Nurse NOT among the fastest growing jobs/careers

Nurses General Nursing

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A friend emailed me this. It is not sited, but she said she got it from Monster.

It's the top 11 fastest growing jobs, nursing is not on the list!

Article from CareerBuilder.com/Karen

Get a Job With an Edge

By Laura Morsch, CareerBuilder.com

Finding a job can be tough - especially when you're not looking in the right place. Tight as the job market may seem, some jobs are so hot, and growing so quickly, that employers are itching to find qualified candidates to fill them.

As the American population grows older and more dependent on technology, the number of medical and computer-related jobs is escalating rapidly to keep pace with demand. According to the most recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), 15 of the 30 fastest-growing jobs in the United States are in healthcare, and another seven are computer-related.

Here is a list of some of the fastest-growing jobs in the United States, where qualified applicants, not the employers, have the edge - and the vital facts about each - from the BLS's Occupational Outlook Handbook:

Medical Assistants

What they do: Perform routine administrative and clinical tasks - from answering phones to explaining medications to patients - to help keep medical practitioners' offices running smoothly.

What you need: Most employers prefer graduates of a formal, one- to two-year medical assistant training program. A high school diploma is required, and some employers provide on-the-job training.

What it pays: Median annual pay was $24,610 in 2004.

Network Systems and Data Communications Analysts

What they do: Help keep your electronic communications - Internet, voice mail, e-mail and so on - up and running. They test and evaluate systems such as local area networks (LANs), wide area networks (WANs), intranets and other data communications systems.

What you need: Some employers require just an associate's degree. Other, more advanced jobs, require a bachelor's degree in a computer-related field.

What it pays: Median annual pay was $60,600 in 2004.

Environmental Engineers

What they do: In response to concerns about environmental damage, they conduct research and develop solutions to environmental problems including pollution control, ozone depletion and wildlife protection.

What you need: Usually at least a bachelor's degree.

What it pays: Median annual pay was $66,480 in 2004.

Physician Assistants

What they do: Provide diagnostic, therapeutic and preventive healthcare services - including examining and treating patients, making diagnoses and ordering prescriptions - under a doctor's supervision.

What you need: Graduation from a formal physician assistant education program. Most programs require applicants to have at least a bachelor's degree.

What it pays: Median annual pay was $68,410 in 2004.

Social and Human Service Assistants

What they do: Assess clients' needs and eligibility for services like food stamps, arrange for transportation and provide emotional support. They also monitor case records and report progress.

What you need: Usually an associate's degree or certificate, plus relevant work experience.

What it pays: Median annual pay was $24,270 in 2004.

Home Health Aides

What they do: Help elderly, disabled and convalescent people live at home instead of in a hospital or nursing home by assisting with housekeeping, bathing and other tasks.

What you need: Usually short-term, on-the-job training. Workers whose employers are covered by Medicare must complete 75 hours of training and pass a competency test.

What it pays: Median annual pay was $18,330 in 2004.

Postsecondary Teachers

What they do: Instruct students in a variety of academic and vocational subjects beyond the high school level to help them earn a degree or improve their knowledge or skills. They may prepare lessons or lectures, grade assignments and conduct extensive research in their fields. Most of these teachers work on college and university faculties, but others work as postsecondary vocational education teachers and graduate teaching assistants.

What you need: Depends on the employer and subject taught. At four-year research institutions, faculty usually hold a doctorate degree and some conduct post-doctoral research. At two-year colleges, a master's degree is standard.

What it pays: Median annual pay was $49,040, but varies widely depending on rank, subject taught and employer.

Medical Records and Health Information Technicians

What they do: Assemble and assess patients' medical charts, determine a facility's Medicare and other insurance reimbursements, and use computer software to help improve patient care and cut costs.

What you need: An associate's degree and a written examination.

What it pays: Median annual pay was $25,590 in 2004.

Computer Software Engineers

What they do: Design, develop, test and evaluate the software and systems computers need to perform their applications.

What you need: A bachelor's degree, relevant work experience and strong computer skills.

What it pays: Median annual pay was about $75,000 in 2004.

Fitness Trainers and Aerobics Instructors

What they do: Amidst growing concerns about obesity, fitness instructors help their clients slim down and shape up by instructing them and physical and exercise activities like yoga, aerobics and weightlifting.

What you need: There are no specific educational requirements, but most jobs require certification including CPR and first aid training.

What it pays: Median annual pay was $25,470 in 2004.

Physical Therapist Assistants

What they do: Help provide treatment including exercises and ultrasounds, record the patient's responses to treatment, and report the outcome of each treatment to the physical therapist.

What you need: Usually an associate's degree and on-the-job training, and some states require a license.

What it pays: Median annual pay was $37,890 in 2004.

There's no shortage of nursing jobs in Austin, Tx (or any of Texas for that matter). And, contrary to what you may have heard, Texas is a great state to live in. Austin is especially nice.

Absolutely wrong.

Yes, that link has many nursing positions. The facility is nowhere near where I am in Texas.

In my area of Texas, there are many more nurses than there are jobs.

Local hospitals have hiring freezes, LTC will not even let nurses fill out apps, nurses getting laid off regularly, and months go by without a single want ad for a nurse in the paper, UNLESS it's for a job in another city hundreds of miles away.

If it looks like a duck, quack like a duck, it's probably a duck.

In other works, there are no $%$#^% nursing jobs in my area of TEXAS and there is a surplus of nurses here!

The job sercurity is 100% in nursing! As long as you do what is expected of you....there are jobs in nursing...at least that has been my experince. The last job interview I went on...they were selling themselves to me...isnt it usually the other way around in most job interviews??:rotfl:

My 16 year old daughter is going to be a Nurse.... she will always have a job!

It is hard work....but I can sleep at night. I have friends being laid off in their jobs..ex: all depts in banking...who would of thought a job in banking wasnt a secured job....

Annor

Specializes in Emergency & Trauma/Adult ICU.
Medical Assistants

What it pays: Median annual pay was $24,610 in 2004. :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl:

Where did they get their info? I make $12,000 /year, before taxes, without benifits if I am working 40 hours (on the dot) a week all year long. (Of course now that I am in school I make near to nothing)

I calculate this to be $5.69/hr. Do you work in a one-physician office? The $24,610 figure works out to $11.83/hr. - seems slightly high for the median for an MA my region, but other areas of the country have a higher cost of living.

In other works, there are no $%$#^% nursing jobs in my area of TEXAS and there is a surplus of nurses here!

HellllloNurse, it sounds like it's time for you to move. It's like I always say, if you want to catch fish, you have to go fishing where there are fish. The beauty of nursing is that it allows you to do just that. The U.S. job market has come to this I think. My Grandmother, God bless her soul, was a nurse during the Great Depression (and WW2). She and her colleagues were largely spared the worst effects of those hard times because of the job security inherent to their profession. Anyways, I'm sorry if you're unable to pick up and move and I understand that not all of Texas is experiencing the nursing shortage to the same extent. The larger cities do seem to be the best places to go fishing for nursing jobs. The compact allows you to practice in Arizona where your skills are in even higher demand (from what I understand).

Specializes in SRNA.

Computer Software Engineers?!! This proves that this list is nonsense anyway. Those jobs are few and far between these days and layoffs are frequent. How silly!

-S

Foreign nurses only move where there are jobs available. I find it unlikely that they would move to an area with few jobs to compete with Americans. In my area there are ALWAYS open nursing jobs.

Foreign nurses will go where ever to get paid. I believe they could very well be working in a lot of facilities, making less than an american nurse therefore the foreign nurse is chosen and the american nurses are not picked for nursing jobs. I dont understand why people dont ban together to put an end to this import of foreign nurse recruitment and make nursing a profession people will want to pursue after college. salary will have to drastically go up

as it should, benefits, and retirement will have to be juiced up. This is America

we should be trying to keep americans employed. Nothing against foreign nurses, it is just called self preservation.

I agree with you entirely. Stats can be massaged depending on what they wish to portray. Keep in mind, the average RN age is around 48. All of us oldies but goodies need to be replaced in the nursing workforce over the next several years.

I dont understand why people dont ban together to put an end to this import of foreign nurse recruitment

As far as I'm concerned, the people already banded together to support the rights of corporations to walk all over their employees when they voted George Bush back for another four years of short sighted self serving Republican leadership. That walking all over employees includes, among other things, facilitating the importation of cheaper labor. Political plug over.

Specializes in Pediatrics (Burn ICU, CVICU).
As far as I'm concerned, the people already banned together to support the rights of corporations to walk all over their employees when they voted George Bush back for another four years of short sighted self serving Republican leadership. That walking all over employees includes, among other things, facilitating the importation of cheaper labor. Political plug over.

There is no need to turn this into a political debate.

As far as I'm concerned, the people already banned together to support the rights of corporations to walk all over their employees when they voted George Bush back for another four years of short sighted self serving Republican leadership. That walking all over employees includes, among other things, facilitating the importation of cheaper labor. Political plug over.

Well, I hate to say it, but you are right. I guess we have to deal with this mess.

There is no need to turn this into a political debate.

I dont think anyone is turning this into a debate. but just look at the state of the country since you mentioned it. it speaks for itself

There is no need to turn this into a political debate.

There's no need to limit the logical progression of a dialectic because it might make a few people uncomfortable either. What's more, there's no reason for nurses not to discuss US politics and how it relates to their circumstances. The bottom line is, the Republican/conservative ideology is incompatible with the kind of compassion that is supposed to be inherent to our profession. This incompatibility is becoming more and more evident. This is just my opinion of course but I think anybody would be hard pressed to make a sound argument against my position; compassionate conservatism is an oxymoron.

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