Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist

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A nurse anesthetist, Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA), is a specialty-trained registered nurse that administers anesthesia to patients before and after surgeries and other procedures. Providing pain management and emergency services, such as airway management, are also roles a nurse anesthetist is capable of doing. A nurse anesthetist has important roles and responsibilities they must achieve along side the surgeon in an operating room to successfully complete a procedure. A nurse anesthetist is just as important as the surgeon during a procedure. Since a nurse anesthetist has important roles and responsibilities, it is important for them to have the right education before becoming a CRNA. Education is a crucial part to becoming …show more content…
As a CRNA, you are working next to the surgeon in an operating room getting to see everything that is going on during the procedure. You are there with one patient at a time from the time they come into the hospital until the time they leave, and this is why I really wanted to become a CRNA. Also, CRNAs are constantly doing something and are always active. I really like to constantly be doing something and in a fast pace environment like the environment of a …show more content…
This is when you are learning the most important things you will need to know being a CRNA. There are educational preparations that are required to become a CRNA. Before applying to a CRNA program, you should get your BSN (Bachelor of Science in Nursing) and get a RN license in at least one state. After receiving your BSN and having an RN license, you are required to have at least 1-2 years of experience in the critical care or ICU unit. Your cumulative GPA during the process of receiving your BSN should be at least a 3.0 to be enrolled in a CRNA program. The average GPA of students who are accepted into CRNA schools ranges from 3.3-3.7. It is also required to take the graduate record examination (GRE) and score at least 1,000 on the exam. Before applying to a CRNA program, you should make sure to have certifications in BLS, ACLS, and PALS. These certifications are required to be enrolled into a CRNA program. CRNA programs also require applicants to have certain prerequisite classes such as statistics, chemistry, anatomy and physiology, pharmacology, physics, microbiology, and basic research or nursing research. Some other standard requirements for CRNA programs are to have three letters of recommendation, statement of why you want to become a CRNA, resume, criminal background check, personal interview, and shadow a CRNA (Nurse Anesthetist School Requirements, 2016). Depending on which school you enter to become a CRNA, the