Updated: Published
Members are discussing the differences between Type A and Type B nurses, sharing personal experiences and preferences. Some members feel that Type A nurses are more task-oriented and praised for their clinical skills, while Type B nurses prioritize patient care and empathy. There is a consensus that a balance between the two types is necessary for effective nursing practice, and that teamwork is essential regardless of individual nursing styles.
Many years ago, when I was director of nursing at a hospital in east San Gabriel Valley, I was confronted by patients and patient's families expressing grievances during the 1500-1900 shift. This shift had a disproportionate number of complaints. Yet, I knew that the nursing staff on this shift was both competent and efficient, so I wondered what was the problem could be. I set about observing the nurses as they worked. It didn't take long to realize that the problem wasn't so much the nurses's skills, but how they executed their work. For some reason, this shift had a disproportionate number of nurses who were task-oriented and it was this behavior that was at the heart of the problem.
Individuals exhibit both a variety and a continuum of behaviors, but many of us have certain traits that mark us as either a task-oriented or a nurture-oriented person. It is one of these two modes that defines how we organize and execute our work. Being aware of your predilection can help you work more smoothly with your fellow nurses, customize your interaction with patients and their families, and even be more effective as a nurse.
The task-oriented (Type A) nurse will usually have a To Do list, with an idea of how much time each task will take. This nurse will plan breaks and meal times around a schedule of work responsibilities. She is usually praised for her organizational skills.
The nurture-oriented (Type B) nurse is more focused on the interpersonal aspects of her work. Her focus is on meet ing the emotional/spiritual needs of her patients. The task itself is secondary. Problems generally arise when the ratio of Type A and Type B nurses are out of sync, as this can lead to subtle and not so subtle conflicts among the nursing team, as well as complaints from patients and their families.
A "Type A" nurse may:
* Fight to get one of the limited number of scales available to weight her baby, rather than wait until later, when there is less demand;
* Get that patient out of bed and sitting up in the chair at the designated time, even if the patient is engaged in some other activity;
* Change the dressing of the patient's open wound, even though housekeeping is in the room vacuuming and doing other cleaning tasks;
* Arrive 15 minutes or more before the shift is set to begin;
* Collect all the necessary equipment for the lab tests ordered, even if the labs don't need to be sent in until end of shift--twelve hours later; or,
* Stick a patient to get that IV started even if it means trying 13 times.
A "Type B" nurse may:
* Arrive late for the start of your shift because she is busy talking to everyone in the nursing office, cafeteria, hallway, and parking lot;
* Know the entire life story of each and every one of her patients;
* Leave the bay supplies more depleted, or in more chaos, than when she arrived;
* Be looking for the supplies needed to draw the labs that were due in the lab 20 minutes ago;
* Know that it just isn't her day to start a patient's IV if by the third attempt she has still been unsuccessful;
* Be overhead saying, "but it's an organized mess."
So, which "type" makes the perfect nurse? If your answer is both and neither then you'd be right. A strictly "Type A" nurse is the nurse caricature that we all dread and hate--this is the Nurse Ratched stereotype that dogs our profession to this day. Meanwhile, the "Type B" nurse is the one we all dread to work with because she is so busy with the "touchy-feely" side that no tasks get done. Nursing teammates are often left to do her work in addition to their own.
The best nursing model is a blend of the two types. Most of us shift between the two types, adjusting our style as needed. Problems arise when we become stuck in one style of behavior. We may not always be aware of our proclivities, but our fellow coworkers generally are.
Any NICU nurse, especially those who work the night shift, knows of the mad dash to get all babies weighed at the start of shift. When Type A nurses make up the majority on the shift, there is an almost comic, and sometimes stressful, ballet as each nurse tries to secure one of the few scales that are available for this function. A Type B nurse would generally choose to wait a little later in the shift to do the weigh-in (especially if it is not a time-sensitive task) and let the Type A's "duke it out" over the limited number of scales.
When Type B nurses make up a large percentage of your nursing team, things like restocking the bay or calling in all the labs, etc., might not get done in a timely manner, since they may focus most of their work time interacting with other nurses, the patient, or the patient's family.
Neither scenario is an example of "bad" nursing. The solution lies in a strong manager who can identify the traits of her nurses and try the following solutions:
* Redistribute the "mix" of personality types, ensuring that one type does not dominate.
* Hold in-services for the nursing teams so they can learn to identify and integrate their styles into their work.
* Help an over-strong Type A or Type B personality learn how to moderate the behavior so that it does not continue to overwhelm the other nurses, patients, and themselves.
Good and competent nursing leadership, from both the nursing management and from the nurses themselves, is a critical element in a nursing team that excels in its work and provides the best of patient care.
Knowing what personality trait you are likely to exhibit, especially in moments of stress, can help you to be a better nurse. No one style is always superior to the other. However, knowing when and how to shift from one style of behavior to the other can help you perform in an even more effective manner, and interact better with the other members of the nursing team.
I lean towards type-B but am not fully so. Type-A generally are the ones who attack me in the morning (I work nights) and wonder why I did/didn't do a certain thing/give or not give a med. Of course I have my reasons that are completely appropriate. They do have their own reasons too but their excessive for my personal tastes. Of course, whatever works for each of us is whatever works you know?
i would say i am mostly a type b nurse and on a side note... i discovered i expect a lot of nurses who are caring for my family...well not really... i expect continuity of care and someone to somewhat adjust their style of nursing to the patient...if you know they aren't well or are in pain and they aren't a bell ringer (like my dad) check on them more often and ask more questions. i think if a patient is not a bell ringer that type if thing should be identified in report.
i think balance is necessary, for sure, i can get my work done but my patients are my priority...
i have a float postion, i think those kind of positions are great for type b nurses.
type b nurses are great if they are nutured not ripped apart...i start to become part of the problem when i feel unappreciated.
if nurses are too task oriented they actually fail their patients...patients are whole people, with the needs of whole people (body,mind,spirit, emotion) and so are their families.
i appreciate type a nurses as long as they maintain their empathy...you only treat 25% of the person with out empathy.
this is a soap box for me..i could go on and on.
no matter what type we are all a team right.
As a student, I thought this was interesting. I'd like to mention that my school is breeding Type A's. :chuckle There is no room for a type B in most our clinicals...they'll beat it out of you!Even during our senior year, most of the instructors are very rigid in their expectations of how we do things....the only time I had some breathing space was during preceptorship. While our clinical evaluation tool is based on Benner's Domains, which includes much more than "tasks" and time management, the instructors are primarily concerned with.... tasks and time management. Type A's are praised as being clinically strong, so that's what we all have to strive for.
Hopefully, once I'm off on my own I can return to some sort of balance.
Thanks for the interesting thread.
my school raised type b's!!!!
type as were labelled as bad, literally...depends on your instructors i guess
good to hear what you have to say though, balance is necessary.
good luck!!!
Great post!! I have now figured out that I work with 5 type A's and I am the only B in the bunch although I do have several of the type A in me, it just doesn't show up as much as it should sometimes........LOL I agree that the type As are getting most of the recognition but I tend to get more of the love from my patients and deep gratitude from the families in spending that extra little bit of time to make sure my patients know that they are a valued person while under my care. Which, in all actuality, is one of the main reasons that I became a nurse in the first place.As far as the IV's go, I am 2 stick gal then I ask for help!!
alot of units in ab have a 3 strikes and your out policy, i agree with that, but i don't do iv's. i am an lpn trained in bc but working in geriatrics in ab.
re: geriatrics..knowing the life story can sometimes be a life saver with patients with dementia...i heard a story of a former nazi p.o.w who was terrified of the 'shower'...the pt caused serious injury to staff...it took the staff awhile to find out from family and the pt was fine in the tub after that ..
a "type a" nurse may:
* fight to get one of the limited number of scales available to weight her baby, rather than wait until later, when there is less demand;
* get that patient out of bed and sitting up in the chair at the designated time, even if the patient is engaged in some other activity;
* change the dressing of the patient's open wound, even though housekeeping is in the room vacuuming and doing other cleaning tasks;
* arrive 15 minutes or more before the shift is set to begin;
* collect all the necessary equipment for the lab tests ordered, even if the labs don't need to be sent in until end of shift--twelve hours later; or,
* stick a patient to get that iv started even if it means trying 13 times.
a "type b" nurse may:
* arrive late for the start of your shift because she is busy talking to everyone in the nursing office, cafeteria, hallway, and parking lot;
* know the entire life story of each and every one of her patients;
* leave the bay supplies more depleted, or in more chaos, than when she arrived;
* be looking for the supplies needed to draw the labs that were due in the lab 20 minutes ago;
* know that it just isn't her day to start a patient's iv if by the third attempt she has still been unsuccessful;
* be overhead saying, "but it's an organized mess."
i think i'm a combo (mostly type a), although some of my co-workers have called me 'type a'. i'm really organized (most nights!) and can't stand for my rooms/paperwork/triage area to be messy. if i have a kid who i think may need an iv or some other procedure, i get all my stuff together, then when the doc comes out of the room with orders, just go in and do it. i wouldn't really call that type a, b/c in an er setting you have to be efficient and keep things moving. i'm also always early to work--i hate feeling rushed!
one thing i won't do is keep sticking a patient. if a patient doesn't have much to pick from to begin with and i miss the first, i'll usually ask someone else to take a look. and if the patient does have decent ones, but for some reason after 2 sticks i haven't gotten it, i still go ask someone else. our hospital's policy is 2 sticks/nurse, although with some kids that we need a line in, there'll be more than 2/nurse (or in an emergency situation, if there's no iv within 90 seconds-2 minutes, an io). as far as the iv 'experts'/'gurus' or whatever you want to call them, sometimes they miss too, and sometimes nurses with less experience can get an iv that they couldn't. i don't think it's fair to assume that because the 'expert' couldn't get it, nobody else can. just my .
Definitely type A. I guess that's why med-surg drove me nuts. At the start of the shift, I always had a list and an order that I wanted to do things. And then the phone would ring or a family member had a complaint about something that happened when I wasn't there, and my list would be shot to hell. Drove me nuts! Now me and my type A personality are happily ensconced caring for one patient on the nightshift. Not only do I get to keep the same list, I get to follow it step by step with no interruptions.
Thanks so much for that post! I'm such a Type B that I now understand why I and other Type B's have so much trouble with a couple of the day shift staffers.They just don't get it when you tell them that your line draws were a little late because you were discussing a patient's new cancer dx at 0400 or sitting at the bedside of a confused patient, holding her hand until she fell asleep.
One of those highly-driven types actually had one of our night shift nurses in tears. We all dread having to pass our assignments on to her because she's gotten such great feedback about her Type A behavior that she's turned into quite the little bully.
But that's gonna stop now. :)
I am working in the neuro ICU and I am a tybe b nurse but I haven't had a problem just yet (Just started) oh and I am learning to intergrate between the two I now know that's it's okay to have a little mixture of both in nurses it helps to go along way.
La Drina:nurse:
i would say i am mostly a type b nurse and on a side note... i discovered i expect a lot of nurses who are caring for my family...well not really... i expect continuity of care and someone to somewhat adjust their style of nursing to the patient...if you know they aren't well or are in pain and they aren't a bell ringer (like my dad) check on them more often and ask more questions. i think if a patient is not a bell ringer that type if thing should be identified in report.i think balance is necessary, for sure, i can get my work done but my patients are my priority...
i have a float postion, i think those kind of positions are great for type b nurses.
type b nurses are great if they are nutured not ripped apart...i start to become part of the problem when i feel unappreciated.
if nurses are too task oriented they actually fail their patients...patients are whole people, with the needs of whole people (body,mind,spirit, emotion) and so are their families.
i appreciate type a nurses as long as they maintain their empathy...you only treat 25% of the person with out empathy.
this is a soap box for me..i could go on and on.
no matter what type we are all a team right.
You are exactly right! We are all a team and that is the most important thing
Schoolnursetrish39
31 Posts
I am mostly type A but am type B too. I always get my work done though as it is unfair to the person following you if you don't. I work nights, however I have alot of paper work to finish as my 3-11 folks don't get to it... so my type A habits kick in.
Alot of times though patients need the type B nursing and that is when I really feel like a nurse. After all thats why I became a nurse. I knew Type A types in school they were rigid and by the book and made 100s on tests but when we were new graduate nurses some of them choked because the real nursing world is not by the book .. It takes the book skills and also the Type B aspects both.Really we need both type skills in the nursing world I think...