Overview of Emergency Nursing

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Emergency nursing is used in almost all places, all over the World. Emergency nursing would be a good field to go into because of the opportunity to work anywhere, at any time, and the thrill and excitement of nursing. Nursing is a very important career, and not often enough recognized for the work they do. It is now more common to see a celebrity who saved a cat on the news, than it is to see a nurse who has saved one life, or many lives. “Nurses do more ‘behind the scenes’ work” (Roark), most people will never know about, or even think of.
Depending on the type of nurse, they will have different specific tasks and duties. For example, “An inexperienced nurse may get more busy and or easier work; but new emergency nurses get the same work that an experienced emergency nurse would receive” (Roark). Emergency nurses, being on the job for any amount of time, get the same amount of work because they will have to know eventually. “If there is a severely ill, or injured patient, all available nurses will work together to hopefully save the patients life”(Roark). A registered nurse in an emergency room will often have to administer local inhalation, intravenous, or other anesthetics (CareerOneStop).
Nurses can work with individuals, families, or communities (U.S. Department of Labor). Nursing can be physically, and mentally exhausting; consoling the severely ill, or dying patients’ family can be the most difficult part (U.S. Department of Labor). Nurses provide personal assistance, medical attention, emotional support, or other personal care to others such as co workers, families, and patients (CareerOneStop). Most full-time nurses work between 35 and 45 hours a week (U.S. Department of Labor); which can be...

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...e. There are many different options in shifts, and work places, which makes the job very flexible.

Works Cited

Ross, Elizabeth. "LPN vs. RN: The Advantages of Being a Registered Nurse." Rasmussen
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Thompson, Lisa. Trauma Shift: Have You Got What It Takes to Be an ER Nurse?. Minneapolis:
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Newberry, Lorene. Sheehy’s Emergency Nursing: Principles and Practice. 5th ed. St. Louis: Mosby,
2003. Print.
“Nurse.” Careercruising. Career Cruising, 27 Nov 2013. Web. 27 Nov 2013.
Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor, Occupational Outlook Handbook 2012-2013
Edition, Registered Nurses. Web. 25 Nov 2013.
Roark, Paula. Personal Interview. 25 11 2013.
“Registered Nurses.” Careeronestop. U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training
Administration, n.d. Web. 26 Nov 2013.

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