Are CRNA's facing an oversaturation also?

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Just curious. Thanks.

Well, when every other new grad tells ya she is going to work for a year and go to CRNA school...

Right but for instance my state has only one CRNA program that admits only 10 people a year. And some states don't have one at all...

Specializes in ER/ICU/STICU.

Depends on what are of the country you want to work in.

Lets say the US....

Specializes in Nurse Leader specializing in Labor & Delivery.

The US is a very large country. Care to narrow it down to maybe a region?

Specializes in Nurse Leader specializing in Labor & Delivery.
Right but for instance my state has only one CRNA program that admits only 10 people a year. And some states don't have one at all...

Do many of the hospitals in your state hire CRNAs, though? THere could be a reason why there aren't many programs in your particular state.

the RN oversaturation is a regional thing?

Specializes in Nurse Leader specializing in Labor & Delivery.
the RN oversaturation is a regional thing?

Yes. And as you indicated, there are probably some areas in the US that graduate very few CRNAs, and other areas in the US that have many CRNA programs and graduate thousands at a time, thus contributing to a regional oversaturation problem.

What region isn't oversaturated then for RN's :o?

Specializes in Med/Surg, Ortho, ASC.

Are we discussing RN's or CRNA's?

CRNA's. She just said RN's oversaturation was a regional problem not a national one, and if so I wanted to know which regions were not hit then. I was making a point in relation to CRNA oversaturation which she claims is regional also.

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