. You may be lucky enough to find a position in a family practice office that does OB which would fulfill all of your desires other than delivering babies. As the other poster said, you can always get post-masters certificates to attain additional certifications you desire (such as midwifery).
In my area, FNPs work in just about every specialty including peds, ob/gyn, and acute care. So becoming an FNP does not necessarily mean you are only marketable in family practice.
Good luck!
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