What makes nursing
attractive to an adult with work experience in other areas?
In May 2001, Joseph
Oseghale earned his master's degree in nursing from the MGH Institute
of Health Professions (Boston, MA). He was excited and equally intimidated;
he felt he was being initiated into a noble profession he had always admired.
Before entering the nursing program, Oseghale was a licensed social worker with
a master's degree in psychology. He had worked as a school teacher, magazine
writer, and nurse's aide, the latter of which led him to his professional
goal of becoming a nurse practitioner.
A Viable Career
Many people are picking nursing as a second career," affirms Arlene Lowenstein,
Ph.D., RN, professor emeritus at MGH, and former director of the Institute's
nursing program. "There's a nursing shortage, and the salaries have improved
dramatically. Both men and women can see this is a viable career," she explains.
According to the
latest projections from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, published in the
February 2004 Monthly Labor Review, more than one million new and replacement
nurses will be needed by 2012. The American Nurses Association reports that
the average staff nurse working in all settings now earns $35,212; hospital
staff nurses, $36,618; clinical nurse specialists, $41,266; nurse practitioners,
$43,636; and nurse anesthetists, $76,053.
MGH had its largest
class in September 2003 -- a little over 80 students, according to Dr. Lowenstein.
“The majority of the students worked in something else and struggled at
it," she says. "Some always wanted to be nurses; others had experiences with
family members or other people they knew in illness situations, and had a chance
to observe some of the roles." First careers run the gamut from psychologists
and horticulturists to lawyers and engineers. "Such backgrounds give depth to
the education the other students get," notes Dr. Lowenstein. "They're bringing
experience from different vantage points."
Researching
Career Options
Keith Tomlin was a medic in the Army who served in the 82nd Airborne Division
during the Gulf War. After completing his enlistment, he earned a bachelor's
degree in public health from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
(UNC). Upon graduating, he worked for the Department of Veteran Affairs (VA)
as a health educator/researcher in a VA hospital, and then in a similar position
at Duke University (Durham, NC) before he decided to enter UNC's nursing
school.
In addition to
missing the hands-on patient care skills he performed as an Army medic, Tomlin
wanted to continue providing patient health education. "Medical and physician
assistant schools did not seem to offer what I was looking for," he says.
Tomlin finished the 14-month bachelor of science in nursing (BSN) program at
UNC in August 2003. The accelerated program was fairly intense, he says, because
it was 10 months shorter than most BSN programs, while requiring the same amount
of class and clinical time.
Despite the intensity,
such programs, particularly ones offered online, are attractive to the growing
number of interested professionals. "Over the past four years, we increased
the number of students admitted to our prelicensure BSN program from 144 to
160," says Linda Cronenwett, Ph.D., RN, FAAN, dean and professor of UNC's School
of Nursing. During this same period, enrollment in the master of science in
nursing program remained stable with approximately 150 students, but the Ph.D.
program enrollment increased from 38 to 52 students. "The strong interest in
nursing as a second career was a major reason the UNC Chapel Hill School of
Nursing opened its 14-month degree BSN option in May 2001," she says.
UNC's program
has a challenging curriculum and requires particularly strong motivation and
endurance. "The second-degree students come to us with degrees in many fields
-- religion, English, music, anthropology, and pharmacy, as well as traditional
biomedical sciences," says Dr. Cronenwett. "We also admit some transfer students
from community colleges, which brings diversity in socioeconomic backgrounds."
Increased Interest
Gwendolyn Ostrinski graduated from Quinnipiac University's (Hamden, CT)
nursing program this May. As a child, the former claims processor always wanted
to be a nurse, but while in college, she worked in a hospital pharmacy and met
nurses who were unhappy with their work. She decided to major in sociology instead,
with a minor in psychology, which she earned from the University of Texas at
Dallas.
Ostrinski spent
10 years in the insurance industry, working her way up to senior systems analyst.
She then worked for a hospital as a systems analyst, documentation writer, and
trainer. After that, she did the same thing for a large bank until the position
was eliminated. At that point, she'd had enough of the corporate world.
"I wanted to do something that would leave me feeling fulfilled, like
I had done some good for someone," she says.
The need for a
more satisfying career, recent media attention to the nursing shortage, and
good salaries for beginning nurses provide incentive for many, but there are
other attractions to this career. "Another source of interest may be attributed
to student loan forgiveness given by health care institutions and the federal
government when students are hired after graduation," notes Elizabeth
McGann, DNSc, RN, CS, associate professor of nursing, and chair of the department
of nursing at Quinnipiac University. Quinnipiac started with three students
in its second-degree-program class in May 2001, and expects about 30 students
this year. Students are described as motivated, well-prepared, and academically
strong. "They come from undergraduate majors such as biological, social,
and behavioral sciences, some from related health professions. Most have work
experience, and quite a few have master's degrees," says McGann.
"Nursing is becoming
increasingly attractive because of the prospect of job stability and a fulfilling
career," adds Harriet Feldman, Ph.D., RN, FAAN, dean and professor of the Lienhard
School of Nursing, and chair of the Institutional Review Board at New York City's
Pace University. "Many of these individuals have had an interest in nursing
for a long time, but for one reason or another were unable to pursue this career."
Pace's number of second-career students has more than doubled in the last three
years, cites Dr. Feldman. "The population of second-career individuals who come
to Pace is diverse in background, past employment, and culture," she says. "They
are uniformly bright, motivated, committed to success, and mature." |