Residency programs for NP graduates?

Specialties NP

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I am planning on going back to school for my MSN/ACNP or to a PA program.

I am very disappointed in the limited amount of clinical hours offered in the NP programs 700 or less as compared to the PA programs 2000 or more. Since I already have my BSN I would like to stick with the nursing education . My question is are there any post graduate NP "residency" programs available for more specialized clinical training? Any help would be appreciated.

I am planning on going back to school for my MSN/ACNP or to a PA program.

I am very disappointed in the limited amount of clinical hours offered in the NP programs 700 or less as compared to the PA programs 2000 or more. Since I already have my BSN I would like to stick with the nursing education . My question is are there any post graduate NP "residency" programs available for more specialized clinical training? Any help would be appreciated.

I would bet real money that any NP program would let you take the clinical rotation for years if you wanted to...as long as you keep paying for it!

I would bet real money that any NP program would let you take the clinical rotation for years if you wanted to...as long as you keep paying for it!

I am sure they would. I'm talking about specific areas for instance the ACNP programs will allow you to specialize in many areas: General surgery, ER/Trauma, neurology/neurosurgery, cardiology/cardiothoracic surgery

I just think it may be better to go the FNP route then maybe do some post draduate rotations in other areas if you wanted to specialize further.

Take into account that a PA is stating from Day 1, you already have four years of schooling behind you............

Take into account that a PA is stating from Day 1, you already have four years of schooling behind you............

Your right Im just worried I may not feel comfortable with only 700 hrs in the role of a practitioner. Plus I would love to work with a cardiology group seeing patients inpatient/outpatient an first assist during surgery if possible. Seems like most positions like this go to the PA's but i guess i could be wrong.

Cardiology uses nurse practitioners. To assist in the OR you are talking about RNFAs. That requires two years of experience as an OR nurse, 2000 hours of time in the job category, as well as writing an exam. Most RNFAs are not NPs.

You normally do not see cardiologists in the OR, only at some facilities where the AICD is implanted in the OR. Then they are there with the CV surgeon. But again, this depends on the facility.

Hope that this helps.................

Take into account that a PA is stating from Day 1, you already have four years of schooling behind you............

I was basically called an idiot on another thread for taking this position.

Then whoever did that was an idiot. You do the math. For the NP program, most have 4 year BSNs which means patient care for most of that time.

The PA program also requires a BS for admission, but most people have those in non-patient care areas, such as chemistry or biology. Not hands on with patients.

It does take time to learn to effectively interact with patients....learn what to say and what not to say.........

That and most NP programs require 2 years of FULLTIME nursing experience in order to be considered for admission. Math:

36 hours a week x 52 weeks a year x 2 years = 3744 clinical hours

Most PA's actually have some background such as EMT or medic or other experience, however the programs were designed to have more clinical within them exactly for the reason you cite - we start with a known clinical background, they do not.

This isn't a bad thing - it's just different.

Specializes in NICU/Neonatal transport.

Neonatal NP already has a program like this essentially. You have to work for 2 years, full time, in a level III NICU prior to being able to do your graduate level clinicals. So, for people like me doing a direct entry program, we go to school and get our RN, stop school for 2+ years while we work in the NICU and then go back to finish our graduate work. It comes very close to 4000 hours, just in those two years alone, which are spent dedicated to the area we will be going into.

There is a nurse practitioner residency program in community health and primary care at the Community Health Center in Connecticut. One year with salary and benefits.

http://www.NPResidency.com

The school I'm going to has 750 hours of clinical time.

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