- 2021 Nurse Corps Loan Repayment Program
- HRSA Nurse Corp Loan Repayment Program 2023
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HRSA Nurse Corp Loan Repayment Program 2023
Hello everyone, I am currently a participant in the loan repayment program. Ran across this thread and thought I'd give some details of how the chain of events went down from last year when I was accepted. Applied in December of 2021 and credit check was in the middle of March. Received an email in August that I was a finalist and then received final confirmation of my acceptance into the program in September. Unfortunately it is a lot of nervous waiting. Remember reading that if you hadn't heard anything by the end of September then you hadn't been accepted but everyone eventually receives an acceptance or rejection notification. I think the deadline for submission was later this year so all of these dates are relative. My stats at the time of application: DTI 95% HPSA Score: 18 CRNA practicing at a small rural hospital
- HRSA Nurse Corps Loan Repayment 2022
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HRSA Nurse Corps Loan Repayment 2022
Just called earlier this morning as I had received the counter signature last week but nothing had changed on my profile. After speaking with someone I received a welcome email 30 minutes later and now my profile has been changed to participant. The representative said if I hadn’t received anything by Monday to give them a call back.
- HRSA Nurse Corps Loan Repayment 2022
- HRSA Nurse Corps Loan Repayment 2022
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What CRNA schools truly accept NICU experience?
From your description of the unit you currently work on, you need to transfer to an adult ICU for at least a year, if not more, to be adequately prepared for anesthesia school. You will be responsible for multiple vasoactive drugs at the same time and looking back on the experience I had before school, I would've had a way tougher time transitioning had I never worked with these drugs before. And the overall pharmacology is only a piece of the knowledge you gain from working in an adult ICU. Also, the vast majority of patients you will be caring for in the clinical setting will be adults while in school. After the restrictions are lifted, make it a priority to find a job in a large university setting, if possible, as these settings allow you to care for the sickest of the sick and look the best on an application. Hope this helps and good luck!
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Waiving ICU requirement
Well you are missing the most important part of the application. No book can teach the knowledge you gain from hands-on ICU experience day in and day out. There's a reason it's there and shouldn't be taken as something that can be replaced or cut out so easily.
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Grading Scale
My program had a 10 point grading scale. 79.5-89.4 was a B, 89.5 and up was an A. One C was allowed the whole program. The rigor of programs, both didactically and clinically, is high given the profession you're going into.
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Employer Paying for School?
There are hospitals and groups that have tuition reimbursement. I have heard of groups offering students stipends while in school to help offset some loan debt. I have also heard of groups or hospitals offering to repay X amount of student loans if you sign a contract for X amount of time. The risk you take is these jobs can be those that are less desirable for whatever reason (bad work environment, bad call schedule, staffing issues, etc.) and these groups need to offer something like this in order to attract providers. So if you sign the contract --> start working --> end up hating it and quit before your contract end date, you could be on the hook for however much the group/hospital paid toward your loans. Hope this answers some of your questions!
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CRNA Question
Right now CRNAs are very much in high demand. You can pretty much pick anywhere you want to work in the country and will most likely find a job in that location. With that said, there are many places that the market is more saturated and as such the pay isn't all that great. These are mostly in urban areas. If you are willing to look at more rural jobs, your job responsibilities will likely be greater (i.e. OB/regional anesthesia, greater autonomy) and the pay will be much better as well. Having just started my first job in a medically underserved area, I can't tell you how happy I am with my career choice. Hope this helps in your decision. Good luck!
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CRNA Scope
Hi Gkb1, CRNAs mainly work in the OR and different procedure areas performing anesthesia for all different kinds of procedures. The closest thing to any kind of clinic setting would be if you did pre-operative clinic on patients before they have a procedure. As you seem to be interested in primary care, NP would be the way to go. However, being that you haven't finished nursing school yet you have plenty of time to evaluate what you like about each profession and to figure out what you would enjoy doing the most. Try shadowing a CRNA and an NP. This should give you good insight into the day-to-day work for each and swing you in one direction or the other.
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Working during CRNA School
Depends on the curriculum structure but more than likely you won't have time once didactic and/or clinicals kicks in. The amount of money you would make isn't worth the extra stress and the time you spend working may negatively your performance. Not that it can't be done, but the amount of information that is thrown at you at once, especially when didactic starts, is ginormous and you need all the extra time you can spare to study it all. There are some programs that don't allow you to work and others that "strongly discourage" working and for good reason.
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How Important Is O-Chem When Applying & In School?
Hi pWalsh, First off your stats are more than adequate and will make you a strong candidate for gaining an interview. Speaking to your main question, I'm currently taking the chemistry course in our program and I'm not going to lie, it's really tough. The concepts are foreign to most of us and it's probably the class that I have devoted the most time to this semester. Lots of youtube, Khan academy, and tutoring. With that being said, I know there can be wide variability with the difficulty of the chem courses within each anesthesia program so it just depends on the program. As far as how much it will help in gaining acceptance, I would say not very much. The main determinants (speaking from personal experience, variability between programs with this also) of getting accepted are your stats, experience, and how well you perform in your interview. Having a strong background in chemistry would definitely be beneficial as far as the course work, but I don't think it would have that much effect on your admission chances. Hope this helps!