Published
I'm wondering if the small differential for having a BSN vs an ADN is more common in the acute setting or is it the norm everywhere?
No extra money with either BSN or certification. The only way you can get more money is clinical laddering. The highest rung requires either one. Ours is RN I (new hire in 90 day probation period), RN II (nurse after 90 day probation period who hasn't decided to ladder), RN III (any RN can attain), and RN IV (must have either BSN or cert). RN III gets $1/hr extra, RN IV gets $2/hr extra. Anyone can be charge nurse, doesn't have to be a BSN for $1/hr. About the only bonus we get is tuition reimbursement (with caps that don't come anywhere near covering even half the cost) and reimbursement of certification exams with proof of passing.
What I have seen is that BSN nurses get at the most $1more an hour. My unit will pay a one time bonus of $850 for a certification.
Where the BSN really pays off is in the ability to advance your career. Those in leadership hold at least a BSN level of education and many of the cherry jobs like clinical educator, infection control and the like require a BSN.
My job doesn't but it's common to pay an extra 1/hr at other area hospitals for a bsn. It is definitely more marketable in this area to be a bsn and it definitely qualifies you more readily for leadership positions. You can not, for instance, charge, even temporarily unless you are a bsn on my unit.
So...if you work in a hospital and get paid one extra dollar an hour for a BSN, work 40 hrs/wk, 52 weeks a year, you get a whooping 2080.oo -- which wouldn't cover the cost of a single class with textbooks at a brick and mortar school. You might get into management -- in my hospital, there are 7 NM, an infection control nurse, and the CNO. Now, if you've ever played "Pop Goes the Weasel" you will quickly realize that there's not going to be a seat for you in management for years...possibly never. I went for the BSN, mainly to assure that I have a job after our hospital's sold. We get no extra money for a BSN or for certs, and if you took tuition reimbursement, you are forced to work for the hospital until the tuition is repaid (read: indentured servitude). I chose Western Governors, and paid out of pocket -- I don't have to write anyone a check if I decide to move or change jobs.
I don't want to tell anyone not to get an education. But know what you're getting it for, what it will do for you, and what it will not do for you, especially if you're going to have to pay a lot out of pocket, or be forced to work in a specific hospital or area to repay the loans. I had a friend who went to med school, went into the health corp, and only then realized he didn't want to spend years in the back side of nowhere, an inner city hot zone, or other places that were on the list. They want double damages to get out of those kind of contracts.
Caveat emptor -- let the buyer beware. Or in this case, the RN looking to get a BSN.
chihuahuaman
62 Posts
I get an extra $100 a month with my BSN.