She could move into a different part of the hospital, like ICU/CCU or general medicine (though those are likely to be shift work still. But if she has seniority, she could probably pull rank and get a steady shift.)
She could go to work in a doctor's office, which is pretty much the opposite of ER nursing.
She could get a nurse practitioner certification (varies by state) and see patients in an office setting (most states require this to be supervised by an MD, so she'd have to find a partnership).
People with MSN degrees usually teach nursing school, I think.
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Date: 2015-09-18 02:43 pm (UTC)She could go to work in a doctor's office, which is pretty much the opposite of ER nursing.
She could get a nurse practitioner certification (varies by state) and see patients in an office setting (most states require this to be supervised by an MD, so she'd have to find a partnership).
People with MSN degrees usually teach nursing school, I think.