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In India Nursing Colleges(Schools) are attached only to Hospitals.Without an attached Hospital with atleast 200 bed in-patient department(IPD) -Nursing colleges will not get recognition from Nursing Council of India(Autonomous under the Ministry of Health&F.W.-Government of india)-B.Sc and M.Sc(nursing )degrees require affiliation to an University. 4.to 5 hours(diveded into 6 to 8 periods) theory classes will be there and then they have to spend at least 8 hours working in the IPD/OPD/X-ray/C.T.scan/MRI/Operation theatres of different specialities etc.They will be on roster duty in one of the 3 shifts(changing every month) round the clock(24 hours)-Nursing students have to work under the guidance of Senior Nurse/Head nurse/ and Nursing Superintendent, whose periodical assessment reports will be counted for getting the degree.Unlike USA-in india-.Full fledged Nurses (both male and female),Auxillary Nurses,Head Nurse,Nursing Superintendent,Nursing students all should wear prescribed Uniforms through out their duty times.Working without Uniforms is not allowed even in privte hospitals and small Nursing homes. Uniforms with different head gears and collar markings will have colur- combinaions-blue/red etc with White Uniforms would differentiate their rank and seniority. Hospital attached Nursing Colleges have many advantages.-I was teaching Bio-Chemistry to B.Sc.(Nursing Students) in a Recognised Nursing college.

2007-05-11 07:50:35 · answer #1 · answered by ssrvj 7 · 0 0

Its really not too much different. The only main one that I see is that most hospitals schools require an sat and references. Both college and hospitals schools are very competitive.

2007-05-11 14:08:59 · answer #2 · answered by johnnybobbitt 2 · 0 0

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