If you’re interested in entering the field of healthcare, you’ve probably wondered about the differences between working as a nurse vs doctor. After learning more about the responsibilities and impact of each profession, many pre-med students change paths to nursing. Read on to find out why.

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Who is a Nurse?


A nurse is a medical professional who provides general patient care and triage. Nurses usually work with a team of other medical professionals, such as physicians and other healthcare specialists. Nurses can work in a wide variety of environments, including:

  • Hospitals
  • ClinicsSchools
  • Correctional facilities
  • Homeless shelters
  • Rehabilitation centers
  • Senior care homes

Who is an Medical Doctor?


A medical doctor (M.D.) is a licensed physician who is a graduate of an accredited medical school.

Primary Care M.D.s deliver the basic diagnostic and preventive medical care that patients most often need. They usually have one of these specialties:

Family Medicine: Family medicine physicians provide comprehensive medical care with an emphasis on caring for all members of the family. Family medicine builds upon a core of knowledge derived from other disciplines, primarily pediatrics, internal medicine, OB/GYN, geriatrics, surgery and psychiatry. The family medicine physician plays the role of personal physician.

Internal Medicine: A broad-based medical field in which physicians rely on their knowledge of major organs to diagnose and treat patients. Internists treat a variety of afflictions, from colds and heart problems to infectious diseases. Internists often serve as a patient’s primary doctor, coordinating all that person’s health care.

Pediatric Family Medicine: A doctor who specializes in the health care of children, from birth through adolescence. By focusing specifically on kids, they gain a lot of expertise about health issues of babies and children.

Nurse Vs Doctor

NURSE VS DOCTOR: WHAT’S THE DIFFERENCE?

To the untrained eye, it may seem as if doctors and nurses do have practically the same jobs as well as interchangeable careers.


After all, both provide expert medical care, saving patients’ lives, and helping individuals gain higher levels of health and wellness.

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However, there is much more to consider than this. If you delve deeper, you’ll find that there are many differences in the following areas:

  • Education
  • Hands-on Training
  • Professional License
  • Scope of Practice
  • Daily Schedules
  • Patient Care
  • Specialization
  • Advancement
  • Salary
  • Personality

So to answer the question at hand, how do they differ now? Let’s go back to first base and tick out the obvious differences between the two.

It’s all about the length and scope of education


Doctors have a lengthier education time while nurses follow a basic baccalaureate scheme to start getting paid work. The said education length will determine and influence the salary of each profession, which would mean to say that the higher the education time, the higher the pay.

It’s all about the salary


On another note, let’s focus on this one objective finding. Doctors have a higher salary than nurses, mainly because of their education, title, and license. While this may be indulging disparity, that is how the world has gone on in the past, and will always be in the future. After all, they took almost two decades to get this license to be able to practice their profession, so I can only imagine the struggle and the sacrifice that the doctors have to endure.

The nurse, on the other hand, has to meet more or less similar educational terms to receive a similar fate as that of the doctor’s, salary-wise. Meaning to say, nurses have to gather more master’s degrees and doctorate degrees to get a notch higher than that of a regular nurse. The more degree you have, the better salary you get which is, in a way, just fair play.

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The roles of Doctor and Nurse


Doctors assess and manage your medical treatment and the doctors also studies the patient then analyze their problem and finds a solution to each of their patient issues.


The roles of nurse are to provide ongoing care for the patient, and also providing care for patients to help manage their physical needs, treat health conditions and prevent illnesses.

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IN CONCLUSION

 


Nursing is an ethical job that is needed throughout the world, it exist in the modern age as a way to care for the and to help people, and to maximize the way we treat people. Its taken care differently and have different choice according to their ethics.
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Abdullahi Suleiman a Certified Registered Nurse based in Nigeria, an Entrepreneur and Also a Blogger, passionate about Community Development and Cosmetic Nursing

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