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Are nurses professional?



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Aug 01, 2007 08:47 AM

Are nurses professional?

by mmmk10

Are nurses professional?
i need our fellow nurses' opinion and what do you think our image in public?Do they think we r professional or just a doctor's assistance?

Happy nurses day


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31 Comments
No. 1
from luvbug
Old Aug 01, 2007, 10:36 AM

Default Re: Are nurses professional?
I would think it depends on a few things.
It probably varies depending on your location--small town, big city, etc. If you are in a small town, more people probably know more about what your job entails. thus, they might look at you as more of a professional. If you are in a big city where people don't know half the town, the whole view may be different.
Where I am, nurses are definitely viewed as professionals more often than as "assistants." We do have one patient that always asks for his "doctor's assistant." Makes me laugh inside.
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No. 2
from BSNDec06
Old Aug 01, 2007, 10:44 AM

Default Re: Are nurses professional?
Do you mean doctor's assistant? Not to be harsh, but part of being professional is using proper grammar.

This is a very controversial topic, or at least it was in my nursing class. The discussion ended with one of my fellow students practically yelling at the professor. I am interested to see where this discussion goes....
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No. 3
Old Aug 01, 2007, 10:46 AM

Default Re: Are nurses professional?
Yes.



steph
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No. 4
from Sensoria17
Old Aug 01, 2007, 11:01 AM

Default Re: Are nurses professional?
I don't know what the general public thinks but when my sister first starting working as an RN, one of her good friends got irritated that she was making considerably more than her "just for wiping asses". This friend has a BS. To be honest, I thought they did the same thing for a long time.
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No. 5
from RNperdiem
Old Aug 01, 2007, 11:29 AM

Default Re: Are nurses professional?
Nurses are a diverse group. Some are very career oriented. They have advanced degrees, certifications and aim to advance professionally.
Some nurses see nursing as a job. They have a factory worker attitude towards their work, these nurses put in their 8 or 12 hours and do no more than they have to do. If any continuing education is done, it must be mandatory.
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No. 6
Old Aug 01, 2007, 11:35 AM

Default Re: Are nurses professional?
Everything that I saw growing up (in Houston, Nashville, and New Orleans, all major metropolitan areas) pointed to Nursing as being "professional," and actually not too far down from doctors. I was shocked when I found out that I could earn the license in a two-year program. It just always seemed to me that as much as Nurses knew, and as much as they did, it must be at least a four-year program (this, though the mother of my best friend from high school was RN). Even when I decided to look into it for myself, I initially looked at the local University, and this is how I inadvertently found out about the local Junior College program.

I suppose it matters on the nurses you come in contact with, how your opinion forms. All of mine have always been stellar (though I have worked with a few not-so-much!).
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No. 7
from nightmare
Old Aug 01, 2007, 11:42 AM

Default Re: Are nurses professional?
Well I would say we're professionals train in uni,have a strong code of professional ethics,are accountable for our own actions,we are highly skilled,motivated and what makes us any less professional than say,doctors,lawyers,vets,engineers,etc?
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No. 8
from sconoli
Old Aug 01, 2007, 02:34 PM

Default Re: Are nurses professional?
I am an LPN student and this past week, my class of "future nurses" has definitely made me question this also! I believe nursing is a profession, therefore, we should act professional. But in all honesty, I have seen the most unprofessional, immature, and rather embarassing behavior from some "future nurses." I'll admit, yes, it's a classroom full of women, but right now, they are acting like a bunch of grade school girls bullying each other. They have actually started to threaten bodily harm to each other! It's not just my class either, the local hospitals here have really went down the tubes also. The nurses have the most vulgar discussions about their sex lives right at the nurses station, and the pts. hear every word. Before I started school, I was admitted to the ob unit at my local hospital for low AFI, and as I was waiting for the nurse to come back to the room, I found out I was being admitted before she came in and told me I was, simply because she was ******** rather loudly, that now they had no more beds because of the new admit, ME! So IMHO, nursing is a profession, but some nursing just don't understand the meaning of professional behavior!!
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No. 9
from psalm
Old Aug 01, 2007, 03:00 PM

Default Re: Are nurses professional?
Originally Posted by happybunny1970 View Post
Everything that I saw growing up (in Houston, Nashville, and New Orleans, all major metropolitan areas) pointed to Nursing as being "professional," and actually not too far down from doctors. I was shocked when I found out that I could earn the license in a two-year program. It just always seemed to me that as much as Nurses knew, and as much as they did, it must be at least a four-year program (this, though the mother of my best friend from high school was RN). Even when I decided to look into it for myself, I initially looked at the local University, and this is how I inadvertently found out about the local Junior College program.

I suppose it matters on the nurses you come in contact with, how your opinion forms. All of mine have always been stellar (though I have worked with a few not-so-much!).
...here we go again! There might have been a "two-year program" but did you include all the pre-req credits? No! There is no such thing as a two-year program, there is a two-year clinical, okay... but no one can be a registered nurse in 2 years, as in 24 months.

BSN's have as their first 2 years of the "four-year program" their pre-reqs...those are the electives as well as the English and speech, Government, math, psych, sociology, biology, ethics, micro, A&P I and II, etc.

Please, can we come up with a different term for ADN nurse?
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