6. The hiring bias — mostly myth, real in specific cases

Career changers frequently worry about age discrimination in nursing hiring. Published surveys from the American Nurses Association and multiple hospital-system nurse recruiter groups consistently show that mid-career and older new grads are hired at rates similar to their younger peers, particularly in medical-surgical, long-term care, and community-hospital settings.
Where the bias becomes real is in specific competitive markets — large academic medical centers with heavily oversubscribed new-grad residency programs sometimes weight prior clinical experience and traditional-age applicants more heavily. Even there, career changers with prior CNA experience or healthcare-adjacent backgrounds routinely match against traditional candidates.
The strongest counter to any perceived bias is applying to hospitals actively recruiting for their known staffing gaps rather than the most competitive prestige programs. Community hospitals, long-term care systems, home health agencies, and rural critical-access facilities routinely favor career changers explicitly for stability and life experience during interview evaluations.