Journalist: Dangerous. The goverment is always on your tail.
Doctor / nurse: Costly. Time consuming (job and education)
Writer: same as journalist?
2007-01-11 13:47:27
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Journalist-There's always the chance you might get sued for offending someone.
Doctor-Basically, I think the greatest problem in this job is that your patient dies and you are blamed for it. Also, it takes many years to become one, and it's time consuming. But it's worth it.
Nurse-Time consuming as well.
Writer-There's a chance your work might not sell, or be rejected before it even gets to the publishers, leading to a very unstable economic standing.
All careers have pros and cons. I think people should look at the good aspects more than the bad ones.
2007-01-12 01:14:18
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answer #2
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answered by Ravenna 2
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Doctor:
1) You may harm the patient with just a small mistake. Some patients would go so far, they would sue you.
2) You'll need many years of education just to get the degree to be a doctor. Not to mention, finding a job as a doctor wouldn't be very easy.
Nurse:
1) Nurses will have to be very precise. They have to record notes about a patient's height, weight, allergies, symptons, etc.
2) You must face blood during your career (taking shots and such). If you do not like the sight of blood, you should not be a nurse.
Journalists & writers:
1) I don't think it would be pretty interesting to sit at your office everyday, writing or typing an article, essay, story, etc.
2)Journalists don't get paid very well, so it isn't recommended for a lifetime career.
I hope this helps :)
2007-01-11 21:57:34
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answer #3
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answered by Dana 2
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Journalists don't get paid very well. Doctors get paid plenty but they have to go to school a long time and run up a big debt and study their brains out year after year. Then they have lots of people who act out their dependency needs in their relationship with their doctor.
They usually have to take call and get up in the middle of the night to answer questions about earaches and other annoying things. (Not if you're a pathologist I guess. OR better yet -- a medical journalist! See link below).
As far as being a writer, you have to do a lot of odd jobs to support yourself like teach writing courses at the community college and write articles for small magazines.
Oh I forgot about nursing. Shift work, lots of responsibility, the only job with a Bachelor's degree where you do heavy lifting, seeing people at their worst.
2007-01-11 21:56:16
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answer #4
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answered by rcpeabody1 5
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Personally I don't like journalists,they sometimes cover or distort
the truth for ratings. Doctors We need them to be sure as well as Registered Nurses.They are needed Writers? Seems none to certain whether you can be sucessful as one.
2007-01-11 21:58:59
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answer #5
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answered by thresher 7
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Journalist: dangerous
Doctor/Nurse: Long hours, exposed to hazardous materials (blood)
Writer: no work
2007-01-11 21:52:38
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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