- Joined
- Sep 26, 2005
- Messages
- 67
- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 4,531
- Resident [Any Field]
Zenman, you still don't get it do you? Myself and others have gone around and around about this with you. Your posts illustrate the problem I have with a lot of midlevels: you don't know how much you don't know. It's scary. It will result in injury to patients.
I will call your "covered all this also in nursing school and as an NP student" and "We might understand pathology because we take courses called 'pathophysiology'."
I'M A NURSE. I've taken both undergraduate and graduate (NP) "pathophysiology." I was a tenured track full time faculty at a school where I taught nursing classes. I also went to medical school. THERE IS NO COMPARISON IN THE LEVEL OR DEPTH BETWEEN THE TWO!!!!!
You think you understand the difference but you cannot. Talk to me when you finish medical school and tell me they are even close to the same. Every NP I know will tell you the same thing. They are the biggest critics of the expansion of midlevels (particularly NPs) because they realize, in hindsight, how little they knew and how much they thought they knew. Scary.
I am not against midlevels and certainly not against nurses. In fact, I probably value a good nurse MORE than most because I've been there. I am against under qualified people trying to play doctor without undergoing the equivalent education.
I will call your "covered all this also in nursing school and as an NP student" and "We might understand pathology because we take courses called 'pathophysiology'."
I'M A NURSE. I've taken both undergraduate and graduate (NP) "pathophysiology." I was a tenured track full time faculty at a school where I taught nursing classes. I also went to medical school. THERE IS NO COMPARISON IN THE LEVEL OR DEPTH BETWEEN THE TWO!!!!!
You think you understand the difference but you cannot. Talk to me when you finish medical school and tell me they are even close to the same. Every NP I know will tell you the same thing. They are the biggest critics of the expansion of midlevels (particularly NPs) because they realize, in hindsight, how little they knew and how much they thought they knew. Scary.
I am not against midlevels and certainly not against nurses. In fact, I probably value a good nurse MORE than most because I've been there. I am against under qualified people trying to play doctor without undergoing the equivalent education.
Let me see. New poster who comes on a forum for medical students who claims that NP's are just as good as MD's. I think I smells a troll.