I want to talk about degree inflation. And I don’t mean when your patient is holding the thermometer over a light bulb to make it look like he has a fever.
My hospital recently went to a BSN-only hiring policy. I have a number of problems with this, the main two being as follows:
I’ll admit to some prejudice: I’m an ADN. I have two bachelor’s degrees in the liberal arts and hours that count toward a master’s degree, and have done paid and volunteer work both in and out of nursing. I’ve found that my sociology degree prepared me just fine for critical thinking and analysis, and the English minor I took makes me the person others seek out when it’s time to edit their term papers.
Sure, not everybody is as brilliant, talented and beautiful as I am. Sure, some people have to be led by the hand through management and critical-thinking courses, and taught how to differentiate homeopathy from evidence-based medicine. But just as surely, there are people out there with perfectly good associate’s or hospital degrees who can do just as well as a bachelor’s-prepared nurse. The metric should be the individual’s brain, not the letters after his or her name.
I’m curious to know what Scrubs readers think of the trend of the BSN becoming the entry-level degree for our field. Leave your thoughts in the comments below!
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