What Specialties are Available for Nurse Practitioners?
Picture a six-floor building that represents the nursing profession. The first floor is the position and limited scope of practice of a certified nursing assistant. The second floor represents a licensed practical nurse or licensed vocational nurse in some states.
Each room on that floor represents a potential area in which the LPN/LVN may work. The third floor is for a Registered Nurse and has many more rooms within that floor representing hospital nursing, public health nursing, school nursing, home health nursing, etc.
Within the hospital room are dozens more rooms representing the variety of hospital settings and units where a RN works, including a medical-surgical nursing unit to critical care, pediatrics, ICU, emergency nursing, obstetrics, labor and delivery, and much more.
Continuing upward on the nursing building, now on the fourth floor, are nurse practitioners. Within the floor for nurse practitioners are dozens more rooms where nurse practitioners can work. Each floor represents additional educational training required to advance to the next level.
The nurse on each floor can perform duties from the prior nursing floors within their nursing training. For example, a registered nurse can perform all duties of an LPN or CNA. Climbing to the next subsequent floor requires additional training but also is rewarded by higher pay.
Nurse practitioners (NPs) work in various specialties and environments. Their scope of practice may depend upon factors like education, certification status, and state regulations.
Here are a few common specialty areas in which nurse practitioners work:
- Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP): FNPs specialize in primary health care for individuals and families across their lifespan, from babies through seniors.
- Adult-Gerontology Nurse Practitioner (AGNP): AGNPs specialize in caring for adults and the elderly. They often specialize in family practice clinics or primary care settings as well as healthcare facilities.
- Geriatric Nurse Practitioner (NP): PNPs specialize in caring for elderly adults in settings like internal medicine or long-term care facilities. They specialize in chronic conditions of the elderly.
- Pediatric Nurse Practitioner (PNP): These PNPs focus their efforts exclusively on taking care of young patients under 18.
- Women’s Health Nurse Practitioner (WHNP): Women’s Health Nurse Practitioners specialize in women’s healthcare needs, such as gynecological and obstetric services. They may work at clinics, hospitals, or schools. Women’s health nurse practitioners (WHNPs) usually work in clinics, family planning centers, or labor and delivery units.
- Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner (PMHNP): PMHNPs specialize in mental health and psychiatric services to all age groups of patients.
Within these categories are unique sub-specialties such as acute and emergency care and hospital-based nurse practitioners. Although a common setting for nurse practitioners is to work in a clinic or office setting, those who choose to become acute care Nurse Practitioner specialists may still work in a hospital unit such as ICU/CCU/NICU and prescribe and write orders for acute care.
Others may work in rehabilitation facilities where they make rounds and write orders for continuing care of in-patients. So yes, there still may be feces and sputum involved! Once a nurse, always a nurse!