Nursing career can begin in a clinic or doctor's office and perhaps not exactly what one expected. There may be too much office politics or insurance "bureaucracy", which prevents them what they feel is the right way for patients. These nurses may be better suited for a position as a nurse, lawyer, nurse, lawyer, nurse educator, nurse or legislature nurse life care planner. Each of these nursing positions treat a patient in a different way, but they all speak on behalf of patients' rights as a human being should be treated fairly and without exception.
If science is what drives your passion instead of the people part of being a nurse, then maybe you would be better suited to a career as a nurse researcher who will work with research physicians and scientists to discover what hidden secrets within the human body and how different medicines or combinations of treatments can unlock a person's healing power.
If you are the type of person who likes variety and does not want two days to be the same, and then consider becoming an ER nurse or outpatient nurse - could also be a helicopter nurse. Everyday presents different people and challenges of what will go through the door next or where an ambulance will arrive next. Everything from common cold to a massive 20 car pile up on the highway will come through the doors, and all need help immediately. An ER nurse working in a fast-paced style environment because they are dealing with life and death with a moment's notice. They may be busy for hours and did not see a single patient for several hours or a whole day.
One of the largest growing nursing career is in trans-cultural nursing field. This is an area where a nurse will help a person or family from another country and with different cultural needs. Health care is based on their specific physical, spiritual and emotional care needs and dictated by their cultural aspects.
The nurses' careers are growing in reproductive health areas, and because more and more people want to have their own children and advances in infertility treatments are showing signs of improvement.
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