What You'll Do

  • Analyze the indications, contraindications, risk complications, and cost-benefit tradeoffs of therapeutic interventions.
  • Diagnose acute or chronic conditions that could result in rapid physiological deterioration or life-threatening instability.
  • Distinguish between normal and abnormal developmental and age-related physiological and behavioral changes in acute, critical, and chronic illness.
  • Manage patients' pain relief and sedation by providing pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic interventions, monitoring patients' responses, and changing care plans accordingly.
  • Interpret information obtained from electrocardiograms (EKGs) or radiographs (x-rays).
  • Perform emergency medical procedures, such as basic cardiac life support (BLS), advanced cardiac life support (ACLS), and other condition-stabilizing interventions.
  • Assess urgent and emergent health conditions, using both physiologically and technologically derived data.
  • Adjust settings on patients' assistive devices, such as temporary pacemakers.
  • Assess the impact of illnesses or injuries on patients' health, function, growth, development, nutrition, sleep, rest, quality of life, or family, social and educational relationships.
  • Collaborate with members of multidisciplinary health care teams to plan, manage, or assess patient treatments.

Essential Skills

Reading Comprehension 4.12/5
Speaking 4.12/5
Critical Thinking 4.12/5
Service Orientation 4.12/5
Active Listening 4.0/5
Writing 4.0/5
Active Learning 4.0/5
Monitoring 4.0/5
Social Perceptiveness 4.0/5
Coordination 4.0/5
Complex Problem Solving 4.0/5
Judgment and Decision Making 4.0/5

Career Fit Overview

Use this summary to understand the kind of profile this role rewards. It helps you judge whether this career looks like a stronger match than your current role, a nearby move worth exploring, or a broader path to compare more seriously.

Top passions

  • Helper: Supporting people and making a difference matters to you.
  • Analyst: Investigating problems and finding patterns keeps you engaged.
  • Maker: Building and fixing energizes you. You like tangible results and practical tools.

Common styles

Attention to Detail, Stress Tolerance, Dependability, Cooperation, Self-Control

Want a personal read on fit? Take the free assessment and compare this career to your current role, nearby alternatives, and broader stronger-fit options.

Key Abilities

This career demands strong capabilities in the following areas:

Oral Comprehension 4.25/5
Written Comprehension 4.25/5
Oral Expression 4.25/5
Problem Sensitivity 4.25/5
Deductive Reasoning 4.12/5
Inductive Reasoning 4.12/5
Written Expression 4.0/5
Information Ordering 4.0/5

Technologies & Tools

Allscripts Professional EHR Amkai AmkaiCharts Bizmatics PrognoCIS EMR Cerner Millennium ChartWare EMR e-MDs software eClinicalWorks EHR software GE Healthcare Centricity EMR IBM Lotus Notes Medscribbler Enterprise MicroFour PracticeStudio.NET EMR Microsoft Access Microsoft Excel Microsoft Office software Microsoft Outlook Microsoft PowerPoint Microsoft Teams Microsoft Word NextGen Healthcare Information Systems EMR SAP software

Work Environment & Strengths

Common Strengths for This Career

  • Attention to Detail (High importance: 5.0/5)
  • Stress Tolerance (High importance: 5.0/5)
  • Dependability (High importance: 4.95/5)
  • Cooperation (High importance: 4.79/5)
  • Self-Control (High importance: 4.75/5)

Want to see how YOUR strengths align with this career?

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How to Become One

Most employers require a bachelor's degree in a relevant field. Some positions may also require experience through internships, co-ops, or entry-level work to strengthen your candidacy.

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Also Known As

This career is known by many different job titles across industries. Here are all the variations:

Acute Care Nurse Admission Nurse Admission Nurse Coordinator Cardiac Interventional Care Nurse Cardiovascular ICU Nurse (Cardiovascular Intense Care Unit Nurse) Cardiovascular Surgery Acute Care Nurse Practitioner (Cardiovascular Surgery ACNP) Care Transitions Manager Care Transitions Nurse Charge Nurse Chronic Condition Nurse DSU Nurse (Day Surgery Unit Nurse) ICU Travel RN (Intensive Care Unit Travel Registered Nurse) MSN (Medical Surgical Nurse) Nurse PACU RN (Post Anesthesia Care Unit Registered Nurse) PACU Travel RN (Post Anesthesia Care Unit Travel Registered Nurse) Pediatric Acute Care Unit Nurse Post-Op RN (Postoperative Registered Nurse) Pre-Op RN (Preoperative Registered Nurse) Progressive Care RN (Progressive Care Registered Nurse) Progressive Care Unit RN (Progressive Care Unit Registered Nurse) Screening Unit RN (Screening Unit Registered Nurse) Staff Nurse Vascular Access Registered Nurse (Vascular Access RN)

Career Fit FAQs

Is this career a good fit for me

This page shows the role itself. To see personal fit, use the assessment to compare your interests, motivations, and strengths against this career and against the role you are in now.

Can this help if I want to stay in my field

Yes. Many people use career pages like this to compare nearby roles in the same field and see whether they need a full switch or a better-fit version of the work they already know.

What should I compare first

Start with the daily tasks, the preparation level, and the work-style signals on this page. Then use the assessment to see whether this role looks like a stronger fit than your current role or just a different title.