Nurses are in short supply now.
Although it is a bit exaggerated to persuade people to study medicine, this kind of self-deprecating ridicule is not unreasonable. At present, the domestic medical environment leads to a shortage of medical staff, but you have to understand that nurses are not as easy to find jobs as doctors, and their social status and treatment are really not high. If you don't have enough hobbies and firm beliefs, I suggest not to take nursing as a major. Although you are a boy, the nursing major will find a good job in the future, but the top three hospitals are all undergraduates or even graduate students from the starting point of high school, and there is no so-called relationship and background, so you have no advantage. If you really like nursing and then go to a junior college, your future employment will inevitably require you to upgrade to an undergraduate course, and you will have to study 1 and 2 years. This time line is a bit long. You have to have a strong inner digestion of the bad experiences that may occur during the internship, and you have to bear the pressure that your classmates have already made money while you are still internship. But if you go to a junior college and don't get promoted to an undergraduate course, I think it's a pity that you have been in high school for three years. Because there are many junior high school girls who are 3+2 nursing majors, from the academic level, you are almost the same, there is no gap. Moreover, people are younger than you, and the clinical operation may be better than you. You should be more cautious.