Nurse Practitioners are considered "Mid-level Providers/Practitioners," along with Clinical Nurse Specialists, Certified Nurse Midwives, Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists and Physician Assistants. Thus, yes they are registered and licensed.
Family Nurse Practitioner-Certified
CRNP means certified registered nurse practitioner.
Advanced Registered Nurse Practitioner - Certified.
Advanced -Registered - Nurse - Practitioner...Certified. I think!
Certified Registered Nurse Practitioner
FNP, for those that don't know is Family Nurse Practitioner.The -C means Certified.So they are a Certified Family Nurse Practitioner.
FNP-C stands for Family Nurse Practitioner. WHNP stands for Women's Health Nurse Practitioner.
Advanced registered nurse practitioner, board certified (by ANCC).
An FNP is a "Family Nurse Practitioner," or a nurse practitioner who is trained and board-certified in Family and Community Medicine. See this article for more information: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certified_nurse_practitioner
In the United States, the abbreviation is CNM, for certified nurse-midwife. In Canada, the abbreviation is RM, for registered midwife (though this differs from the U.S. because it can apply to non-nurse midwives.)
Family Nurse Practitioner - Board Certified.An FNP-BC is a "Family Nurse Practitioner-Board Certified," or a nurse practitioner who is trained and board certified in Family and Community Medicine. Most practitioners choose to include the "BC" designation after the title "FNP." See this article for more information: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certified_nurse_practitioner
CNP = Certified Nurse Practitioner. So technically, your "doctor" is actually a highly trained nurse.