You must have critical care experience to be a CRNA, not or experience. Don't wast your time in the OR because you will work there eventually as a CRNA. Go straight to the ICU upon graduation; you...
If you decided to become a CRNA, you should have already researched the field including having already shadowed CRNA's. This shadowing should be for more than a couple of hours or days. Just think...
Just take a few grad school courses to show you can handle the work, take your GRE's and do well in your interveiw. Get CCRN certification and learn as much as you can in the ICU and obtain strong...
It's not true. If you have researched the profession on nurse anesthesia, shadowed CRNA's and found that this is the career you want, then apply! A lot of times, people will tell you things to...
You must have ICU experience (minimum 1 year) to get into Columbia U. (check the website). Students who got into the Anesthesia program as part of the ETP (they receive a bachelors in 1 year and...
I ask this because my school offers an MS in nurse anesthesia and my friend's school offesr an MSN and the faculty at my friend's school are saying that those with an MS in nurse anesthesia cannot be...
What is the difference between getting an MS vs a MSN in Nurse Anesthesia. Are you considered an Advanced Pracitce Nurse with either one? How does this affect employment and salary
Getting your NP does not give you an advantage to getting into CRNA school. The only thing it might do is show that you can handle grad school work, but remember that CRNA coursework is much tougher...
The CRNA profession is very flexible. There are plenty of jobs that a vareity of shifts, how you can work those shifts (i.e. 8,12, 16 hours) and you can choose to take on a job that does not require...
Don't forget that in order to be a CRNA, you must be an RN first, so you have to include nursing school education (2 or 4 years), and either way you must have a baccalaureate degree. Remember that...