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I want to become a nurse....I am currently enrolled in a University with my major undeclared. I want to know if poor vision will keep me out of the nursing program or out of this career. I work, drive and function normally, but I'll never be 20/20....Never! Even with my contacts. Is this like being a pilot? (must be correctable to 20/20) Help!
Originally posted by KP RNWhy is it that US SMART people always wear glasses (or contacts?)
Hey Kp - That is not as mad as it sounds there is a definite link between keratoconus and high intelligence. Compared to the rest of the population keratoconic patients are statistically more likely to have a tertiarly education.
When I first heard about the link betwen Keraatoconus and intelligence I had just one answer - I wanna swap!
As many others have written above, you don't need perfect vision to be a nurse. However, your question raises another, which is .... "At what point, does poor vision become a problem sufficient to warrent exclusion?"
Now, don't get me wrong. I am asking this question, NOT to suggest that we keep people with poor vision out of nursing. Just the opposite. I am interested in promoting a greater of inclusion of people with signinficant "handicaps" into nursing.
I, myself, am hearing-impaired. I know other hearing-impaired nurses who have been discriminated against because of their hearing loss. It seems we nurses are not as willing to accommodate the special needs of our colleagues as society expects other workers to be. While teaching at one university, I was told by my boss (a famous nursing leader) not to tell people about my hearing loss unless I really had to because my having a handicap would make the school look bad.
As the nursing population ages, more and more of us will have a variety of aches and pains and assorted other problems related to eyes and ears, etc. How prepared are we as a profession to deal with that fact?
I don't see it being discussed much.
llg
I swear to god this is true...I worked with a nurse that was blind in one eye and his vision was so bad in his good eye that he had to hold a piece of paper to his nose to read the writing on it. poor guy though, he ended up with a detached retina in his one good eye and that ended his nursing career.
Dave
BranRN
67 Posts
I am a member of the Coke Bottle Glasses Club, and have been in contacts since I was 8. They let me in nursing school and never had a problem with reading/seeing anything, I doubt you will either. Good luck, Brandi