Asked by grim

Training for nurses and therapists requires:

a two-year program at a community college, trade school, or professional organization.

a certification, licenses, and one-year certificate programs.

a four-year degree and license.

a four-year degree, medical degree, and on-the-job training in the form of a residency.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Neither single option covers every role — training varies by job. In practice:

- Both 1 and 3 are correct examples:
- Many nurses train in 2-year programs (ADN) or 4-year BSN programs and must pass licensure (NCLEX).
- Some therapists (e.g., respiratory therapists, therapy assistants) may have 2‑year or certificate programs; others (e.g., many physical, occupational, and speech therapists) require a 4‑year degree plus advanced graduate training and licensure.
- Option 2 is incomplete (certifications/licenses are often required but one‑year certificates are only for some assistant roles).
- Option 4 describes physician training, not nurses or most therapists.

So: training can be a 2‑year program or a 4‑year degree (and licensure) depending on the specific nurse or therapist role.