Glad to be the commenter . Thanks for the video reply Old Dad Nurse. I know that it would be hard to anwser this one, but If you could say a bit more about what you expect to change in your day to day once you become a Family Nurse Pract. that would be great. I mean in terms of, how much your hours changed, what the job would be after compared to what you do now, the increase in compensation (% wise), and also how competitive is it to find and land jobs in the NP world compared to your RN world right now. This kind of stuff. Sorry about the constant poking around, i'm interested hahaha. Thank you again!
lol, ok i'll try to answer some of those but not yet being a NP i can't really answer the nitty gritty of some of those. there are many NPs on here that could comment better from actual first-hand experience. from me, i'll try and comment from what i've heard/seen from interacting and talking with some of them in-person. but i'll defer to their answers if they are different than mine.
really?! did not know that. in NJ i believe they have to work in no more than 4:1 ratios with MD. i'm sure it varies state to state. but that makes sense that CA would be giving such leeway. it seems to usually be at the forefront of nursing parameters, etc.
Glad to be the commenter . Thanks for the video reply Old Dad Nurse. I know that it would be hard to anwser this one, but If you could say a bit more about what you expect to change in your day to day once you become a Family Nurse Pract. that would be great. I mean in terms of, how much your hours changed, what the job would be after compared to what you do now, the increase in compensation (% wise), and also how competitive is it to find and land jobs in the NP world compared to your RN world right now. This kind of stuff. Sorry about the constant poking around, i'm interested hahaha. Thank you again!
lol, ok i'll try to answer some of those but not yet being a NP i can't really answer the nitty gritty of some of those. there are many NPs on here that could comment better from actual first-hand experience.
from me, i'll try and comment from what i've heard/seen from interacting and talking with some of them in-person. but i'll defer to their answers if they are different than mine.
@@olddadnurseThat's more than enough, looking foward to it
CRNAs in California work independantly. FYI
really?! did not know that.
in NJ i believe they have to work in no more than 4:1 ratios with MD. i'm sure it varies state to state. but that makes sense that CA would be giving such leeway. it seems to usually be at the forefront of nursing parameters, etc.
@@olddadnurse yeah I believe it varies by state. AAs report to a physician.
54…stop you’re not old and you look good.
@@aide2nurse ☺too kind!!! thku!
I just started my FNP program at Frontier Nursing University and I’m 53. I will be 55 when I graduate.
It’s on my bucket lists. Live with no regrets