| > Nursing only requires a 2 year degree It also requires passing a licensing test. Passing the licensing test requires self-study. You need to include this time in the training requirements for the profession. Most jobs do not require a licensing test. So when comparing you need to find similar jobs with 2 year degree + licensing requirements. > The average full time salary without overtime is ~80,000. That's exaggerated. The median pay is $77,600. Or a better measure is the $37.31 per hour. That is not a high hourly rate by any measure. [1] > I think we'd struggle to name a career with such low education requirements and high salary. No we wouldn't. Large numbers of programmers don't even have a degree - it's not required for sure - and earn way more than nurses. Licensing is not required. Mandatory overtime is not rampant. Programming being a male dominated field. > Most nurses are paid hourly, so the "long hours" is a moot point. It's not moot at all. In many cases it is a job requirement, not optional. NY for example only passed a law in 2009 making mandatory overtime illegal for nurses. It was so rampant that states have passed laws about it. That makes the career far harder than most jobs where overtime is often optional. And to date, only 18 states have laws against mandatory overtime for nurses. > Neither of your links mention nursing. That's wrong. The 1st link shows a chart with a comparison of careers with similar training and the chart shows nursing in that comparison. [1] https://www.bls.gov/ooh/healthcare/registered-nurses.htm#tab... |