You need to be an RN to be a circulator in the OR. To scrub you can be an RN, LVN, or surgical tech. I've even had some scrubs that were trained by the hospital and not certified (don't recommend this since you probably can't work anywhere else). Of course, the military is a lot different but we'll talk about civilian land for now.
I started off around the 40,000 area as a new grad. ADN/BSN does not make a pay difference. I'm a BSN and now I am a CNOR (certified perioperative nurse). That doesn't make a pay difference either in my hospital. I have doubled my salary in my seven years as an OR nurse. So yeah, you can make a decent living.
I suggest trying to get an internship in a major hospital. You'll learn the most about the specialty in these teaching type hospitals. Internships are also offered in smaller settings but I encourage larger hospitals because you will gain so much more experience/confidence.
You can do plastics in a large hospital or surgery center. A lot of plastic surgeons hire nurses to work with them exclusively. This happened with the surgeons I worked with at a large teaching facility; however, they didn't want to pay very much. I'm sure this isn't always the case...so don't let that cloud your picture.
Plastics falls into two catagories...reconstructive or cosmetic. I learned/did recon at the big hospital...facial fractures...burns...micro surgery (reimplanting fingers and such) and free flaps. I do cosmetic at the suburb hospital I work at now...eyes...boobs...I get bored with the cosmetic side but that's just me. I also hate big facial fractures...so not all recon is fun either.
Good luck.




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