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I'm sorry.. just can't get overly energized about a bunch of students being insulting at a show that's run for 56 years on a theme of being insulting. Apparently, this show has historically used themes that make fun of all sorts of anatomical landmarks, including butt-cracks and phalluses. This wasn't a speech by the class president during freshman orientation; it wasn't an isolated skit performed at the alumni banquet. It was a demonstration of poor taste at a show known for poor taste.
I guess I'm surprised that anyone would be surprised at college students going "over the top" at this thing. I'm more worried that the credibility of the issues in the letter are going to be fogged over by using a known, bawdy, "black humor" event as a basis for action. I'd rather see such energy directed toward a letter writing campaign targeting local, state, and national politicians and business leaders based on real impacts to patient outcomes.
I'm sorry.. just can't get overly energized about a bunch of students being insulting at a show that's run for 56 years on a theme of being insulting. Apparently, this show has historically used themes that make fun of all sorts of anatomical landmarks, including butt-cracks and phalluses. This wasn't a speech by the class president during freshman orientation; it wasn't an isolated skit performed at the alumni banquet. It was a demonstration of poor taste at a show known for poor taste.I guess I'm surprised that anyone would be surprised at college students going "over the top" at this thing. I'm more worried that the credibility of the issues in the letter are going to be fogged over by using a known, bawdy, "black humor" event as a basis for action. I'd rather see such energy directed toward a letter writing campaign targeting local, state, and national politicians and business leaders based on real impacts to patient outcomes.
Ah, so be cause it's a 56-year tradition, it was ok to have this sexist skit featuring a degrading song about nurses???
Read the lyrics to the song before you'd reply to my post, that is NOT "black humor", it is purely dragrading and insulting.
NRSKarenRN, BSN, RN
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strangeways, here we come: university of alberta medical students have something important to say about nurses--especially their breasts!
july 8, 2005 -- the edmonton journal published a fair piece by jodie sinnema on may 19 about the recent controversy surrounding the lyrics of a "nurses' song" performed by university of alberta medical students at their annual "medshow." it seems that nursing professors, the university provost, and even the medical school dean found something objectionable about the song's assertions that nurses were "wh*res" and "b*tches" whose "incompetence" threatened to "make our patients die." but at least the medical students felt nurses were qualified to "fill up my coffeepot" and "give good head," and the refrain urged nurses to "show me those boobs." the song seems to reflect virulent misogyny, ignorance of nursing, and professional insecurity, a perfect storm of dysfunction that persists in many clinical settings, harming patients and contributing to nursing burnout and the global nursing shortage. to the extent the song and the medical students' apparent non-apology are indicators of their career trajectory, it's bad news for patients and colleagues. but the students' conduct does suggest that the business outlook may be good for local malpractice and personal injury lawyers--and possibly even those who work in the criminal justice system!
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