Scrubs For Everyone

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There is nothing more important in hospital then sanitation. If sanitation is not up to par, people who come in can actually become sick. Scrubs are clothing that doctors and nurses wear in order to ensure that they are completely sanitized before interacting with a patient. This precaution was not always a viewed as a necessity.

Scrubs were simply designed for there to be few places for dirt and germs to hide. Since their design began surfacing in operating rooms, surgeons have adopted scrubs as their uniform. Scrubs have gone from what was once just an operating room attire to extending to other areas in the hospital. Now nurses typically wear scrubs, and the majority of doctors wear scrubs and lab coats. Scrubs are also beneficial to those who come in contact with bodily fluids on a regular basis by allowing the nurses the satisfaction of knowing that their street cloths are not being contaminated. Scrubs have even shown up outside of hospitals. Veterinary clinic nurses and technicians wear scrubs, and some prison inmates have been required to wear scrubs. Scrubs have also reached the fashion industry and are a trendy pajama choice for some young adults.

It wasn’t until the twentieth century that surgeons started to wear specific uniforms. Before scrubs, a surgeon would wear normal street cloths with an apron of some sort to protect his clothing from stains. Neither the equipment nor the surgeon’s hands were sterilized before the procedure. Many instruments were reused, and some of the bandaging and gauze was made out of scraps found on the floors at cotton mills. Today we are relentless with cleanliness, making sure that everything is sterile and washed before patients interact with physicians. Scrubs have provided for sanitary and safe environments for patients and care providers around the world.

Nursing An Exciting, Fulfilling Career

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A career choice is certainly one of the most important decisions a person will ever make in their lifetime. Not only will they spend most of their waking hours doing the job they’ve chosen to do, but it will also affect the income they have and the lifestyle that results from that income. With this in mind, a career in nursing is certainly something that men and women starting out should seriously consider.

Nursing is now and will continue to be one of the most in-demand of any job on the market, and the starting pay is getting better all the time. Even more importantly, it is a profession in which someone can truly make a remarkable difference in the lives of others. Below are just a few of the many reasons to put nursing on your “careers -to-consider” list:

o    Obviously, becoming a nurse is a choice to spend your career in the care of others. The fulfillment and job satisfaction that many people derive from this aspect alone is compensation for the well-known challenges associated with nursing. Seeing someone’s face when something you’ve done has improved or even preserved their life is a reward that no salary can equal.

o    Nursing is a very high-skill profession. The kind of person that chooses to become a nurse is generally the kind of person that is goal-oriented and driven to excel. Our society could certainly use more of this kind of person.

o    Nurses are known and admired for their dedication to and their passion for their profession. Becoming a nurse is a choice to work long and hard, day after day and week after week. It is not a job for the squeamish or the lazy. It’s not a profession that lends itself to an active social or family life, at least not without a careful balance.

Nursing is all about making a difference. In your own life, and in the lives of others.

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Military Nurses Making A Major Difference

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Serving as a military nurse is an opportunity to receive rewards in a multitude of ways. In addition to all of the benefits of a traditional nursing career, the military nurse is also given the privilege of serving their country. Many who choose to become a military nurse cite this as one of the chief reasons they decided to pursue nursing as a career. With ongoing wars and other military engagements taking place throughout the world, the urgency of need for people willing to step up and serve has never been greater. The rewards are great. The challenges are many. But to an overwhelming degree, a military nursing career is truly the best of both worlds.

It has been over 80 years since the Veteran’s Health Administration (better known as the VA) was established. From its earliest beginnings, the VA has been focused on providing the best care for the brave men and women serving our country. It is now one of the largest health care delivery systems in the United States, with over 150 hospitals nationwide and serving more than 5 million veterans annually. It is also the largest employer of nurses in the entire world, with a total of over 60,000 currently employed. It is also one of the largest employers in the country of minority nurses.

The opportunities for a military nurse are also remarkably diverse and ever expanding. Whether one wants the intense but rewarding experience of a military hospital, the excitement of being a health educator, or the chance to specialize in innumerable niches, a military nursing career can fill the bill. There are also many opportunities for developing nursing skills that will easily carry over into a non-military nursing career. This in fact is yet another attraction of choosing the military.

Each of these factors, coupled with many, many more, make the decision to be a military nurse one for careful consideration. There is truly limitless, exciting opportunities ahead.

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Military Nursing Career is Path to Adventure

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Have you been struggling with the decision of what to choose for a career? Or you a service-oriented person and find yourself interested in helping other people? There is an opportunity now available that may be just right for you. And not only is it a rewarding, fast-paced and exciting experience, you’re likely to discover that it is also a personally fulfilling career as well. Is it a job in the circus? Not at all. It’s the chance to serve and work as a military nurse.

The reasons that could be cited as motivators to choose this career are many. Below are just a few of the possible reasons people give when mentioning how much they enjoy the work they do as a military nurse. Many more could be cited. It would be very wise to do some personal research, coupled with discussing military nursing as a career with someone actually now serving in that capacity.

For example, one of the leading reasons people cite for job satisfaction in nursing is the chance to innovate. Innovation is a part of almost every day life for military nurses. Whether it’s using cutting-edge technology to help a cancer patient, helping a soldier adapt to life with a prosthetic limb, or almost innumerable other possibilities, a career in military nursing is the place to be if you’re passionate about innovation.

In fact, many of the innovations now employed by hospitals and healthcare providers all over the world had their beginnings in the military healthcare world. For example, VA doctors and researchers have been key players in the development of such things as CT scans, the pacemaker, artificial limbs, and cancer research. They have also made an important contribution to the world of pharmaceuticals, whether in the discovery of new drugs or through improvement of existing ones.

If this isn’t enough to get you excited about pursuing a military nursing career, do your research. It could change your life.

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Nursing a Great Career Choice For the Compassionate

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Nursing is one of those careers that people often assume to be far too difficult and stressful for them to consider. No doubt it does take a certain type of individual who is willing to commit their lives to the work of nursing. But as for it being a hard profession to prepare for and to break into, the opposite in fact is true. Nursing is a career that could be considered incremental in nature.

After the initial investment of time and resources for training (which can vary in length depending on the type of training you choose to pursue,) the payoff for that effort comes quickly and often. Whether it is in the form of compensation, which for a first-year student out of nursing school can easily top $50,000+, to the equally immediate payoff of seeing your work make a difference in the lives of other people virtually every day, nursing is without a doubt a high reward profession.

For someone thinking of becoming a nurse, here are a few of the many reasons that it is such a great choice. Each one has to do with the great flexibility that nursing offers, although there are many other benefits in addition to the ones listed below.

First of all, there is the benefit of a flexible schedule. Nurses have a wide variety of part and full-time schedules to choose from, all based around what they are able to commit to on a weekly basis. Some nurses are only able to work a part-time, four hours per day schedule. Some work a 12-hour, four days per week schedule. For some, a weekend graveyard shift is the only one they can handle due to other personal responsibilities. Nursing accommodates all these and many other demands on a nurse’s time.

You also have the flexibility of location.  There are an ever-increasing number of options to choose from for the work of a nurse. All are very flexible.

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The Future of Nursing is Bright and Exciting

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To the person considering nursing as a possible career, one of the many questions they may ask has to do with what their chosen profession might look like in the near future. A recent report issued by The University of Miami attempted to answer that and many other questions about nursing.

For example, it is predicted that by the year 2020, a majority of practicing nurses will have received at least their bachelor’s degree. It is also considered likely that many nurse practitioners will be able to practice without a physician being present. Especially encouraging is the prediction that those same nurse practitioners will also be paid more fairly and also directly by insurance companies. This is great news, in part because there is such a large influx of nurse practitioners entering the nursing field due to the attractive nature of the work done by this emerging and highly-trained nursing contingent.

The report also made mention of the fact that there are almost 3 million nurses now at work in the United States, which makes nursing the largest health-care profession in the country. The report stressed the importance of giving this critical group of medical professions a voice in the future of their industry.

The report estimated that roughly 50% of nurses now have at least a bachelor’s degree. The trend of that number rising is a positive one, the report noted. Nurse practitioners have at least a master’s degree and now do many of the things that a doctor does in diagnosing and treating patients. 15 states currently allow nurse practitioners to see patients without a doctor present.

This is widely considered to be an essential step toward these nurses being able to also be paid directly for their services by the insurance companies, just like doctors. The report called upon state legislators to force insurance companies to pay practitioners the same as doctors. They believe this will improve nursing and medical care generally.

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Exciting New Career Choices in Nursing Now Available

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In spite of being one of the most storied and established of career choices, nursing still has a lot of new adventures and opportunities to offer of any career field. Here are a few of the most in-demand options now available to choose from in nursing.

1. Forensic nursing – The rapid advances in law enforcement, coupled with greater publicity from television programs dealing with forensics, have led to forensic nursing becoming a very exciting place to pursue a nursing career. Whether collecting DNA evidence at a crime scene to testifying at a criminal trial, this is a career with no ceiling on opportunities. You also have the opportunity to assist victims of crime as they struggle to deal with assault and other violations of the law. Your background as a nurse will also give you the opportunity to examine evidence and to then ensure that it is properly preserved for trial.

2. Legal nursing – With training and a nursing license, some nurses are earning upwards of $150 per hour as nurse legal consultants. In essence you get to become a nurse detective as you analyze challenging and complex medical records in support of legal cases. An especially exciting aspect of this career can come when you are called upon to testify in criminal trials. Rare are the rewards of being able to see justice come about because of your training and expertise.

3. Military nursing – This is one of the fast-growing segments of nursing. You’ll have the opportunity to serve your country while also assisting soldiers who have been wounded or injured in battle. You’ll also have the opportunity to receive advanced training not available to those in a civilian-nursing career. Not to mention the chance to travel the world and have most if not all of your training paid for. A military nursing career truly offers the best of both worlds. It is also a fantastic springboard into non-military nursing service.

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New, Exciting Opportunites to Specialize in Nursing Profession Now Available

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When someone is asked about pursuing a career in nursing, their first thought is often connected to their preconceived notions about what it means to be a nurse. More often than not, an image of a woman rushing around a hospital or operating room is what comes to mind. However, in the 21st century, there are an ever-increasing number of alternatives to this traditional view of nursing. This makes choosing a career in the nursing field a more exciting one than ever before. Here are several of the many exciting options available to those opting to pursue this path:

Travel nursing – although it is not often thought of when thinking of a nursing career, travel nursing is perhaps the most exciting way to live the nursing life. There are literally thousands of locations both in the United States and around the world where the demand is great and growing for travel nurses. This is truly a way to be in total command of your career. For each assignment, the travel nurse has the freedom to choose where they work, for how long, and in what specialty. With the severe nursing shortage literally impacting hospitals around the world. a travel nurse can find short-term work anywhere they choose. The compensation is also generous, ranging from $20 to $40 per hour on average. Many of these locations also offer free or reduced-cost housing as a bonus, in addition to signing and contract-completion bonuses.

Surgical nursing – this is another in-demand and high-compensation category in the nursing field. Surgical nurses employ their advanced training during delicate procedures such as organ transplants, heart surgery, laser incisions, and countless other surgery-related services. Surgical nurses are also some of the highest paid nurses in all of nursing, due to their advanced training and experience. They are also a vital part of the recovery process for patients after a procedure has been done. Surgical nursing is red-hot and getting hotter.

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The Benefits of Nursing

Luisa
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Your life is a devotion of concern, a meet of hours and demands – you never dreamed of New York luxury apartments when you were young, the common indulgences. You always wished instead to offer yourself to those who needed you most: the weak and the frightened, the ill and the (slowly) healing. You are a nurse. Too often is this position belittled by the masses, left ignored in the wake of surgical precision. But the necessity of your profession cannot be denied and it is therefore afforded many essential benefits. You can be rewarded for your choices. You can be paid for your time.

Nursing, as of 2010, provides individuals with a wealth of incentives – each meant to counter the long minutes and desperate scenarios:

One: Salary. A registered nurse, just beginning his or her career, can be paid between $30,000 and $50,000. This is considerably higher than most entry level positions and is also a rare constancy. Wages will only increase over the years, yielding a possible salary of over $70,000.

Two: Overtime. The notion of giving an excess of seconds to your job can seem daunting, but the payment offered with it should compensate. The typical registered nurse can see their wages stuffed with over $10.00 extra per hour. Few careers in 2010 could generate that amount.

Three: Vacations. There will be days that seem endless and situations that seem cruel. It is necessary therefore to allow yourself to simply relax, turning all focus inward rather than toward others. Beginning nurses typically receive a week of vacation time. Those with more experience, however, can gain as much as three.

Nursing is not an easy profession but it is still your purpose. This could never be doubted. The pressures of your career can seem overwhelming, however. And so these advantages must be utilized fully to maintain your patience and your strength.

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Field Clinic Nursing at the Front Lines of Adventure

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Working as a nurse in a field clinic can be some of the most exciting and rewarding opportunities in a nursing career. Field nursing often involves traveling to a third world country or to the site of a major disaster to assist victims. It is demanding and exhausting work. But those who chose to accept the challenge, it can also be deeply satisfying.

Here are just a few of the many things you might find yourself doing as a member of a field clinic:

Helping with pre-natal checkups for expectant mothers.
Assisting with pap smears and other preventative medical procedures.
Performing physical exams and assessments on a wide variety of patients.
Provide vaccines to children (both oral and injected) in conjunction with Public Health officials.
Assisting in wound care and dressing changes for injured victims.
Interviewing patients to determine what medical attention and assistance they might need.
Traveling to remote locations to assist seriously injured patients and then assisting them as they are transported to medical facilities.

These are just a very small sample of the literally numberless opportunities available in a medical field clinic. These are essentially modern-day versions of the famous MASH units made popular by the long-running television program. They can be found in a wide variety of settings, including schools, community centers, churches, homes, and locally-based residences.

They may have only latrines, no electricity except what is available on-hand, little or no running water, and exposure to the elements, heat, and dirt.

Field clinics can even present significant risks, since they are often located in areas close to a recent major disaster such as an earthquake or hurricane. For example, during the earthquakes in Haiti, nurses were right on the front lines, helping the tens of thousands affected by this horrific disaster.
Although field nursing is fraught with risks and challenges, it is also one of the most rewarding adventures available to nurses today.

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