Published
How beneficial is a BSN? If you have a BS in human physiology and are working on your MS in Neurophsyiology do you really need BSN or MSN? I want to go into nursing and be either an OR or ER RN.
I mean like moving into management, education, moving out of floor nursing. I did 10 years of floor nursing in a level one trauma center and decided that it was very hard work: on your feet the entire 12.5 hours, no breaks, literally running constantly. And...I realized I was going to have to do this for many, many more years unless I went back to school.
Having an MSN (or other advanced degrees) gives you more options as you get older. I miss the ER terribly but left there to pursue advanced nursing opportunities and haven't regretted it.
Hope this explains it - ??
There seems to be a shortage of floor nurses and LTC nurses - but in the ER - No way. It is very competitive. Last December we had 9 applicants for one position and had to turn away four of the nurses who had been techs in the ER for over a year. As for those who graduate in December - they've already been told there are NO er positions available.
you will be an rn with an ms. however, you can never sit for the np exam or crna exam. you will compete for management positions with rns with mbas or msns in health care management.
if you have a ms, you should consider going into a bsn program. your degree credits will count and you'll just have to do the nursing components. if you go for an associates, you'll just be doing the nursing components there too.
traumaRUs, MSN, APRN
87 Articles; 21,287 Posts
Marie said it well. If you wish to pursue further positions in the ER or OR, you will need either a BSN or MSN or MBA (a trend I'm seeing in my area).