and Baccalaureate-Degree Level Nurses Vicki Brown NSG-430V Professional Dynamics Luci Hanus April 26, 2015 In nursing there are two primary pathways of education used to enter the profession, the Associate degree level (ADN) and the Baccalaureate degree level (BSN). The associate degree level program of study typically requires two to three years for completion, and is usually offered at the community college level. It was created in 1951 by Mildred Montag as an alternative to the four year
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social sciences, communication, leadership, and critical thinking. According to the Bureau of Labor and Statistics, it is required that nurses hold a Bachelor’s degree or higher for administrative, research, consulting, and teaching work. BSN nurses contribute distinct skills to their field. These are important traits for the safe care of
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technical nurse and a professional nurse is the level of education. The Nursing Diploma and two-year Associates-Degree Nurses (ADN) are considered “technical” while a nurse with a four-year Bachelors of Science Degree in Nursing (BSN) is considered “professional”. The distinction of differentiating nursing capabilities based on education arose after the creation of the two-year ADN programs at junior colleges. After World War II there was a sudden growth in junior colleges to support the demand for technical
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as a bedside nurse and providing routine care for more stabilized patients under the supervision of a BSN prepared charge nurse, they are able to work in assisted living facilities, clinics assisting physicians with routine and daily care (Chapter 7 page 168. Chitty, Black 2007) And majority of the hospitals are now requiring their ADN nurses to go back to school and get their BSN. The first BSN program was instituted in 1909 (Page 25 Creasia, Friberg 2011). Bachelor of Science in nursing programs
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competencies between nurses prepared at an Associate-degree versus the Baccalaureate-degree level in nursing, they are slight. As I started my nursing career as an Associate-Degree Nurse (ADN), I felt inferior to my colleagues whom possessed their Baccalaureate-degree. That inferiority faded fast, as I saw that what an ADN and BSN did in my particular specialty was just the same. There were more similarities than differences. The similarities in competencies I found were, that both were required to pass
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Rn to Bsn Admission Essay Ellen Dillard BSN Admission Essay After researching a variety of different programs I have found that the RN to BSN program at Michigan State University is the program in which will best help me to personally grow as a professional nurse. I have always been extremely dedicated to my goals and proved that as I earned my BS in Interdisciplinary Studies in Social Science from Michigan State University in 2007. I then went on to receive my ADN from Schoolcraft College
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Since the beginning of nursing, there has always been different ways of preparing ones self for the field. Although the American Nurses Association decided that the BSN is the “entry point into professional nursing practice” (Cresia & Friberg, 2011) in 1965, there are still 3 “equal” ways of becoming a nurse. The three ways of becoming a registered nurse today are associate degree programs, diploma programs, and baccalaureate programs. Upon completion of all of these programs, the nurse will sit
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community college before, sitting for the NCLEX to become a Registered Nurse. The Associate-degree nurse does more bedside nursing with very little research being performed. Nurses are expected to take care of the patient as a whole, whether they are ADN or BSN. In the past this level of nursing was needed to supply the needs of nurses due to a shortage during the war. Health care is changing rapidly as more and more hospitals are trying to become Magnet hospitals, in which they require all nurse managers
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patient a better outcome as stated by the article in Health Affairs. In an article published in March 2003 issue of Health Affairs, nurse researcher Ann Kutney-Lee and colleagues found that a 10 point increase in the percentage of nurses holding a BSN within in a hospital was associated with an average reduction of 21.2 deaths for every 1000 patients- and for a
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• Select two articles on the role transition from RN to BSN. • For each article, complete the information below. Article 1 reference: List entry in correct APA format. Delaney, C., & Piscopo, B. (2007, November 19). There really is a difference: Nurses’ experiences with transitioning from RNs to BSNs. Journal of Professional Nursing, 23 (3), 167-173. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.profnurs.2007.01.011 Brief summary paragraph (in your own words) of approximately 3-4 sentences: A phenomenological
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