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Is being a nurse practitioner more stressful than being a doctor? |
im curious to know! I think it all depends on your working conditions and your own psyche. If you feel empowered as a nurse practitioner, because you have power commensurate with your skills, you will not feel undue stress. It's also important to have the resources in your health care system to be able to refer a patient to a more knowledgeable professional (physician, psychologist, another nurse) when you know your skills are not sufficient to treat a given patient. However, if you have to have everything approved by a physician, even when you know better than the physician, or when the patient has no recourse to a more skilled practitioner if your skills are insufficient, that can definitely lead to more stress than a physician faces. Probably. Although i am not a nurse practioner or a doctor, But i hear that both are very willingly stressful. Hell yes......im a nurse and if someone thinks doctors have it worse they are LYING......or some kind of delusional or something. We are the ones that do the majority of the work.....about the only thing doctors do is diagnose and operate thats it.......if there life is stressful its only because they dont know what to spend their next wage on.... Being part of the medical profession, I can tell you that a nurse's job definitely seems more stressful than a doctor's. Doctors do the examination, the diagnosis and plan the management of the patient's condition but it's the nurses who actually have to administer the medication and be available as the first line response team in caring for the patient. yes, you have the same kind of work to do but you do not have full control the less control the mosre stress also do not get the I've never been a nurse, but a doctor's job is very stressful. The NP always has a doctor to go to, and the doctor is ultimately responsible. I've never been either of these professions, but I can say that while I worked in an ER for about a year all the doctors I got to know we're really uptight and had a hollier than thou attitude but the one NP that worked in the ER was about as laid back as you can imagine, he got in trouble for wearing sandls to work more times than I can remember. |
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why don't you just do a web search? ...Yes, you can. My personal physician is one. She is nice and does house calls in a rural setting. She got her PHD this summer and is now Dr. #@&#*(protection) However she is still a nurse practi... A nurse practitioner (NP) is a registered nurse who has completed specific advanced nursing education (generally a master's degree) and training in the diagnosis and management of common medic... University of San Diego has such a program and I know a few folks who have gone through it. VERY intense. go to www.sandiego.edu ...It depends on what program you take. I took a college credit course this summer for Anatomy and Physiology I, and there was a girl in there that had to take the course even though she had already ... Yes, I actually prefer to see the nurse practitioner as they take more time to sit down and talk to you if you have questions, and they don't seem as rushed. A nurse practitioner has only abo... No. The first two are physicians, the last is not. ...According to the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners (AANP), nurse practitioners (NPs) are advanced practice nurses who provide high-quality healthcare services similar to those of a doctor. NP... |
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