The average hourly wage of aregistered nurse is $32.56 per hour so they would make $66,560 per year
Well if you know that you want to go ahead and get your bachelors in nursing there is no need to obtain your associates because you will still go through the same program and classes. It would just basically be an extension of classes from your associates. So If you want a bachelors in nursing, enroll in the bachelors nursing program, not the associates.
yes
Answer Registered Nurses have tons of paper work to do. My suggestion to you would be to go to a seminar for a Nursing School and see just exactly what is required from a Registered Nurse and take it from there.
If rn is part of the proper name then capitalize. If saying that someone is an rn then no.Not Quite..."RN" should always be caps, whether it's used as a suffix attached to a nurse's name or as a noun in a declaratory sentence -- "Jerry is an RN." However, if you expand it to say, "Jerry is a registered nurse," the caps are not necessary.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics the estimated mean annual wage for registered nurses as of May 2008 is, $65,00. This would amount to $31.31 per hour.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics the estimated mean annual wage for registered nurses as of May 2008 is, $65,130. This would amount to $31.31 per hour.
according to position area unit
A nursing field such as an emergency room nurse or psychiatric nurse often does not determine the pay as much as experience in nursing / number of years one has worked as a nurse. ER nurses are usually registered nurses just as you would find on a normal hospital floor, it is just the difference in duties.
A registered nurse is the basic level attained after graduating from a certified Associates or Bachelors nursing program. This means that the registered nurse has not yet specified if he or she would like to enter a specialized field in nursing. A pediatric nurse is a registered nurse trained in the care of newborns and children. It is a specialized field that a registered nurse must first train on before he or she is able to work in that specific area.
"The proper definition of registered nursing work, would be a nurse who works in the hospital to ensure that the doctors orders for a patient are being followed."
No, a registered nurse can do the duties of any version of nursing training below their license level. So a registered nurse should know the abilities and skills required to be a CNA. The one difference is a registered nurse would be required to be more responsible by the Board of Nursing to be aware of any problems or changes than the CNA would be required (due to CNA's lack of training and the fact that ultimately the registered nurse is the one responsible for a CNA's actions if they are in charge of them). So for example, if you miss the fact that your patient is choking to death, a CNA would be less liable than that of a registered nurse due to the RN having the higher training.
The average wage of a nurse can vary depending on whether you are a registered nurse, or a nurses assistant. I have found that with less than a year experience as a Registered Nurse you would earn approximately $48,720 but with 5 to 9 years experience you would earn approximately $67,000 per year.