PART 6: CRNA Playbook Q & A... Do I need to be an ICU nurse for 5 Years?

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  • Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
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Комментарии • 10

  • @flippcrazy
    @flippcrazy 4 года назад +5

    RUclips University IS the best! I always say RUclips will make you feel like you can do anything and it's wonderful!

  • @jesstiss222
    @jesstiss222 4 года назад +1

    This is so dope. Thank you for sharing so generously.🙏🏾

  • @ajagboblessingc2373
    @ajagboblessingc2373 4 месяца назад

    Can l do Master degree in CRNA

    • @AishaCRNA
      @AishaCRNA  4 месяца назад

      They will all be Doctorates by end of 2025

  • @steveabraham3052
    @steveabraham3052 4 года назад

    @Aisha Allen I think that’s a very interesting take you have on the number of years of ICU experience one has before entering CRNA school 🤔 While I agree, no one has previous experience providing anesthesia prior to official training. Do you not believe that an experienced ICU nurse while have more familiarity with say induction with Propofol verses a 1-2 year experienced RN? Also, I would think that it would also depend of the acuity of the ICU that experienced nurse came from. Granted, induction for an intubation of an acutely ill patient vs one for general surgery, is much different; in the ICU we do that routinely (most). I am by no means trying to say it’s the same or that an experienced nurse with be better than a lesser experienced one in CRNA school. I only ask, because that is what most programs have said and what I’ve heard most CRNAs that I’ve spoken to, have said regarding getting in and being successful. The only other caveat I can see that makes your take on this more palatable, would be the fact that much of anesthesia training, is focused on the art/science & pharmacology training. The better a student is at these sciences, the better their chances of success would be, right? Full disclosure here, I LOVE YOUR VIDEOS & am inspired by you to do the same 😊 My response by no means, is meant to be disrespectful, I just want to understand your take.

    • @AishaCRNA
      @AishaCRNA  4 года назад +1

      Steve Abraham So I stand by what I said. Mainly because you as a nurse (1 or 10 yrs) are not intubating patients after pushing inductions meds. The "we" is really the person intubating the patient. Having more or less familiarity to me is still irrelevant. It's like if we are talking about flying a plane... if you heard two air plane mechanics talking about being a pilot. Do we care about who has more time fixing airplanes? I don't. Fixing air planes isn't flying them. The longer someone fixed them doesn't mean they'd be better off flying them IMO

    • @steveabraham3052
      @steveabraham3052 4 года назад

      Aisha Allen thank you for that insight. I guess, I am just assuming the familiarity of the medications & actions of the medications (some) would place one at an advantage over say a 9 month ICU nurse who just made it off probationary period in the unit. I understand anesthesia training, is an entirely different beast, and that’s what I’m looking for. The in-depth understanding of the pharmacology & pathophysiology that goes into providing anesthesia, is what really attracts me to the profession. I really do love you videos & insight. Thank again for explaining your take on the number of years of experience thing. Keep the awesome videos coming. 👍🏾

    • @AishaCRNA
      @AishaCRNA  4 года назад +3

      Steve Abraham yeah no worries! When you start school I feel like your take may change, everyone has strengths and weaknesses. But nothing is really an advantage. All of that stuff is learned and really what matters is the end result of passing boards. Also. The familiarity of drugs as an ICU nurse isn't going to help you with anatomy, physics, chemistry, your DNP course work, your pre ops, or care plans.

    • @perfectDOE
      @perfectDOE 3 года назад +3

      You become an expert by doing...Not by watching and not by being familiar with.

  • @ellejones325
    @ellejones325 4 года назад

    Can you do an hpsp workshop please?