In this article
Welcome to the world of nursing
Whether you want a meaningful, secure healthcare career, or you're weighing it as a path, this guide covers what a registered nurse actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
A registered nurse (RN) provides skilled clinical care โ assessing patients, administering treatment, and coordinating their care. In simple terms: they are qualified clinical professionals who deliver and manage hands-on patient care. Think of them as the frontline experts who spend the most time with patients and often catch what others miss.
- Assess patients and monitor their condition
- Administer medication and treatments
- Coordinate and plan patient care
- Support, educate, and advocate for patients
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- Compassion โ care is the heart of nursing
- Resilience โ the work is physically and emotionally hard
- Attention to detail โ small signs and dosages matter enormously
- Communication โ with patients, families, and the team
- Calm under pressure โ emergencies are part of the job
- Stamina โ long shifts on your feet
Education & qualifications
A nursing degree (or diploma) plus registration is required to practise. Specialisation and further qualifications open higher-paid and advanced roles.
Typical responsibilities
- Assessment โ monitoring and evaluating patients
- Treatment โ administering medication and care
- Care planning โ coordinating each patient's care
- Advocacy โ speaking up for patients
- Education โ guiding patients and families
- Documentation โ accurate clinical records
Responsibilities by seniority
Newly Qualified Nurse
0โ2 years
- Building clinical skills
- Supervised practice
- Ward experience
- Learning the systems
- Finding a specialism
Registered Nurse
2โ8 years
- Full clinical responsibility
- Owns patient care
- Mentors students
- Handles emergencies
- Develops expertise
Senior / Specialist / Nurse Practitioner
8+ years
- Advanced practice
- Specialist or leadership
- May prescribe
- Leads a team
- Shapes care standards
Where nurses work
๐ฅ Hospitals
Wards, ICU, theatres, and emergency.
๐ฉบ Community / GP
Care in clinics and homes.
๐ Emergency / ICU
Critical, high-acuity care.
๐ถ Pediatrics / maternity
Children and childbirth.
๐ง Mental health
Specialist psychiatric nursing.
๐ Abroad / agency
Globally portable, flexible work.
A day in the life
Handover at shift start โ you take over a ward of patients, noting who needs close watching today.
Medication rounds, observations, and a quick catch on a patient whose vitals are quietly worsening.
You escalate that patient to the doctor in time โ early detection that may have saved a life.
Wound care, supporting a frightened family, and updating careful records throughout.
Handover to the night team. Tired feet, but you cared for people who needed you all day. That's the job.
What this job gives you
- Deeply meaningful work
- Exceptional job security
- Flexible, globally portable
- Many ways to specialise
- Real clinical responsibility
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- Profound, meaningful work
- Exceptional job security
- Globally portable
- Flexible shifts and settings
- Many specialisms
- Path to advanced practice
- Always in demand
โ Disadvantages
- Physically and emotionally demanding
- Shift work, nights, weekends
- Modest pay relative to demands
- Understaffing and pressure
- Emotionally hard situations
- High burnout risk
Salary potential โ global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Specialise โ ICU, theatres, oncology, mental health, and more
- Nurse Practitioner โ advanced practice, often with prescribing
- Ward / nurse manager โ lead a team and unit
- Education / research โ train nurses or advance practice
- Work abroad โ nursing skills are in demand worldwide
- Clinical leadership โ senior nursing roles
Registered Nurse vs related roles
Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.
| Role | Core focus | Note | Pay | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Registered Nurse You are here | Skilled clinical patient care | Nursing degree | Baseline | Medium |
| Nurse | Hands-on patient care | Nursing degree | Similar | Medium |
| Doctor (Physician) | Diagnoses and treats | Medical degree | Higher | Hard |
| Paramedic | Emergency pre-hospital care | Paramedic qualification | Lower-similar | Medium |
| Physiotherapist | Restores movement | Physio degree | Similar | Medium |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.
Future outlook
Chronic, worsening nursing shortages mean registered nurses have some of the strongest job security and flexibility of any profession.
- Global nursing shortages keep demand very high
- Ageing populations increase care needs
- Advanced-practice roles expand (and pay more)
- Nursing skills are globally portable
- Technology supports nurses, not replaces them
Fun facts ๐ค
Nurses are far more than helpers โ they're qualified clinical professionals who assess, treat, and advocate.
A nursing qualification is one of the most globally portable there is.
Nurses spend the most time with patients and often catch deterioration first.
Worldwide shortages make nursing one of the most secure careers anywhere.
Nurse practitioners can diagnose, treat, and prescribe โ advanced practice that rivals junior doctors in scope.
Myths about this role
"Nurses just help doctors."
โ They're qualified professionals who assess, treat, plan care, and advocate โ clinical experts in their own right.
"It's unskilled work."
โ Nursing requires a degree, registration, and deep clinical skill and judgment.
"There's no career progression."
โ It leads to specialism, advanced practice, management, education, and leadership.
"Anyone caring can do it."
โ Compassion helps, but clinical expertise and resilience are essential and hard-won.
"AI will replace nurses."
โ Technology supports nurses, but hands-on care and judgment stay human.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Genuinely care about people
- Are resilient and calm under pressure
- Have stamina for demanding shifts
- Are detail-oriented and observant
- Want meaningful, secure work
- Like clinical, hands-on care
โ Maybe not for you if...
- You want a strict 9-to-5
- You can't cope with emotional strain
- Shift work is a dealbreaker
- You dislike physical, hands-on work
- You want a high salary for the hours
- You avoid responsibility
Flexible & agency potential
Nursing offers exceptional flexibility โ agency and bank work, part-time, and overseas roles let nurses control their hours and location.
โ Advantages
- Agency and bank shifts on demand
- Part-time and flexible options
- Work abroad readily
- High, constant demand
- Choose your specialism and setting
โ Challenges
- Shift work disrupts routine
- Physically and emotionally hard
- Pay modest for the demands
- Understaffing pressure
- Burnout risk
How to get started
- Get a nursing degree or diploma, the route to registration.
- Register / get licensed required to practise as an RN.
- Gain ward experience build clinical skills across settings.
- Specialise ICU, theatres, oncology, mental health, and more.
- Advance toward nurse practitioner, management, or education.
What to know before you start
- It's a real clinical profession, not just helping
- Job security is exceptional โ shortages are global
- Shift work and emotional strain are real trade-offs
- Specialising raises your pay and prospects
- Your skills work almost anywhere in the world
- Look after yourself โ burnout is common
From the field
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:
People underestimate nurses until they need one. We are the ones who catch the patient quietly going downhill at 3am. That clinical judgment is the whole job.
Registered nurse ยท 6 years in
The job security is unreal. In fifteen years I have never once worried about finding work, here or abroad. Few careers offer that.
Senior nurse ยท 15 years in
Becoming a nurse practitioner changed everything โ diagnosing, prescribing, running my own clinic. Nursing has far more ceiling than people think.
Nurse practitioner ยท 12 years in