Fast track application as an enrolled nurse, registered nurse or midwife - AFTR-40 2026

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open the Fast track application in the editor.
  2. Begin with Section A: Application criteria. Mark all applicable boxes for your registration type: Enrolled nurse, Registered nurse, or Midwife.
  3. Proceed to Section B: Personal details. Fill in your name, date of birth, and any previous names. Ensure you attach proof of any name changes if applicable.
  4. In Section C: Contact information, provide your current contact details and residential address. Make sure to indicate if your principal place of practice is the same as your residential address.
  5. Move on to Section D: Suitability statements. Answer questions regarding criminal history and compliance with health guidelines thoroughly. Attach necessary documentation as specified.
  6. Complete Sections E and F regarding obligations and consent, ensuring you understand the requirements before signing the form.
  7. Finally, review all sections for completeness and accuracy before submitting your application online through our platform for a streamlined process.

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No, years of nursing experience is NOT required. Certified midwives enter midwifery education with backgrounds like art history and English lit. Nursing and midwifery have completely different scopes of practice and competency. This is classic professional jealousy, although nurses would never admit it.
Is midwifery or nursing harder? To answer this question directly, as a career path, nursing is likely harder than midwifery. The deeper answer is that both paths are challenging for their own unique reasons.
Midwifery is specialisation in one specific area, where as a nursing degree enables you to work in all areas of nursing EXCEPT midwifery. Therefore if you want to work in peds, surgical, emergency, ICU or anything else you need to do nursing I wan
CNMs typically hold a masters degree or higher, which allows them to provide a broader range of services than a standard RN, including primary care, gynecological exams, and pregnancy care.
Arguably, midwifery courses are harder to get into than nursing courses. However, midwives and nurses both face exceptional challenges which make their day to day lives difficult, and its hard to say which career is harder. Both face exhaustion, budget, resource and staffing cuts, abuse, hospital politics, more.

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An EN can become a registered nurse (RN) with the completion of a Bachelor of Nursing. Many universities offer a Bachelor of Nursing to ENs, recognising previous learning and experience.
Essentially, a registered nurse is someone who has finished their degree. They will have more function in the development and creation of patient management and care plans. It is the next professional stage from being an enrolled nurse, where workers have greater overview of all facets of the role.
You can become an RN in two years with an Associate Degree in Nursing (ADN) or a nursing diploma. These programs offer faster entry into a registered nursing career than a four-year degree but may limit your career advancement options later.

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