Re: Male nursing moments.
Sorry, I don't have any specific stories off the top of my head, just now. Well, I just woke up and was starting to get ready for work when I suddenly realized I'm off tonight. I'd say I'm having mental status changes, but lately this seems to be my baseline.
So, anyway, I have found that I sometimes do well with confused/combative patients, and also sometimes with PITA patients. We seem to get a lot of both, so it's something I've really worked at. There have been times I've had to dig pretty deep to find the compassion that a needy, demanding patient or family member needed in order to behave appropriately. And, I gotta admit, it has bugged me, occassionally, when one or more female peers have said, "It's because you're a guy." Well, I am, but I'm also a caring, sensitive person who tries to look at what the person needs.
That said, the longer I do this, the more I do see my Y chromosome as an advantage, at times. Some patients/families do seem less inclined to try to bully a male. Others, I think, may be a bit surprised when a male comes to them from a caring perspective--they notice it more than they do with an equally caring female. And, really, with our neuro patients, sometimes just having a deeper voice seems to help. Also, some little old ladies just like having a man fuss over them.
Still, I know a number of female nurses who also tend to do pretty well with difficult patients and families, so I tend to think it has at least as much to do with attitude and demeanor as with gender. I'm middle-aged, too, and that both gets you a little respect that younger nurses don't automatically receive and gives you a perspective that younger nurses don't automatically have.
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