Health care career could be your calling
October 11, 2007
There is a need for health care professionals in our military. Don’t know what to do after college? Maybe you can answer the call.
Leo J. Shapiro & Associates is a premier Chicago-based market research firm.
Every month, the 50-year-old company surveys Americans on how they feel about a variety of issues, such as spending and saving, consumer prices and the stock market, and income and job security.
In August, they reported that nearly 40 percent of us are worried about losing our income because of a job layoff or cut in work hours.
It was the fourth month in a row that Americans were so downbeat. Clearly, a lot of us are anxious about our future. And college students are no different.
If anything, their anxieties are compounded: College students not only worry about their future job security, they also worry about choosing the right major.
The founder of MyMajor.com said that 80 percent of those heading off to college have yet to pick a major and 50 percent change their minds once they do.
Some go on to revise it two, even three, more times before they don their long sought-after cap and gown. Two or three times is a whole lot of apprehension.
What’s an undecided major to do?
At NIU, there is an incredible nursing program. Though difficult to get into, the program merits such competition.
The NIU nursing program is ranked third in Illinois.
Last month the Pentagon reported that hundreds of social workers, nurses and health care specialists are needed in the fields of traumatic brain injury (TBI) and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Specifically, the need for psychiatrists and psychologists is so great that the military is proposing shortened two-year recruitments and richer retention bonuses for these positions. They’re even offering to pay down outstanding college loans for this essential group.
For those leery of enlisting, the Veterans Administration gives civilians a chance to “serve” without having to sign up for a tour of duty in a combat zone.
And by donating their services through groups like Operation Comfort and Give an Hour, even private therapists are lending a hand to returning troops and their families who need reintegration help.
As the operations in Afghanistan and Iraq continue, and with troops continuing to return home with TBI and PTSD, a career specializing in either of these fields is sure to provide the job security most of us crave.
Added bonus? A health care career would serve the needs of the country, too.