Nursing Specialties Guide

Publications Nursing Ebooks

    1 Reviews
  • Sorry, you aren't permitted to download this file. However, you may be able to download if you sign in. Sign In

About This Ebook ( 1.0.0 Edition)

1st Edition. 
Available in PDF and Doc format. Download one or both. 
317 Pages

There is a specialty for every Nurse. For many Nurses, specializing is not just a job … it is a life-long career. We realize choosing a Nursing specialty can be a daunting task and allnurses has made choosing a little easier.

Nurses work in a variety of specialty areas after graduation. Licensed Practical/Vocational Nurse (LPN/LVN), Registered Nurse (RN), and Advanced Practice Nurse (APN) may, after working in a certain area of nursing, decide to make that area a life-long career choice. After gaining more experience, they can become highly-qualified experts making a difference as confident leaders who elevate the Nursing profession. 

Education requirements? Salary ranges? We have it and more!! For example, you will find a detailed list addressing some of the concerns, expectations, and common questions when considering a specialty area:

Key Features

Skills and qualities and attributes necessary

Education required

Professional certifications available

Future opportunities

Current salary expectations

We also included some of the more popular and fastest-growing specialties:

  • Aesthetic / Plastic Surgery Nursing
  • Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist
  • Forensic Nursing
  • Nursing Informatics
  • Psychiatric / Mental Health Nursing
  • School Nursing
  • Travel Nursing

While considering broadening your career professionally and personally … we know that you will find the material in this Nursing Specialty ebook helpful.

Which Nursing Specialty area are YOU considering?

Table of Contents

Introduction

Specialties

  • Addictions Nursing
  • Aesthetic / Plastic Surgery Nursing
  • Agency Nursing
  • Burn Nursing
  • Camp Nursing
  • Camp Nursing: Choosing a Camp
  • Camp Nursing: 10 Camp Nursing Lessons
  • Case Management Nursing (CM)
  • Certified Nurse-Midwives (CNM)
  • Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA)
  • Correctional Nursing
  • Developmental Disabilities Nursing
  • Diabetes Nursing
  • Dialysis and Renal Nursing
  • Emergency Nursing
  • Endocrinology Nursing
  • Faith Community Nursing (FCN) / Parish Nursing
  • Faith Community Nurse 101
  • Foot Care Nursing
  • Forensic Nursing (FN)
  • Forensic Nursing (FN): Programs
  • Forensic Nursing: Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner – Part 1
  • Forensic Nursing: Role of the Forensic Nurse – Part 2
  • Gastroenterology Nursing
  • Gastrointestinal (GI) Nursing
  • Government Nursing
  • Hospice Care vs Palliative Care
  • Hospice Nursing - Compassionate Care at the End of Life
  • Hyperbaric Nursing
  • Infectious (ID) Disease Nursing
  • Legal Nurse Consultant (LNC)
  • Legal Nurse Consultant (LNC): Educative Entities
  • Legal Nurse Consultant (LNC): FAQ
  • Medical-Surgical Nursing (Med-Surg)
  • Military Nursing
  • Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) Nursing
  • Neuroscience Nursing
  • Nurse Educators/ Faculty
  • Nurse Massage Therapists
  • Nursing Informatics (NI)
  • Oncology Nursing
  • Operating Room / Perioperative Nursing
  • Operating Room Nurse: Roles
  • Orthopedic Nursing
  • Pain Management Nursing
  • Psychiatric/Mental Health Nursing
  • Pulmonary Nursing
  • Radiology Nursing
  • Radiology Nursing: Tips
  • School Nursing
  • Trauma Nursing
  • Travel Nursing
  • Urology Nursing
  • Volunteer Nursing
  • Wound / Ostomy / Continence Nursing

Post questions below...



User Feedback

You may only provide a review once you have downloaded the file.


PNCB

   12 of 12 members found this review helpful 12 / 12 members

The Pediatric Nursing Certification Board (PNCB) was disappointed that pediatrics as a stand-alone specialty was omitted from the guide. While pediatric subspecialties were included in great number, your guide does not mention the Certified Pediatric Nurse (CPN) certification with more than 30,000 active credential holders and our two Certified Pediatric Nurse Practitioner (CPNP) credentials offered in Acute Care and Primary Care. More than 22,000 APRNs hold a CPNP credential. I had previously reached out to two of your team members with no reply. With diminishing pediatric undergraduate content being reported nationwide in so many RN programs, pediatric nursing – regardless of the certification aspect – needs all the visibility it can get. Children and adolescents are not little adults. As a vulnerable population, they need specialized care whether for routine check-ups and procedures or for significant, complex in-patient care. Please include general pediatric nursing and PNP practice in your next edition—or reach out to us now for a much-needed addendum to the current publication. Thank you. 

Share this review


Link to review