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Become a Nurse >> Browse Articles >> Step 7: Decide on a Specialty
Up-and-Coming Nurse Niches
Megan Malugani / Monster Contributing Writer
A nurse is a nurse is a nurse, right? Wrong. Nursing jobs are extraordinarily varied and diverse. Here’s a snapshot of four specialized nursing niches that even healthcare professionals may know little about.
Correctional Nursing
Nurses who work behind bars with the nation’s 2 million inmates and juvenile offenders deal with a range of medical problems, from toothaches to trauma. “A lot of our clients don’t have access to healthcare easily,” says Gayle Burrow, MPH, BSN, director of corrections health for the Multnomah County Health Department in Portland, Oregon. “Correctional nurses like the fact that we get to take care of people who need a lot of services and education.”
Because correctional nurses work autonomously – assessing new inmates, helping manage the chronic diseases and mental illnesses of long-term prisoners and responding to acute illnesses and injuries – they must be confident, mature and well-rounded. In addition, they “must have the ability to look at a person not by what they do, but for who they are,” says Burrow, a certified corrections health professional who is on the board of the American Correctional Health Services Association.
Nursing in prisons and jails is safe, she says, because guards are always nearby and the environments are carefully controlled.
Forensic Nursing
Nurses have always worked with victims and perpetrators of violent crime, but it wasn’t until the early ’90s that “forensic nursing” became a common description for this work. Now, there are an estimated 7,500 nurses who regularly fill forensic-nursing roles, from those who work full-time investigating deaths or treating violent offenders at psychiatric facilities to those who moonlight as Sexual Assault Nurse Examiners (SANE) or legal nurse consultants. “A lot of us in the field have the hope that our interventions are going to help break the cycle of abuse and violence,” says Daniel J. Sheridan, PhD, RN, president of the International Association of Forensic Nurses.
While the television show “CSI” has sparked an interest in forensics, Hollywood’s portrayal of forensic nursing is misleading, he says. “There are exciting moments, but you have to be patient, methodical and thorough in your assessments in order to withstand the scrutiny of court,” says Sheridan, who runs a master’s degree program in forensic nursing at Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing. “You have to look for even the smallest sign of injury to show that an assault did or did not occur.”
Nurses can get a taste of forensic nursing by participating in one of the more than 420 SANE programs offered at hospitals and other sites around the country, Sheridan says.
Holistic Nursing
Although skepticism regarding alternative therapies exists, holistic nursing is a growing specialty, thanks to healthcare consumers’ acceptance of the philosophy that treating the whole person is better than treating just a disease or symptom. Any nurse who embraces the mind/body/spirit connection and empowers patients to participate in their own healing practices holism, says Sonja Simpson, MSN, a certified holistic nurse and president of the American Holistic Nurses Association.
In addition to embracing the holistic philosophy, many nurses become proficient or earn certification or licenses in such healing modalities as therapeutic massage, aromatherapy, imagery, herbology or Reiki that complement Western medicine, Simpson says. While some practitioners work full-time nursing jobs and practice their healing modality on the side, others take positions in holistic wellness centers, spas, health clubs and physicians’ offices.
Parish Nursing
“Probably a parish nurse’s most important role is helping people understand how faith and health fit together,” says Alvyne Rethemeyer, MSN, director of the International Parish Nurse Resource Center. Parish nurses promote healthful living by educating and counseling parishioners on exercise and nutrition, advocating for community health, helping sick parishioners navigate the medical system, and developing support groups for bereavement, parenting, divorce and other issues.
Most parish nurses are unpaid. The paid ones usually work 20 hours or fewer a week. Nurses interested in this specialty should work with their own churches to get started or investigate whether any local hospitals sponsor parish-nurse outreach programs, she says. “Parish nursing is a beautiful place to be a nurse,” Rethemeyer says. “You’re not taking care of the casualties of life, but trying to help people stay healthy.”

baybeegrl31
4 months ago
4 comments
great article the only nurse i knew of out of the four was the correctional nurse, and the forensic the holistic and parish were new to me thanks
nurz4life
4 months ago
102 comments
Enlightening article. I am all for getting the word out on the varied aspects of nursing. Nursing is so multi-faceted there is no need for us to be in a job that is unsatisfying that intereferes with our ability to be caring individuals and lowers our morale. Thanks for this article.
angienwgeorgia
6 months ago
254 comments
Fabulous article...........thanks so much for this post! Who couldnt love the guy on CSI who played Ted Bundy on a tv movie back in the 80's? I wanna work with that guy!
Herbalnurse919
6 months ago
52 comments
I am glad to see that my love for Holistic Nursing and Alternative Health practices are being noticed by more and more people.
mashell4
about 1 year ago
1078 comments
this is very interesting I knew about the other speciality nursing except the parish nurse. I will have to read more about that kind of nursing. hopefully one day I will be able to specialize.
ritathoma
about 1 year ago
4 comments
I have been working in correctional health for over 5 years. My main assignment is in juvenile detention, but I do also pick up overtime shifts in the adult jail. I love my work. It is very much like my past experience in homecare only all of my patients are easily found and monitored for compliance. My days are varied from doing "sick call" for minor aches and ailments to urgent and occasional emergency issues. One moment I may be counseling a youth on safe sex and setting up a referral to a clinic for STD testing and the next minute removing sutures or assessing abdominal pain. The job requires good assessment skills, comfort working autonomously, a gentle and nonjudgemental heart-but some street smarts, and case management abilities as I do need to coordinate care with outside providers, parents, probabtion officers and social workers. Another important part of my job is staff and patient education. My days are varied and always interesting. I can honestly say that in the 5+ years I have never dreaded going to work. My pay is great ($32/hr) and benefits are also very good with 5 weeks FTO/year, 12 paid holidays and public employees retirement. I also work days, no weekends, no holidays unless I choose to pick up for overtime. As a side note about Parish nursing (Faith Community Nurse) there are many paid positions for this in Minnesota at about $20/hr, some with benefits. I have received my parish nurse training and do this on a volunteer basis for my church. It is a wonderful, meaningful way to connect with patients. I LOVE being a nurse!
galgirl
about 1 year ago
2 comments
My sister is a correctional nurse and loves it, it has it'sown challanges, but it's own rewards also. Very well written article. Thank you
razeus1
about 1 year ago
4 comments
Very interesting, but, is this geared to RN's only?
goldenmentality
about 1 year ago
2 comments
Very interesting, as a fairly new nurse I find this article very interesting. I would love to take my love for nursing and expand it into an exciting field of maybe forensics or corrections nursing. These positions can exhibit the nurturing yet firm side of nursing!
teamrn
about 1 year ago
52 comments
For those of you considering using your nursing knowledge and working "outside the box," freelance writing for nursing magazines or publications like Prevention, etc are options. Competition for magazines like Prevention is fierce, but everyone wants and needs the knowledge of a nurse.
vickielee1970
about 1 year ago
692 comments
I am like ljr I had guessed most of this, but nice to hear it explained more thoroughly.
ljr3418
about 1 year ago
152 comments
Some of this I had guessed at, it is nice to see that someone has put some effort into looking into these new areas of nursing. A well written article, I would like to see more.
Shan4691
about 1 year ago
5402 comments
It is cool to see that nurses can work outside of the "box" now.