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The Argument For The Dnp

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The Argument for the DNP Nurses have been an integral part of health care for years. Many of the nurses people see regularly are Registered nurses or BSN, aka Bachelor of Science nurses that more or less are similar in work load, only separated by amount of education. It takes two years to receive an RN as well as passing a rigorous examination while it takes four years to receive ones “BSN”. Advanced practice nurses are those who have taken their education further and have received a master level education, these master level programs can be Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist, Midwives and Nurse practitioners and their various intra-specialties’. However, in 2004 the AACN (American Association of Colleges of Nursing) introduced …show more content…

The nursing community is fragmented and many in the community have a goal towards a compromise while some have a self-serving reason why they do not want this implemented. Many of the nay-sayers have brought valid reasons as to why they would not want to implement the DNP as mandatory but all of the points have been addressed and put to rest by the AACN and the overwhelming support from the nursing community. As mentioned, nurses far and wide have rallied against the DNP implementation. Some of the most influential nurses of the country have their reservations on the topic, for example, Dr. Meleis and Dracup are two in-field opponents of the Doctor of Nursing Practice. Many of the points they made, resonate with so many of other opponents such as the justification of the DNP when there is already a shortage of nurses and lack of development of the nursing field. Meleis and Dracup mention that, “The crises in health care due to the critical shortage of nurses, the dialogues about environments in the health care system that undermine the retention of nurses, the threats to providing quality nursing care, and the well-documented disparities in health care are topics that are front and center in all major organizations and associations that deal with the goals of quality health care. Another major, well-documented crisis is

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