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Thank you so much! My main questions:
Thank you so much for your valuable time! I would be grateful for any other information I may not have asked about!
Thank you so much! My main questions:
- I am most passionate about working with individuals suffering from a range of brain injury. What field(s) of nursing work most closely in that field? I am aware there are PM&R physicians.
When you say brain "injury", I think of neuro-ICU since it deals with catastrophic strokes, neurosurgery, and actual brain damage. I don't think you'll be helping with any rehab though. If you expand injury to neurological disorder, perhaps a post-stroke floor would be to your liking since you said neuro-rehabilitation? If you work on a general neuro floor, you may see strokes, ALS, myasthenia gravis, seizure disorders, and multiple sclerosis (I know I'm leaving other things out).- From what I am aware through researching different programs, I need to complete anatomy and physiology. Does it matter where I complete these (community college vs. university setting)?
This is school dependent and you should call the school and make sure. If your gpa is intact, I would pick the cheapest route possible.- What is the range of volunteer or clinical hours I should obtain? The most significant experience I've had was a clinical unpaid internship I completed during my undergraduate career for 1.5 years where I rotated through a wide range of medical departments to provide general assistance such as patient ambulation and encouraging prescription compliance ( i.e. Geriatric psychiatry, pharmacy, oncology)?
I would get a paid clinical job, but hit 100+ hours of volunteering if you want to be competitive. This is definitely program specific and calling admissions would help you get a better idea.- For direct entry MSN programs, which ones should I be aware of that require an interview?
No idea, a quick call to the school you're interested in goes a long way! :)- In what ways might my undergraduate degree in public health be used or prospects for advancement?
No idea, would make you eligible for some accelerated BSN programs though.- Would my background being premed be a disadvantage in any way?
No way. Recruiters and schools would be impress if your gpa is intact. If you verbalize a good reason to your switch, then don't worry about it.Thank you so much for your valuable time! I would be grateful for any other information I may not have asked about!
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Grateful0893
6 Posts
Hello beautiful people, I am 24 and a survivor of a rare neuroimmune disorder. As a first generation college student, I have gone through a series of hardship that have shaped me into who I am today and I am so incredibly grateful for everything in life. I graduated last year from a renowned university in California with a bachelor's degree in public health and transitioned into a one year competitive premedical Post Baccalaureate program which made me realize my earlier plans during high school to become a nurse practitioner never went away. Unfortunately, it just took an expensive detour to make me see and believe nursing aligns more with the core of who I am. I am highly interested in one day serving patients in neuro-rehabilitation. May I kindly ask for advice and perhaps mentorship? I would be grateful for any input. Thank you so much for reading!