What defines nursing and sets it apart from other health care professions, particularly medicine with which it has long been considered part and parcel? It is nurses’ focus – in theory and practice – on the response of the individual and the family to actual or potential health problems. Nurses are educated to be attuned to the whole person, not just the unique presenting health problem. While a medical diagnosis of an illness may be fairly circumscribed, the human response to a health problem may be much more fluid and variable and may have a great effect on the individual’s ability to overcome the initial medical problem. It is often said that physicians cure, and nurses care. In what some describe as a blend of physiology and psychology, nurses build on their understanding of the disease and illness process to promote the restoration and maintenance of health in their clients.
Nurses’ broad-based education and holistic focus positions them as the logical network of providers on which to build a true health care system for the future. An acknowledged realization that individuals have considerable responsibility for their personal health has driven an increasing recognition that there is a professional group, whose focus is education and practice, that can facilitate efforts of individuals to reach their fullest health potential. This profession is that of registered nurses.
Washington University students who would like to pursue a career in nursing complete a non-nursing degree here, and then attend either an accelerated nursing program, which results in a bachelor of science of nursing, or a direct entry master’s program in nursing, where they typically earn an MS in nursing.
*Please note that WashU does not offer a nursing program. This page provides information for those interested in applying to programs offered elsewhere.