WORKING -- SUSAN WERGLES
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SHE IS
Providing medical care to the sick
LONG ROAD
Wergles, 43, is a nurse practitioner for the Edinger Medical Group’s
Fountain Valley office.
After earning a bachelor’s degree from Cal State Long Beach in 1975,
she became a registered nurse and soon after, began working in the
emergency room at UCI Medical Center. Not unlike many in the medical
field, Wergles says that she has always loved working with people. But
the journey she chose to take was not necessarily based on finding the
quickest means to an ends.
“I switched from the hectic emergency room work to working in
administration as the trauma service coordinator at UCI because once
again, I was studying at Cal State Long Beach,” Wergles said. “I was
lucky I had a fairly nice boss who would work with me so I would have
time to also work on school.”
MASTERING THE FIELD
In 1993, Wergles graduated from the nurse practitioner’s program at
Cal State Long Beach with a master’s degree and was ready to begin her
new career as a nurse practitioner.
“I needed my master’s degree because it is now necessary for a nurse
practitioner to have that,” Wergles said. “It is like that because if you
want to bill for Medicare, you not only have to have a master’s degree,
you have to be nationally certified to bill for certain things. It also
just gives you more credibility.”
WHO ARE THESE PEOPLE?
Nurse practitioners are primary care health-care providers. But one of
the things that they are actively lobbying for is to be listed as
primary-care providers with all insurance companies; something in which
they currently don’t have.
Wergles said that nurse practitioners have been around for some time,
however, she added, even with their steady emergence, which has come
about in the last 10 years, some people still need to be educated as to
what nurse practitioners do.
“We do physicals, histories, order diagnostic testing, make diagnoses,
order treatment, write prescriptions; basically, we do every thing that a
doctor would do,” Wergles said. “Often times, we provide the health care
in the rural areas that physicians won’t go to.”
THE PAYOFF
A year after grabbing her master’s degree and searching for work,
Wergles finally found a position as a nurse practitioner in 1994 with the
Edinger Medical Group and has been there ever since. Wergles adds that a
lot of urgent-care facilities will hire nurse practitioners.
“We can practice independently without having a physician on site,”
Wergles said. “If for any reason we need a doctor present, then we just
call one.”
Although her days can be hectic, they are always enjoyable. Wergles
says that she does everything from keeping track of chronic diseases to
doing a lot of urgent care, which she added can get hectic, but because
of her emergency room background, is hard for her not to love.
“I thrive on interacting with the patients,” Wergles said. “As a
registered nurse, especially when working in the emergency room, you
don’t have the time to teach, where as nurse practitioner, you do. I love
teaching them (patients) and taking care of them and that’s probably why
I became a nurse practitioner.”
Story by Torus Tammer; photo by Carlos Hilgado
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