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International experience
I been reading your post for a while now and it seems to me that you really do depent on your future nursing career an what YOUR HUSBAND DOES! It seems to me that you are a great student getting As on everything. So it is only a matter of experience before you get into CRNA school. Why does'nt your hubby relocate to WHERE YOU NEED TO GO. keep in mind that CRNA schools can vary significally, so you will have to find one that fits you the best, This about only looking at CRNA school only on the state, and getting your ICU experience on other countries because your man needs to go there, Really is what is the PROBLEM WITH NURSING. You are not giving your self your price, just like so many nurses that I know. Is nursing less important that your husband's career, are you less important than your husband. this is the mentality that nursing needs to come out off.
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Problems with eczema
oh, i used the freederm hc eczema/dermatitis cream. is relly weird because when ever i went to the doctor before he would always say that my condition was quite common and that he even had it. after using freederm hc, the irritation and scales don,t come back unlike desowen that i had to put every few days.
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Problems with eczema
HI, I had the same problem and used Desowen for years. A while back I had no insurance so I could not buy it since I need a prescription for that. However, it is one of the best things that have happened to me since I did an internet search and i decided to give www.FreeDerm.com a try. This thing is a miracle! even better I found out that Desowen is for eczema and sorasis of the skin. It actully is a TOpical STEROID that works by disimflaming the skin. I will never use DEsowen again. Hope this HEps..
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Rankings for Nursing Schools?
hi, im from miami and when i was doing my prerequisites my profesors used to tell me that miami dade college was the best in the nation. then i transfer to broward community college and guess what? they said the same thing too..... the real thurth is that the best program in nursing are the following; university of pennsylvania, university of washington and the university of california at san francisco. each one of them have their speciality upenn has the best undergraduate program. and also the following: [color=#ffffff]program[color=#ffffff] penn ranking nurse midwifery nurse practitioner-adult nurse practitioner-gero nurse practitioner-pediatric clinical nurse specialist-psych nursing service administration clinical nurse specialist-adult nurse practitioner-family1 1 1 2 2 2 3 3
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WHY are nurses so catty??
i think i found the perfect reason why nurses are so catty while reading post at another site. keep in mind that it is not my opinion, eventhought it is indeed a very intersting point that should even be studied by psychologist or sociologist....so here it goes.... i am currently a nurse working in a pediatric hospital. i have felt for a while all the frustration that i have seen displayed on various responses and original postings. all talk of leaving the profession, feeling sorry for those who enter. how will things change? i really don't know the answer to this - and honestly want to try to find out - not just complain. [color=#3366ff]is it because it is a "woman's profession" that it has this stigma of backbiting, and the "woe is me" attitude? why do we allow this? why do men do better in "our" profession than we do? i believe that men are not brought up to believe that they have to put up w/**** and that they can't change it. women do think this way. if a guy doesn't like something - he is vocal w/out being petty - and he is aggressive for the change not whiny. i think it is time to stand up and try to be the voice of change. it won't happen overnight but if we allow it to continue then the professional image will never change, the attitude will never change and we will continue to be disappointed in our choice of profession and the path it follows. do we really want to leave this legacy to the next generation of nurses or do we want to be the advocates and make this the profession we imagined when we were in nursing school?
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Does it have to be such a hostile environment?
i am not speaking for anybody. if you read my original post you will see that this is an article posted at another site by another person, who happens to be a women. let me posted again....... i am currently a nurse working in a pediatric hospital. i have felt for a while all the frustration that i have seen displayed on various responses and original postings. all talk of leaving the profession, feeling sorry for those who enter. how will things change? i really don't know the answer to this - and honestly want to try to find out - not just complain. [color=#3366ff]is it because it is a "woman's profession" that it has this stigma of backbiting, and the "woe is me" attitude? why do we allow this? why do men do better in "our" profession than we do? i believe that men are not brought up to believe that they have to put up w/**** and that they can't change it. women do think this way. if a guy doesn't like something - he is vocal w/out being petty - and he is aggressive for the change not whiny. i think it is time to stand up and try to be the voice of change. it won't happen overnight but if we allow it to continue then the professional image will never change, the attitude will never change and we will continue to be disappointed in our choice of profession and the path it follows. do we really want to leave this legacy to the next generation of nurses or do we want to be the advocates and make this the profession we imagined when we were in nursing school?
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Does it have to be such a hostile environment?
I found this tred at oneter site read...... I am currently a nurse working in a pediatric hospital. I have felt for a while all the frustration that I have seen displayed on various responses and original postings. All talk of leaving the profession, feeling sorry for those who enter. How will things change? I really don't know the answer to this - and honestly want to try to find out - not just complain. Is it because it is a "woman's profession" that it has this stigma of backbiting, and the "woe is me" attitude? Why do we allow this? Why do men do better in "our" profession than we do? I believe that men are NOT brought up to believe that they have to put up w/**** and that they can't change it. Women do think this way. If a guy doesn't like something - he is vocal w/out being petty - and he is aggressive for the change not whiny. I think it is time to stand up and try to be the voice of change. It won't happen overnight but if we allow it to continue then the professional image will never change, the attitude will never change and we will continue to be disappointed in our choice of profession and the path it follows. Do we really want to leave this legacy to the next generation of nurses or do we want to be the advocates and make this the profession we imagined when we were in nursing school?