Do male nurses face gender bias in nursing education?

This article discusses gender bias from the perspective of the nursing student. Men are a minority in the nursing profession and may face bias that can have a negative impact on their self-concept and career path. Solutions for dealing with gender bias are included. Nurses General Nursing Article

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  1. Do you identify as a male nurse?

    • 67
      Yes
    • 18
      No

85 members have participated

The next time you’re at work, look around. How many of your fellow nurses are men? I teach nursing and in a class of forty students, I have only three students who identify as men. None of the forty faculty members at my school of nursing are male. Back in the 1960s, only 2 percent of nurses were male, but now the number has risen to 13 percent.1 Why is nursing so female-centric?

History

We were taught in nursing school that the first nurses were male caregivers in Ancient Rome, tending the sick and dying during the Crusades. Male nurses were also found in the Civil War in both the Union and Confederate armies. The shift to an all-female workforce didn’t begin until the Army Nurse Corps (ANC), established in 1901, banned men from serving as nurses. It wasn’t until 1955 that they commissioned the first male officer.2

Media

You may have seen a movie called Meet the Parents, in which Ben Stiller plays Greg Focker, a male nurse who perpetuates stereotypes that women are nurses and men are doctors. If you look at Grey’s Anatomy, Scrubs and ER, the stereotypes continue. We might see a female doctor, but never a male nurse. In a survey of male nurses, 70 percent stated that gender stereotypes are the main barrier to entering the field of nursing.1 Male nurse respondents indicated they were influenced by the misperception that the profession of nursing is not “appropriate” for men.

Challenging Masculinity

In an article in American Nurse Today, David Foley shares some of his experiences as a male nurse. “The pressure to create a masculine identity within a historically female profession proves overwhelming and they [male nurses] flee for the operating room, emergency department or intensive care unit.” Male nursing students may face questions from family and friends about choosing nursing and may face challenges to their masculinity because women are traditionally seen as nurturers, while men are in more dominant leadership roles. Foley shared a story about a student who was actively discouraged from going into a less technical discipline in nursing with comments like, “You’ll never be accepted,” “Why would you want to make your life so hard,” and “What’s wrong with critical care? You’ll make more money.”3

Edward Bennett, named 2018 Student Nurse of the Year by the National Black Nurses Association, said, “I’ve definitely gotten pushback for being a black male nurse. Other people look at me like, ‘why would you want to be a nurse when you can be doctor?” Bennett continues to advocate for changing misconceptions by reminding prospective male nurses that, “You work with your hands, you think critically and you advocate for your patients every day.”4

Male nurses face a particularly steep challenge in obstetrics and OB-GYN. Even if they overcome stereotypes about who should pursue this field of nursing, often they cannot obtain access to patients. As an instructor I have seen it happen many times – a woman giving birth or having a pelvic exam doesn’t want a male nursing student to observe or care for her.3

In a survey of 462 undergraduate nursing students in Canada, male students demonstrated significantly lower scores on the efficacy subscale, suggesting that some men experience feelings of marginalization and discrimination.5

Solutions

According to the IOM report, The Future of Nursing: Leading Health, Advancing Change, we must find a solution. Men provide unique perspectives and skills that are crucial to the profession and to society as a whole. We need to place a greater emphasis on recruiting men into the field. We know that patients are more receptive to healthcare providers of similar cultural and ethnic backgrounds.1 Male patients may feel more comfortable discussing certain conditions, especially those related to sexual and reproductive health, with other men, than with women. The World Health Organization identifies the “men’s health gap” – men visit the doctor less frequently and are less likely to ask questions or bring up concerns during appointments. “Having a male nurse could help open them up” says Bryan Smith, president of the American Association for Men in Nursing.6

The nursing shortage is another reason to recruit men. The president of the American Assembly for Men in Nursing, William T. Lecher, states that “The shortage of the future will likely not be solved unless men are part of the equation.”1

Elias Provencio-Vasquez, a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Executive Nurse Fellow, shares that when he was met with resistance from some female patients in the maternity ward early in his career as a student at the University of Texas, in El Paso, “We overcame that by presenting ourselves as students, and our faculty members were very professional and very supportive."1

Bennett recommends creating pipeline programs for male students at predominantly African American high schools to diversify the profession in multiple ways.4

The AAMN

To encourage more men to join the profession, the AAMN conducts outreach, challenging local chapters to reach as many male middle and high school students as possible through classroom visits, career fairs and more. The AAMN also offers an award to the best schools for men in nursing to recognize programs that have made efforts in recruiting and retaining male students. Award winners include Nebraska Methodist, Duke, Goldfarb, New York University, Rush, Rutgers, Vanderbilt and West Coast University. In addition, the AAMN enlists members to guest lecture at nursing schools. Only 6 percent of faculty are men. Having a lecture from a male nurse can have a powerful impact on male students who are feeling isolated and alone. “Just seeing a male being successful in nursing, even though it seems like something so small, can really trigger a sense of belonging.” says Smith.4

Nurse educators and preceptors must acknowledge that gender bias exists. We need to refrain from gender-biased language and teaching practices that may discourage male nurses from embracing a career in any of the specialties of nursing.

What do you think?

I’d love to hear from male nurses out there – what has your experience been? Did you find support when you needed it? Do you have ideas for how we can recruit more men into nursing and remove some of the misconceptions that are preventing a diverse workforce?

Read Gender Bias in Health Care to learn more about gender bias in health care.


REFERENCES

  1. Male nurses break through barriers to diversity profession
  2. Men in Nursing: History, Stereotypes, and the Gender Pay Gap
  3. How to Avoid Gender Bias in Nursing Education
  4. Bohanon M. (2019, January 8). Men in nursing: A crucial profession continues to lack gender diversity.
  5. Sedgwick, M. G. & Kellett, P. (2015). Exploring masculinity and marginalization of male undergraduate nursing students’ experience of belonging during clinical experiences. Journal of Nursing Education, 54(3):121-129.
  6. American Association for Men in Nursing.
Specializes in ICU/community health/school nursing.

Mr. Ruby Jane started out as an ADN in a small rural program. While he loves children and is fabulous with helping pregnant women (all his family, me, and the occasional patient) he was not allowed (by the preceptor) to check a dilated cervix on his maternity rotation. In the mid 90s. Was he going to ever be a L&D nurse? Probably not. Did that stop any interest he had? Yup. He was encouraged toward and ultimately found a place in the ER. Where he never need a chaperone to place a foley...that's crazy!

Specializes in Adult and pediatric emergency and critical care.

I absolutely faced discrimination in nursing school for being a man. None of the female students got a speech about having to watch out for sexual harrasment complaints. None of the female students ever had their Male patients asked if they were comfortable with a female nurse. Even in class some of the instructors loved to say things like florence didn't let men into her nursing schools because men had had not provided compassionate care.

Many of the other Male students struggled with getting patients in L&D, often almost failing to fulfill the clinical requirements because of the way patients were asked if they would be willing to have a Male student nurse in the room. I was very lucky that the my preceptor was an amazing nurse and would introduce that I worked in EMS and would be in the ED after nursing school so I needed to know what to do if we had a laboring mom in the ED (that job was in no way a guarantee), and that I had already delivered a couple of babies in the field.

In reality I rarely feel like I face discrimination as a male nurse, but I also don't think I get any special kind of privilege.

I don't end up dealing with any of the high school drama type stuff that many of our female nurses seem to engage in but I also don't get invited to many of the nights out, baby showers, pool parties, et cetera. It's a trade I'm more that happy to make.

Any of the times I go to L&D to help them I don't have any special requirements placed on me, although we almost exclusively do high risk OB so I think that my presence as a man are the least of their or their partners worries. The same goes for patients I care for in the NICU, PICU, ICU, or ED; I think that when patients are actually sick gender isn't on the list of things they are worried about.

Specializes in L&D, OBED, NICU, Lactation.
23 hours ago, midnighter94 said:

I've worked in OB for 24 years and we've recently hired our first male nurse. When we interviewed him, we raised the question of 'will there be more work for co-workers/charge nurse?' as in will we need to chaperone him during foleys/pushing/breast feeding etc. ? Orientation is over, things have gone well, patients love him and no patients have complained about having a male nurse. Suddenly we've gotten notice from HR that he is to be chaperoned during foleys, exams, breast feeding - that when the baby is placed skin-to-skin with the mom, he shouldn't lurk, he should be given only bottle-feeding mothers; that all staff need to ask patients if they want a chaperone prior to any exams - even if it's female staff performing the exam. Yes, we normally accompany the physicians when they do the exams, but most of the time it's more so that we can document - there has never been a policy that said they had to be accompanied. It's like HR has turned what we do into a sexual thing! One of the questions I asked was, do male nurses on the medical floors need a chaperone to place a foley? - no, they don't, not officially - if the patient is a 'young female and the nurse feels that the patient would be uncomfortable, then he may request a chaperone.'

So yes, I am for the first time in my career, seeing gender bias.

I have literally none of these requirements or "suggestions" in place at anywhere I've ever worked (I do L&D, Antepartum, Postpartum, OB triage, NICU, and lactation). The only time I'm not assigned to a patient is if they explicitly state "no male providers." There are no other rules or anything in place that restrict my ability to do the same job in the same manner as the women I work with. Are there individualized situations in which I chose or the patient wanted a chaperone? Sure, but that's how the system is supposed to work, it's between me and my patient. Must be doing something right, I get requests from patients constantly to be their nurse when they come in.

Specializes in Oncology, OCN.

I’m guessing the OP never really watched ER, Scrubs, or Grey’s Anatomy because they all had male nurses in them. Not that any of the shows are really accurate portrayals but they absolutely showed male nurses and they weren’t stereotypes.

As for personal experience 13/53 in my nursing school cohort were men. Two of those males work in L&D and one in Peds, none of them had a hard time getting the job either.

16 hours ago, SafetyNurse1968 said:

Since it would be illegal for me to verify the existence of male genitalia or to confirm a Y chromosome with my students, I cannot answer your question. The term "identify as male" is used out of respect for transgendered folks who have a different identity than the gender they were born with. I'm curious as to why you want to know?

Im curious because it would seem to me that a study of gender bias in nursing would, by definition, have to consider the objective truth of a person's gender in order to be taken seriously. What I mean by that is, if I am objectively a female, despite "identifying" as a male, than how can I be discriminated against for being a male, or vice versa? For example, I think that a female L&D nurse who identifies as a male would face much less bias from her patients than would an actual male L&D nurse. I understand and fully appreciate that you are trying to be sensitive to others, but the fact remains that objective truth still exists even if one "feels" otherwise.

Specializes in Oncology, OCN.

You’re confusing sex and gender, they aren’t the same thing.

2 hours ago, Quota said:

You’re confusing sex and gender, they aren’t the same thing.

Okay, I shound have said "the objective truth of a person's sex"

Specializes in NICU.
10 hours ago, Quota said:

I’m guessing the OP never really watched ER, scrubs, or Grey’s Anatomy because they all had male nurses in them. Not that any of the shows are really accurate portrayals but they absolutely showed male nurses and they weren’t stereotypes.

Don't forget Code Black. Jesse Sallander (Luis Guzman) was a main character as an ER nurse.

Specializes in Oncology, OCN.

Oh there are plenty of other shows with male nurses I was just pointing out the ones the OP decided to use in their article. I’d guess the majority of medical dramas have male nurse characters (I haven’t watched them all). Night Shift and Nurse Jackie have good male nurse characters.

On 10/30/2019 at 7:34 PM, midnighter94 said:

I've worked in OB for 24 years and we've recently hired our first male nurse. When we interviewed him, we raised the question of 'will there be more work for co-workers/charge nurse?' as in will we need to chaperone him during foleys/pushing/breast feeding etc. ? Orientation is over, things have gone well, patients love him and no patients have complained about having a male nurse. Suddenly we've gotten notice from HR that he is to be chaperoned during foleys, exams, breast feeding - that when the baby is placed skin-to-skin with the mom, he shouldn't lurk, he should be given only bottle-feeding mothers; that all staff need to ask patients if they want a chaperone prior to any exams - even if it's female staff performing the exam. Yes, we normally accompany the physicians when they do the exams, but most of the time it's more so that we can document - there has never been a policy that said they had to be accompanied. It's like HR has turned what we do into a sexual thing! One of the questions I asked was, do male nurses on the medical floors need a chaperone to place a foley? - no, they don't, not officially - if the patient is a 'young female and the nurse feels that the patient would be uncomfortable, then he may request a chaperone.'

So yes, I am for the first time in my career, seeing gender bias.

As a woman paying for my care it is my choice who will or will not be caring for me. No men in my delivery room, gender bias is not my problem to deal with.

16 minutes ago, DeeAngel said:

As a woman paying for my care it is my choice who will or will not be caring for me. No men in my delivery room, gender bias is not my problem to deal with.

Completely agree, but just curious, do you hold the same stance with MDs?

Specializes in Cardiology.
10 minutes ago, jinct said:

Completely agree, but just curious, do you hold the same stance with MDs?

I doubt it.