Female nurses earn less than male nurses

Nurses General Nursing

Published

http://www.lygus.lt/itc/news.php?id=61

pay: the gender gap

a woman's work is never done. though you might not know it to look at her paycheck.

according to u.s. census bureau statistics, women make on average 25 percent less than men. this is, however, a marked improvement over 1970, when women made 41 percent less.

it varies by race

the pay gap differs by race, with the earnings of white women being just 72 percent of those of white men; black women making 82 percent as much as their male counterparts; and hispanic women earning 83 percent of what hispanic men earn. the rutgers school of management relations says this is primarily because white men still earn the most among all groups of workers.

it's wider among professionals

regardless of educational level, men out-earn women. for example, in 2000, college educated women earned just $5,000 more a year than male high school graduates.

while education has a major positive effect on the earnings of both sexes, it is particularly strong for men. interestingly, the wage gap is largest among the most highly educated groups.

a researcher exploring the pay and promotion gap among statisticians attributed this to women not wanting to put themselves forward as candidates for competition. she found that while most women did not apply for higher jobs because they believed they needed more time and preparation, ironically, those who did apply actually had more success than their male counterparts.

while causes of the gender pay gap are complex and include work/family choices, data on women's dramatically lower recognition in domains where their talents and achievements are equal to men's imply there is a tendency to undervalue a woman's work and contributions.

occupation matters

the gap appears in all occupations, however it is largest in the category of medicine and health management, where women earn just 63 percent of what men do. even in predominantly female medical fields like nursing (9 out of 10 rns are women), female nurses still earn just 88 of what male nurses make.jobs with the smallest gender pay gaps include legal assistants, where women earn 96 percent of what men do, as well as male-dominated occupations like engineering, where women earn 89 percent as much as men, and police and detective work, where women earn 83 percent as much as men.

according to labor department figures, women who choose non-traditional careers such as dentists (just 20 percent are women) or airline pilots or navigators (less than 4 percent are female), can expect to have lifetime earnings that are 150 percent higher than those of women who choose traditional careers.

pay vs. satisfaction

despite the pay gap, according to several studies, women are actually more satisfied at work!

careerbuilder.com's recent "pulse of the worker" survey found that despite receiving lower raises, fewer bonuses, and having lower expectations for being promoted, women were more likely than men to report that, overall, they are happy with their jobs.

who said a woman is never satisfied?

copyright 2004 careerbuilder.com. all rights reserved. the information contained in this article may not be published, broadcast or otherwise distributed without prior written authority.

http://www.bpwmaryland.org/html/womens_issues.html

women's issues in the workplace

the wage gap for working women is 74 cents to a man's dollar earned. the facts continue to show women are not earning all they could. some of the figures related to this gap include recent women college graduates earn nearly 16 percent less than men. the average woman loses approximately $420,000 over a lifetime due to unequal pay practices, resulting in fewer savings for retirement.

in 1996, the median weekly earnings for all men was $557, compared to $418 for all women, $362 for african american women, and $316 for hispanic women. poverty rates are higher at every age for women who live alone or with non-relatives than for their male counterparts. women of color face discrimination in earnings based on both race and gender, african american women earned 65.1 percent, while hispanic women earn only 56.6 percent of white men's wages on average.

in 1995, the u.s. bureau of labor statistics reported that male nurses were paid three percent more, or $1,144 more per year than female nurses. male secretaries, stenographers and typists earned 12 percent more, an annual $2,392 more than female secretaries.

the more educated a woman, the wider the wage gap. women with a high school diploma earn $9,000 less a year than their white male colleagues, and college educated african american women earn $2,558 less than white male high school graduates.finally about 60 percent of the improvement in the wage gap during the last 15 years can be attributed to the decline in men's real earnings.

source: bpw/usa's 101 facts on the status of working women

(note: this is a pdf file - click here to download the free acrobat reader)

want more information?

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.

eggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggzactly fergus. unionized here.

I really don't think i would ever work anywhere that was non-union from everything I hear lately.

In my many years of nursing I have worked with a few good male nurses, ones I would share a shift with anytime, anyplace, anyhow. But, in general, I have worked with male nurses who just did not do their work, used the flirty, smiling, brown-nosing attitude to get ahead, and then when the job was too much for them tried to con some poor female into "giving me a hand with this."

I heard ,just this weekend ,that one guy in particular had finally been called on the carpet by an older, experienced, drill sargent-type nurse, from what I hear she refuses to let him back in her department, will come in and cover herself, but he is never to come back. Seems like he just did not get around to giving that second unit of blood, HGB was only 7.1, so no rush, let the good old day shift RN,female ofcourse, do it. When I worked with this guy and NONE of the 06:00am meds or fingersticks were done and I complained, I was told he was managing other problems, even when I showed a pattern, so I am glad someone with clout got his butt.P.S. the other problems were computer games with the ER male nurse.

Bah!

You know, this kind of stuff erks me! if this type of junk were written about any other collective group of people it would be erased and the poster baned.

Why is it Okay to bash men and blame the whole gender for the actions of a few bad apples?

How would you feel if someone came here saying these same things about women? or what if they said the same things and attributed peoples actions to their race or religion?

Paint a different picture? sure it does but yet it's okay for this lady say disparaging things about a whole gender because she has known a few bad ones.

It's really silly if you think about it, How many lazy nurses have we all seen? Gender hasn't had much to do with it from what I've seen they come in all shapes and sizes.

This post seems colored by a some hang ups that originated outside of nursing and have been carried over into a place where they don't belong.

GRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHH! :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire

Bah!

You know, this kind of stuff erks me! if this type of junk were written about any other collective group of people it would be erased and the poster baned.

Why is it Okay to bash men and blame the whole gender for the actions of a few bad apples?

How would you feel if someone came here saying these same things about women? or what if they said the same things and attributed peoples actions to their race or religion?

Paint a different picture? sure it does but yet it's okay for this lady say disparaging things about a whole gender because she has known a few bad ones.

It's really silly if you think about it, How many lazy nurses have we all seen? Gender hasn't had much to do with it from what I've seen they come in all shapes and sizes.

This post seems colored by a some hang ups that originated outside of nursing and have been carried over into a place where they don't belong.

GRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHH! :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire

i totally agree with you dayray. there's just no place for generalized stereotypes.

Specializes in Rodeo Nursing (Neuro).
Bah!

You know, this kind of stuff erks me! if this type of junk were written about any other collective group of people it would be erased and the poster baned.

Why is it Okay to bash men and blame the whole gender for the actions of a few bad apples?

How would you feel if someone came here saying these same things about women? or what if they said the same things and attributed peoples actions to their race or religion?

Paint a different picture? sure it does but yet it's okay for this lady say disparaging things about a whole gender because she has known a few bad ones.

It's really silly if you think about it, How many lazy nurses have we all seen? Gender hasn't had much to do with it from what I've seen they come in all shapes and sizes.

This post seems colored by a some hang ups that originated outside of nursing and have been carried over into a place where they don't belong.

GRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHH! :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire :angryfire

Well, you have to bear in mind, she is from West Virginia...oh, wait--that would be stereotyping. Oh, right, I'm from West Virginia, too! Crap, and I'm not wearing shoes, at the moment!

See, I don't think by "generally" she meant always or even most of the time. I'm pretty sure she just meant some men are lazy idiots, and some aren't. It just came out wrong--sort of like our beloved senior senator on race relations. Notice that she did say "Take each Male as he Comes," which is the opposite of generalizing. But I must admit, if she weren't from West Virginia, I would agree with you.

Go, Falcons, yea team!

"Take each Male as he Comes," which is the opposite of generalizing.

whoops, overlooked that part. but still, i take that philosophy with each nurse i meet, male or female.

leslie

"Because of the view people have of men in nursing many feel that they must show that they do belong in nursing. I've noticed that allot of guys tend to go overboard to show that they "know their stuff".

.

"I watch peoples reactions when I tell them I'm a nurse and I don't get the same reaction that my friends do. Some openly laugh and say "Isn't that a girls job?" others look surprised and change the subject and many many times the next question they ask is "do you have children?" which is code for "are you gay?" Another aspect of this is constantly having to answer the "so why did you go into nursing" question that I get when ever I meet a new nurse, they don't ask other women."

This is the Gospel Truth, right on the money.

Specializes in ICU, CM, Geriatrics, Management.
Damn, he was stupid

Yeah, maybe like a fox. :)

Could he have parlayed his experience to an even higher-paying spot?

Specializes in ICU, CM, Geriatrics, Management.
... You know, this kind of stuff erks me! if this type of junk were written about any other collective group of people it would be erased and the poster baned...

Doesn't surprise me the least bit. :stone

Lots of prejudices / closed-mindedness here. Not everyone, by any means, but there's a plethora of examples on other posts / threads.

Damn, he was stupid

my thoughts exactly

In my many years of nursing I have worked with a few good male nurses, ones I would share a shift with anytime, anyplace, anyhow. But, in general, I have worked with male nurses who just did not do their work, used the flirty, smiling, brown-nosing attitude to get ahead, and then when the job was too much for them tried to con some poor female into "giving me a hand with this."

I heard ,just this weekend ,that one guy in particular had finally been called on the carpet by an older, experienced, drill sargent-type nurse, from what I hear she refuses to let him back in her department, will come in and cover herself, but he is never to come back. Seems like he just did not get around to giving that second unit of blood, HGB was only 7.1, so no rush, let the good old day shift RN,female ofcourse, do it. When I worked with this guy and NONE of the 06:00am meds or fingersticks were done and I complained, I was told he was managing other problems, even when I showed a pattern, so I am glad someone with clout got his butt.P.S. the other problems were computer games with the ER male nurse.

there is that whole us vs them crap. immature and futile

Specializes in Med-Surg, Trauma, Ortho, Neuro, Cardiac.

Right now I'm the only male on night shift. I work on a relatively new unit compared to other units as it was created about 1 1/2 years ago. I've been working the hospital longer than anyone on the unit and probably make the most money. Privy to the salaries of the night I know I make the most money on the night shift, except for the Travelers of course.

This is my story and my opinion: I've never felt any advantage being male. I've felt as one of two male nursing students and usually one of only a handful of males working on the various med-surg units I've worked on, I've felt I've stood out and was scrutinized a bit more and have been driven to succeed and to prove myself. So if I have the promotion and the bucks (I've never had to negotiate) it's because I've earned it and not because it was handed to me. Part of it is my overachieving people-pleasing kind of attitude as well, but part is definately being a male in a female field and having to "prove" myself.

I've worked with a lot of lazy good for nothing nurses both male and female. But I haven't seen any advantage to being male in my nursing career. I've also worked primarily at a hospital with a female CEO and females in all the positions of "power" in the nursing department.

But that's my story and we all have different stories and experiences to tell. I've found the articles interesting and a bit disappointing. One would think we've moved beyond that.

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