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Salary Survey Results

2007 Salary Survey Results: A Decade of Growth

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ADVANCE is currently collecting data for the 2009 National Salary and Workplace Survey of Nurse Practitioners. Nurse practitioners, fill out the new survey here.


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If you happen to have a copy of ADVANCE for Nurse Practitioners from the end of 1997 lying around, take a look at the salary survey questionnaire.

OK, we'll summarize it for you.

Ten years ago, the first National Salary Survey of Nurse Practitioners included only half the number of questions contained in our 2007 survey. Besides neglecting to ask for an e-mail address (how many NPs used e-mail in 1997?), it mentioned nothing about education, on-call pay or intent to own. Retail clinics and aesthetics practices weren't even on the radar.

The National Salary and Workplace Survey of Nurse Practitioners has changed along with the profession. Responses to the survey have nearly tripled, from a respectable 2,150 faxed or mailed responses in 1997 to 6,162 this year. Below you'll find our analysis of NP compensation, prescribing habits, office hierarchy, opportunity perceptions and job satisfaction.

The tables accompanying this article compare NP pay over time and across master's-level professions. They lay out salaries by practice setting, experience, education and gender. Geographic differences are reflected in tables that indicate pay rates by state and patient population setting. Average salaries for select cities are included to illustrate that compensation can vary even across cities within the same state. Table 11 (click here) reproduces the original questionnaire with the addition of the percentage of responses for each answer choice; monetary values indicate the average of all responses.

The Big Payoff
Survey data show that the average nurse practitioner salary rose 8.8% over the past 2 years, from $74,812 in 2005 to $81,397 in 2007. The increase is an impressive 55% over the decade (Table 1). For the sake of comparison, physician assistant salaries increased by 35% over the same period, according to numbers available online from the American Academy of Physician Assistants.

These big pay gains reflect big public relations gains, says Margaret Fitzgerald, NP, president of Fitzgerald Health Education Associates. "We have made great headway in establishing ourselves in the marketplace, from marginalized providers who practiced in relative anonymity to a professional group that is increasingly being recognized for our contributions to health care," Fitzgerald told ADVANCE.

Jill Olmstead, NP, president-elect of the California Association for Nurse Practitioners, seconds Fitzgerald. "An 8.8% wage increase reflects a combination of nurse practitioners' capabilities combined with their overall importance to the health care system," she said.

NPs who worked part time made headway, too. The average part-time hourly wage for NPs in 2007 was $40.32, a 9.5% increase from the 2005 rate (Table 2). And NP salaries continued to compare favorably with those of other professionals with master's degrees (Table 3).




2007 Salary Survey Results: A Decade of Growth

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The argument between the engineer and the medical professionals isn't at all productive. Almost without exception, people see value in their own profession, they believe their own sacrifices are greater than those of others, and they believe the demands and responsibilities placed upon them exceed those placed on others. This applies not only to differing professions, but colleagues within the same workplace. 'Difficult' is an objective term. Personally, I find most math to be abstract, confusing and downright difficult, but applied math makes sense to me--so does biology, pharmacology, and immunology. Others find math to be easy and fun in a challenging way--but they would choke on the health care related classes I love. Howard Gardner (at Harvard) wrote a fascinating book about this concept a decade ago, (can't remember the exact title but it's something about 'seven intelligences'). It's human nature to value one's own fortes and minimize those of others; we all feel underappreciated and under compensated for our own contributions and see others as having an 'easier' course and more generous overall benefits. Engaging in these discussions a waste of time and effort. Personal attacks are worse and uncalled for.

Patti ,  RN attending NP schoolOctober 29, 2011



Mark,

Wow an engineering student that has never had a girlfriend, what a shocker! Hey, but at least your good at math.

Dave April 17, 2010



Mark, the arrogant engineer,

You’re right, engineers do make our planes and water safe; however, it takes many engineers and workers months to build a plane or building. It takes only one nurse, NP, PA, or MD to save a life in a matter of seconds. I feel bad for someone who is so wrapped up in their work that they are unable to appreciate the work of others. Next time you are in the hospital and at your most vulnerable point, try to appreciate the healthcare workers that are fighting to save your life.


Andrew ,  RN, BSNNovember 28, 2009



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