Working environments may vary depending on the consultants' responsibilities and their legal cases. According to a survey conducted by American Association of Legal Nurse Consultants, 53 percent of legal nurse consultants were in independent practice, and law firms employed 32 percent. Office environments where consultants work are usually clean and well lighted. However, research and interview requirements may take consultants to communities that range from safe to less than desirable.
- Advanced Practice Nurses
- Airport Security Personnel
- Arbitrators
- Bail Bondsmen
- Bailiffs
- Bankruptcy Lawyers
- Biotechnology Patent Lawyers
- Bodyguards
- Border Patrol Agents
- Bounty Hunters
- Civil Litigation Lawyers
- Community Health Nurses
- Corporate Lawyers
- Corrections Officers
- Court Interpreters and Translators
- Court Reporters
- Crime Analysts
- Criminal Lawyers
- Critical Care Nurses
- Deputy U.S. Marshals
- Detectives
- Elder Law Attorneys
- Emergency Nurses
- Emergency Services Dispatchers
- Environmental Lawyers
- Family Lawyers
- FBI Agents
- Forensic Experts
- Forensic Meteorologists
- Fraud Examiners, Investigators, and Analysts
- Genetic Genealogists
- Geriatric Nurses
- Hedge Fund Lawyers
- Home Health Care and Hospice Nurses
- Intellectual Property Lawyers
- Judges
- Law Librarians
- Lawyers
- Legal Operations Specialists
- Legal Secretaries
- Licensed Practical Nurses
- Litigation Support/eDiscovery Analysts
- Mergers and Acquisitions Attorneys
- Neonatal Nurses
- Nurse Anesthetists
- Nurse Assistants
- Nurse Managers
- Nurse Practitioners
- Nurse-Midwives
- Nursing Instructors
- Occupational Health Nurses
- Oncological Nurses
- Paralegals
- Parole Officers
- Patent Agents
- Patent Lawyers
- Police Officers
- Polygraph Examiners
- Process Servers
- Psychiatric Nurses
- Public Interest Lawyers
- Real Estate Lawyers
- Registered Nurses
- School Nurses
- Secret Service Special Agents
- Security Consultants
- Security Guards
- Space Lawyers
- Tax Attorneys