Press Enter to search or select a section to narrow results

If a bill currently under consideration by the New York state legislature becomes law, nurses in that state will have to obtain a bachelor’s degree within 10 years in order to retain their licenses and keep working.

‘ B S N in 10 ’ Bills Could Start a Trend

Jen Fad · Friday, February 3rd 2012 at 6:17AM · 1073 views
January 27, 2012 - If a bill currently under consideration by the New York state legislature becomes law, nurses in that state will have to obtain a bachelor’s degree within 10 years in order to retain their licenses and keep working.

New York has considered some version of the current bill (A01977 / S02533A) for about eight years now, according to Deborah Elliott, MBA, RN, deputy executive officer for the New York State Nurses Association (NYSNA), which has announced its official support for the legislation.

But the state’s effort to compel nurses to get a bachelor’s degree has existed far longer than eight years; one proposal that was introduced in 1974 and approved in 1985 would have required a bachelor’s degree for entry to practice, but that provision met so much opposition that it stalled. The current bill does not contain an entry-to-practice requirement.

By Jennifer Larson, contributor

http://www.nursezone.com/nursing-news-even...



‘ B S N in 10 ’ Bills Could Start a Trend

About the Author

Jen Fad Central Jersey, NJ

Share This Article

Post a Comment

Please log in to post comments.