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how much does a nurse make a year
#nursing #nurse #healthcare #registered-nurses #medicine
4 answers
Updated
Richard’s Answer
Depends on the location and practice setting. Generally Range is $37,000- $65,000 per year.
Updated
Lisa’s Answer
Hi Bailey P.
you can go to salary.com to research what nurses make in your area!
Lisa recommends the following next steps:
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Karen’s Answer
It depends on where you work, that can even vary between facilities. It depends on the kind of nurse you are. I believe as an NP and when l was an RN I have been paid quite well. However, if the pay is what you're going after look for something else. It's a headache, backache, heartache and exhausting. Sometimes you come home smelling of heaven knows what. You think you can't do anymore and you have a shift in 4 hours. But, after 35+ years of all that l wouldn't change a thing. It is also heartwarming, wonderful and can just make you feel ALIVE. I keep do it because l love it. Although l have been paid well, sometimes the pay sucks for all that you do. You have to love it or you won't survive.
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Shannon’s Answer
most nurses generally aren't rich in dollars. they do the job because it's meaningful for them.
you can make even more than 65k if you go on to become an advanced-practice nurse in a big city hospital. this involves graduate school training.
you'll see on this website a lot of nurses with lots of letters after their names because of their advanced training. they usually have a lot of high quality clinical experience and have moved on to teaching, writing books/nursing journals; management positions at hospitals or big hospital groups, insurance companies, drug companies or government. they make more than a typical hospital nurse but they don't see many patients, if any.
you can make even more than 65k if you go on to become an advanced-practice nurse in a big city hospital. this involves graduate school training.
you'll see on this website a lot of nurses with lots of letters after their names because of their advanced training. they usually have a lot of high quality clinical experience and have moved on to teaching, writing books/nursing journals; management positions at hospitals or big hospital groups, insurance companies, drug companies or government. they make more than a typical hospital nurse but they don't see many patients, if any.
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