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QTRN74

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  1. I moved to Charlotte from S. Florida and have been looking for a job since the end of September when I received my NC license. I have probably applied to over 20+ jobs and haven't received a single call for an interview! I feel like my resume is probably just floating in some human resource cloud somewhere not being sent to the intended department posting the job. I am an experienced nurse and have NEVER had any difficulty finding a job until now. I am now questioning our decision to move here...
  2. Hi Rach, I am a graduate of NIU's school of nursing and I can say you have chosen a fantastic accredited school to attend! Getting your BSN right away is the best move you could make. Plus, living in DeKalb was fun too since it is a college town. Since graduation, I have worked in many different areas of nursing and it has always helped that I had my BSN. I recently went back to school and completed my MSN and now teach students just like what you will soon be. My mentor was from NIU and I really hope to be like her with my own students. My advice to you is to work hard in school and work part-time as a CNA or PCT while in college. This will assist you in getting that first job. Until then, if you are still in high school, then volunteer at your local hospital for that also looks good on both college interviews and also resume's. Feel free to PM me...I am always interested in helping a future students, especially NIU Huskies!
  3. Did you have to fill out the part that needed to be notarized?
  4. THank YOU SO MUCH FOR THE LINKS!!!
  5. Thank you all for your responses. How did you go about finding your clinical site? I am going for nurse educator so I am assuming I would need to teach. We just moved to a new state and I unfortunately have no connections here.
  6. I am starting the online MSN program at South University next month . All I can hope for is it to be uneventful. I am nervous about doing the whole thing "online"...not exactly sure how the clinical portion works yet...
  7. Hi all, I am wondering if anyone has gotten a Virginia license via endorsement online. I moved here from IL and looked up how to do it and am not sure if I did it right. I paid the fee, filled out a few questions, and was told it is "pending". Now, is that it? Don't I need to fill out paperwork in PEN and submit it to the Board of Nursing? Isn't a notary required? I feel like it can't be this easy! I must have missed something. Anyone who moved to VA, not from a "compact" state...please tell me what you had to do to get a VA license. Thanks in advance.
  8. Hi there, I just relocated to VA, but from IL. I just started the process to obtain a VA license. Did you do this already? Or are you a part of the "compact" states? If not, did you get your VA license yet? I ask this because it looks like you can do it all online...which is strange to me. I paid the fee, but feel like I should have done more... Let me know how your got your license! Thanks!
  9. QTRN74 replied to Ckatmc04's topic in General Nursing
    I am the wife of an active duty Naval officer and have wished MANY times that I had joined the Navy as a nurse back before we got married and had our kids! I don't know about the other branches, but the Navy treats their nurses like gold! I would only advise this if you have your bachelor's degree, that way you are automatically an Officer. You get paid great, you get to travel the world, work on an aircraft carrier (with cute Top Gun pilots and such), or do mission trips to areas in need of the USA's help. (That would be on a "hospital ship, which are REALLY cool). The Navy has many opportunities that I had NO CLUE about when I was a new nurse. Plus...they would have paid for my schooling or repaid my student loans! Sigh...if I could go back and do different...I would be a Navy Nurse!
  10. I will be starting my MSN through South University online...this fall.
  11. South University Online MSN program
  12. I definitely think LPN is the way to go if you are interested in the medical field. Due to lack of trained instructors, colleges are turning away students who otherwise would be admitted into an RN program. Get some experience and start taking care of sick people! With the babyboomers on their way to retirement, LPN jobs will be plenty!
  13. It is actually better in some cases. When I looked into it I found they were more accomadating to new grads...plus in some areas the pay is actually higher because you are an "Officer". :) If my husband wasn't already in it and we didn't have three kids, I would do it in a heartbeat!
  14. I graduated in 1997 and my first ICU job we made our own KCL bags! We used 0.9NS and injected the 10,20, or 40meq's ourselves! Now that is NOT done anymore!!! Also, in ICU each nurse only was assinged ONE vented patient...now we can have up to three! We also were the only unit to have drips...now the regular tele, med-surg floors do some of the drips. We didn't have as many "specialty" beds, nor did we have so many obese patients needing them!
  15. I would suggest going the RN route rather than X-ray, only because nurses have SO many options offered to them. If you have a weak stomach, then you go into an area with little blood (psych, doctor's office, phone triage, case management, legal nurse, insurance, x-ray special procedures...). If you start one area and find out it is not a good fit, then you try a different area. You don't get this flexibility with radiology. Good luck!

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