Re: OB Rotation is Hell
Just for the record, I am a woman.
Many of us survived nursing school rotations we hated. Fortunately, your OB rotation probably won't last very long and you just need to survive it and move on. I suggest you have a sit-down meeting with your instructor ASAP and come up with a plan to get you a passing grade. In your meeting, be honest and sincere. Express how you would like to learn as much as possible and have been a very successful student up until this point ... but that you just feel totally out of place in this envirnoment and would like her advice and help in passing. That may be a little humbling for you, but it is the truth and is likely to yield her support for you. She's not "out to recruit you" into the OB field and doesn't want any extra problems in her life either that might arise if she fails you. So, you're really on the same side here. Work together, make a plan to get you successfully through the course, and move on.
As far as male nurses in OB in general ... it can be an uncomfortable fit. In my long neonatal career, I have only encountered 1 man in OB nursing. He was a staff nurse in L&D who I shadowed many ears ago when I was a student. Part of me tells me it should be more common and very possible for any man interested in the field ... but my experience tells me that our current culture is not very supportive of the idea.
There are a few more men in pediatric nursing -- but not as many as I would expect there, either. I think the issue there is with the school age and adolescent girls who may be exceptionally uncomfortable with having a man perform intimate care. There is also the fear of pedophiles, which is
totally unfair to all you wonderful men out there, but is in the minds of some people.
However, men have played an active and very important role in the development of the neonatal nursing field. The first 2 presidents of the National Association of Neonatal Nursing were men and I have worked with many men in that field over the years. Any men interested in the general field of maternal-child nursing might want to consider a career as a neonatal nurse -- as there is a stronger tradition of acceptance and inclusion of male nurses in the NICU.
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