The following is written by and according to the U.S. Department of Labor and particular nursing specialties.
Some specialties in nursing are as follows.
Ambulatory care nurses
Critical care nurses
Emergency, or trauma, nurses
Transport nurses
Holistic nurses
Hospice and palliative care nurses
Infusion nurses
Long- term care nurses
Medical-surgical nurses
Occupational health nurses
Perianesthesia nurses
Perioperative nurses
Psychiatric-mental health nurses
Radiology nurses
Transplant nurses
Intellectual and developmental disabilities nurses
Diabetes management nurses
HIV/AIDS nurses
Oncology nurses
Wound, ostomy, and continence nurses
Cardiovascular nurses
Dermatology nurses
Gastroenterology nurses
Gynecology nurses
Nephrology nurses
Neuroscience nurses
Ophthalmic nurses
Orthopedic nurses
Otorhinolaryngology nurses
Respiratory nurses
Urology nurses
neonatal nurses
Nurse practitioners (minimum requirement of a master's degree)
Forensics nurses
Infection control nurses
Nurse administrators
Legal nurse
Nurse informaticists
Registered nurses (RNs), regardless of specialty or work setting, treat patients, educate patients and the public about various medical conditions, and provide advice and emotional support to patients' family members. RNs record patients' medical histories and symptoms, help perform diagnostic tests and analyze results, operate medical machinery, administer treatment and medications, and help with patient follow-up and rehabilitation.
For the source and more detailed information concerning your request, click on the related links section (U.S. Department of Labor) indicated at the bottom of this answer box.
AA
There really isn't an answer for this, because you could potentially become CEO of a company with an AA degree ... if your father is the Chairman of the Board. An AA degree is, to put it colloquially, not much of a degree, but it does prove you have some amount of training in a particular field (so it's slightly better than "I gots me my 8th grade diplomer"). Depending on the field, it could be either the minimum qualification required for an entry level job, or it could be completely irrelevant.
Bartender
Typically, a nursing program at the associates level is an AS, not an AA.
aa
AA offers only car insurance. They do not currently offer any other kind of insurance.
AA stands for alcohol anonymous it is for alcoholacs that need help
N/a
15
Yes you can. there are nursing programs available for high school grads at most Junior Colleges/Community Colleges. Get an AA degree then you can move into a BA degree in nursing at a university
No, not if your credit hours from you AA are accepted at the college you want to finish your BA at. I know someone that had a AA in Business and went two more years for the BA in Teacher Education. They told her as long as the credits are accepted you are fine, no matter what the field.
It is called aa