Nurses Helping Nurses
allnurses Network: Jobs | Books | Newsletter
allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses
Home General News Blogs Articles Students Region Specialty
General Nursing Discussion /

Nurse is a nurse is a nurse




Did You Know?
allnurses.com is the largest community for nurses on the web. We now have over 328,833 members! Join today to network with other nurses, laugh, share, and much more.
Page 1 of 9 1 2345678 > Last »
May 12, 2003 02:53 AM

Nurse is a nurse is a nurse

by Dayray

We really need to do something about the publics understanding of nursing. I'm starting to get really ticked about this and I'm far far from a prideful person. I'm just tired of people not realizing that I do infact hold a license and that I went threw a hell of allot to get it and that I do more then just change bed pans etc...

The other day I ran into my wife’s cousin who I haven’t seen for about 13 years. We were talking and he asked what I do.

"I'm a nurse"
"Oh really? So is my girlfriend"
"Cool where does she work?"
"Oh she doesn’t work as a nurse anymore she does telemarketing"
"Really? Why"
"She makes more money that way"
"Huh? How much does she make?"
"Oh minimum wage + bonuses of 2 or 3 dollars"
Went on like this for a while turns out she was a CNA, ok so I was a CNA once too but I didn’t call myself a nurse. CNA’s are great and some are damn sharp but they aren’t nurses. I just let it go and didn’t take the time explain the difference to him.

A few days later I’m sitting at the nurse station and a doc is complained about her office "nurses”. It seems that some of them don't feel comfortable calling lab results to patients or excepting phone orders. So I ask are they nurses or MA's. Well some are nurses but the ones complaining are MA's. All I said was well if I was an MA I wouldn’t want to do it either. I don’t even think MA's can legally take orders or report test results.

Had a patient freak out on me the other day when I went to start her IV. "You can’t do that I need a doctor!" "Um honey I can call him in here but doubt he has started one in the last 20 years scene med school"

Anyway I’m feel better after venting and now feel a little silly about being so ticked off but we really do need to do something about this


Bookmarks: Submit Thread to Digg Submit Thread to del.icio.us Submit Thread to StumbleUpon Submit Thread to Google

Search Tags
None
Top

 
Page 1 of 9 1 2345678 > Last »
86 Comments:

No. 1
from canoehead
Old May 12, 2003, 04:42 AM

It's too bad that the doc didn't respect the nurses enough to differentiate them from the MA's. I would find that insulting. Plus I would expect a completely different job description from an MA. I don't think that's the norm.

I'd also have to beat the snot out of someone who equated being a CNA with an RN. Many years difference in training and in responsibility there. I don't blame you for being upset, but I haven't got any ideas for solutions.
Top
 
No. 2
from gwenith
Old May 12, 2003, 05:05 AM

This is one of my favourite soap boxes and it comes down to media presentation. Have a think about the stereotypes shown on TV,

1) the doctor is always the center of attention
2) Nurses main function in to call the doctor for asnything more brain taxing than handing out bedpans
3) Nurses spend a lot of time talking to each other and gossiping
4) Nurses are never depicted as being busy - just too lazy to help.

It is no wonder that we the attitude that we do get from the general public. I personally see this as the last great fight for nurses - that of turning the media around.
Top
 
No. 3
from graysonret
Old May 12, 2003, 07:03 AM

Being a male nurse, I've lost count on how many times patients insist on calling me "doctor", even when corrected, or patients who insist on wanting the "nurse"...that is, the assigned CNA...to help them. It can be a bit embarrassing, causing amusement at the nurses' station, but, over time, I've gotten used to it". Maybe I can get a scrub top with a sign on it, "I am your NURSE!". LOL.
Top
 
No. 4
from Katnip Platinum Member
Old May 12, 2003, 07:46 AM

I would love to see a television show based on nurses. Not like that brainless one a while back, but the way it really is. Real men and women with families, boyfriends, bills, and taxes. I do NOT want to see them tumbling into be with every cute doc who walks by.

I want them to show the reality of what a nurse does and how a nurse will, when necessary go toe-to-toe with a doc about patient care---and show the nurse is right.

I want them to show nurses at various stages of their careers-some CNAs working up to LPN, ADNs and BSns. Let them fret over school and career.

I want them to show nurses holding the dying person's hand, encouranging a para to live, and every ohter thing a nurse does every single day. Show the general public what nurses really do.
Top
 
No. 5
from Furball
Old May 12, 2003, 08:04 AM

There is a realistic glimpse at what nurses do in the movie "Wit". There's a scene at the end where the RN physically removes an inappropriate MD from the bedside of a dying pt. Check it out.
Top
 
No. 6
from Furball
Old May 12, 2003, 08:12 AM
Updated May 12, 2003 at 08:21 AM by Furball

Default Wit
http://www.epinions.com/content_89259871876



Read Review of Wit
Review Summary About the Author

WIT – With Emma Thompson and Directed by Mike Nichols
Feb 06 '03 (Updated Feb 06 '03)


The Bottom Line
An excellent movie if you can handle it.


Full Review
Plot Details: This opinion reveals major details about the movie's plot.
I find myself shaken by one of the most powerful movies I have seen in a very long time. I am grateful to Chad (Lemonlime) for referring me to it. He also suggested I read Mfunk75’s review – and again I am grateful. Not only did I get to read a truly smashing review, but I encountered Mike’s work which was impressive. Not that it is a great honor, but Mike immediately became a member of my WOT.

So I asked my daughter to go to Blockbusters and rent the movie. At first Jude was reluctant. She had already seen the movie on HBO, and found it too painful to watch again. However she did rent the VHS for me. It was not available on DVD, so I have no comments from the directors, actors or whoever to quote here. Jude watched part of it with me, broke into tears, and refused to stay for the rest of it.

One of the things Chad liked about the movie was the reference to a poem by John Donne, a fifteenth century poet that he shares my admiration for.

I must say I was not disappointed. This is not about the poet, or even too much about his work, although his famous “Death be not Proud” is elaborated on. It is a story about terminal illness – the advanced stages of ovarian cancer. You will be absolutely glued to your armchair, and you will think about it long after the movie is finished.

The director of the movie is Mike Nichols who also directed The Graduate. He did an amazing job in this one. The background music throughout the film is soft classical, and it works. It is never obtrusive, and always fits the mood.

THE STORY

Emma Thompson plays the lead – a strict mid-life Professor , Vivian Bearing. We see her at the doctor’s office where she learns she is terminally ill with ovarian cancer. She is a professor of poetry, focusing I think, on John Donne. She takes the news of her eminent death calmly. She is tough, sophisticated, and very much in control. When the doctor, a character who was cold and too scientific to be likable, told her there was an alternate treatment that might save her if she was interested. He told her the treatment would be rough,and it was comparatively new. However if she was brave enough to try it she would be making a valuable donation to science. He wasn’t kidding. From a strong woman in complete control of her life, Bearing became a numbered guinea pig for the Doctor's improvised tests. Christopher Lloyd played this doctor as a scientist who was more concerned with the results of his experimental tests then he was with his patient.

This movie was never released to the theater circuit, but went directly to HBO. This made it ineligible for the Academy Awards. I cannot understand how that could have happened. A performance so outstanding, a script so thought provoking, and the setting so familiar should have been seen by many more people. Also Emma Thompson should have won the Academy Award hands down. I knew she was acting, but her performance was so real I thought for a few startling minutes that it was actually happening.

There were a few scenes (flash backs) apart from the sterile hospital rooms. They were few, and served to make Bearing a person you could relate to on a personal basis.

The actual treatment time for us starts with Bearing in the hospital. Her first chemo has advanced to the point where she has lost her hair. She wears a jaunty baseball cap to cover her baldness. She is upbeat, and speaks to the viewers directly – as though she were thinking out loud. It was effective.

I didn’t realize how sick she actually was until her violent vomiting shook her, and her baseball cap came off. She often quotes Donne’s “Death be Not Proud,” and we see how she came to understand the poem by a flashback to her time in college when it was explained by her professor, played by E.M.Ashford. Before the story ends, the old retired female professor will play an important role.

Bearing (played by Thompson) runs the course of continued treatments, called “full treatment”: being treated as a number, and being displayed in all of her hospital gowned glory to be viewed by aspiring doctors. She progresses from dignity, to complete misery that cannot focus on anything but her unbearable pain.

One of the interns turns out to be a former student of hers. He, too, is intent on being an impersonal man of science, although now and then the humanitarian in him tries to emerge. He was played JasonPosner.

Bearing’s nurse, played by Eileen Atkins, seems to be the only sympathetic hospital character. She is concerned about her suffering patient as a person and friend, and does what she can to make things a little better for her. She is the one who informs Bearing that she has the right to suspend treatment – and order the life saving methods to be stopped so that nature can take its course.

There are a few moments of humor. Bearing takes an interest in the young doctor who was a former student, even though he admits he took her course only because it was required for pre-med students to be well rounded. He told her she gave him an A minus. Once after being displayed so that student doctors could see the progression of her cancer, Bearing muttered, “I wish I had given him an A.”

In the hospital, every new treatment would be delivered by a technician who would ask routine questions over and over again, starting with “What’s your name?” This time, with a wry smile, Bearing announced “Lucy Countess of Bedford”. This was a beloved patron for John Donne, and he wrote many elegies for her. The “Death be not proud” devine poem by Donne is one of the focal points for Bearing, although at the end when her iron will snapped, she no longer wanted to hear anything about John Donne.

Anyway, the technician didn’t know what she was talking about, and it was a small joke Bearing shared with the viewers. Thompson’s facial expressions showed pride, hidden amusement, chagrin, will power, dignity, humiliation, intelect,and unbelievable pain. Another little joke was when the sympathetic nurse replied to Bearing’s question about some medication “Is it soporific?” the nurce answered, “I don’t know about that, but it sure does make you sleepy.” Until the very last, Bearing kept up her spirits with little jokes that she tried to share with us.

I won’t tell you the actual end, because I do hope you rent this. I don’t write good movie reviews, and I don’t really like a lot of movies, but this one I have to say is great. The human spirit beats the scientific analysis every time. I don’t know how the movie earned the name WIT. I hope somebody can enlighten me on that.

I can only say that I do hope you see it, and will let me know what you think. Again, I am grateful to Chad and to Mike.

Virginia




PS Soporific means....something that will make you sleepy...haha...nurses aren't English majors ya know.



Recommended
Yes
Top
 
No. 7
Old May 12, 2003, 08:53 AM

Thanks for posting the review for the movie! I may have to get ahold of this one...and maybe some Kleenex.
Cheryl
Top
 
No. 8
from jnette allnurses Guide
Old May 12, 2003, 09:02 AM

Originally posted by cyberkat
I would love to see a television show based on nurses. Not like that brainless one a while back, but the way it really is. Real men and women with families, boyfriends, bills, and taxes. I do NOT want to see them tumbling into be with every cute doc who walks by.

I want them to show the reality of what a nurse does and how a nurse will, when necessary go toe-to-toe with a doc about patient care---and show the nurse is right.

I want them to show nurses at various stages of their careers-some CNAs working up to LPN, ADNs and BSns. Let them fret over school and career.

I want them to show nurses holding the dying person's hand, encouranging a para to live, and every ohter thing a nurse does every single day. Show the general public what nurses really do.
Amen to that ! This is really what's needed... just for starters !

So when do we pick the cast ? An Allnurses movie by Allnurses members ! With the vast variety we have here we could put together one heck of a good movie !!! And tell/show it like it IS !
Top
 
No. 9
from nursemouse
Old May 12, 2003, 09:35 AM

Our chaplains give a Death and Dying presentation and show excepts from "Wit". I agree that it is a remarkable movie. (And yes, we do pass out the kleenex). The title comes, I think, from the lead character maintaining her wit throughout the entire degrading process. I've actually been with several groups attending this presentation who debate whether the nurse pressures her patient into accepting a DNR by showing faint disapproval when the patient appears reluctant. It's very subtle, but definitely there. (BTW: I'd have loved to see Eileen Atkins get the Supporting Actress Oscar. Pity they screwed that up).
Top
 
Page 1 of 9 1 2345678 > Last »


Did You Know?
allnurses.com is the largest community for nurses on the web. We now have over 328,833 members! Join today to network with other nurses, laugh, share, and much more.

Thread Tools

Who's Online
428 members
3,482 guests
3,910
18

Nursing on worst job list

3

Reduce Rates of Spending on Nursing...

2

County Nurses Pact Seen As Symbolic

7

Gasping Misunderstood in Heart...

8

Nurse Reports Assault

0

EMERGENCY CARE A Mixed Grade

0

CDC: Salmonella Outbreak Spans 42...

2

Study Raises Doubts About Tamiflu...

7

Baby Dies As Bug is Found at Tot...

0

Gene Abnormality Found to Predict...


Sponsored Links
Health Care Degrees Online
Healthcare Degrees Online!


2

Rejecting the Transplant

1

"Transcultural Nursing...

10

It's up to you

4

My life in Ireland and US...still...

15

Hasidic Jew Admitted for Bone...

19

Day One in the Life of a Nursing...

21

Suicide On The Ward

20

Culture of Violence

7

My First Nursing Instructor

0

Matua and Joseph Smith Junior, a...


Current Readers: 1



Interested in the hottest topics of the week? Subscribe to the Nurse-zine Newsletter.
Enter email address: