Re: New name for the Nursing profession?
You know after reaing your response I started thinking about that. People could have all the resistance they wanted but in the end if a hospital decided they wanted to call you a carefellow or health monitor instead of a nurse how many people do you think would turn down the job? Not many I suspect if the salary and working conditions were alright. They could require an RN for the job but make the clinical title health monitor, etc. The pharmacuetical company has RN's that they call clinical monitors, what is the difference. In fact it may get rid of some of the "this is not a job and you should not care about the salary stuff, the stuff that is normally associated with nuns. I am not a nun. I like to take care of people but I am not a nun, I expect to be treated as a professional and I need to get paid comensurate with my responsibilites. I also am not a trashman, a caterer or a Walmart employee. And I like you and want to help you but that doesn't mean you can abuse me.
I bet that airlines would not be employing so many men if the title was still stewardess instead of flight attendent. Moreover, in the old days a "stewardess" was a sexy lady in a skimpy outfit. A flight attendent is a professional person that attends to my needs as an airline customer. BIG DIFFERENCE.
I personally don't think nursing is going to more into the "professional" realm until there is a name change. Flame away, that is my personal belief. But I also feel that everyone should have the same entry level education into the field, it would promote harmony.
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