A REAL Nurse

This article was inspired by the thread asking "Do you Tell That You're A Nurse When You Go To The Doctor Or ER?" Nurses Announcements Archive Article

When dad was ill, my sister went to the hospital and told everyone that she was a nurse and she'd be watching them. She is a nurse -- sort of. She's a "Gucci nurse". She comes to work in her Gucci suit and her Prada heels carrying her designer handbag and her coach briefcase and sits in her corner office with the gorgeous view making policy for a chain of hospitals. She hasn't been near a patient in over 25 years (except for that time where her "fire most of the RNs and hire non-licensed personnel instead" policy caused the remaining RNs to strike . . . (she arrived to visit dad wearing $100 blue jeans, a cashmere sweater and carrying the designer handbag and coach briefcase. I'm sure that her hair and make-up were perfectly done as well. She didn't like dad's room and insisted he be moved closer to the nurse's station, and then wanted a cot installed for my mother to sleep on and the food on the trays wasn't appetizing enough and . . . . Nothing, it seemed, was good enough. She was ever so polite, I'm sure, while making it excruciatingly obvious that no one was quite as good as she, either.

I arrived a day later in rumpled jeans and sweater and bleary eyes from an overnight flight. I got to the ICU about 6 am and, having heard from my sister about the 24/7 visiting hours, went directly to the nurse's station to ask if it was a good time to visit my father, Mr. Farmer. "who is your father?" asked the nurse rather strangely. "Mr. Farmer," I said. "my sister said he was in CCU."

"Oh," she said. "I'll get your father's nurse."

And so the nurse came hesitantly out of dad's room, peering around the corner obviously looking for my always impeccably dressed and groomed sibling and seeing only rumpled, overweight and dowdy me. "Did your sister fill you in on your dad's condition?", he asked. "she says she's a nurse."

I laughed and said, as I always do when asked about what my sister does for a living, "She's a Gucci nurse." This guy didn't seem to require the explanation about the Gucci suit, designer accessories and corner office with a view.

Dad's nurse began using layman's terms and a gingerly manner, to fill me in on dad's MI. Turns out it was the "big one." I asked questions, he provided answers and before either of us quite realized how it happened, he was giving me a nurse-to-nurse report using the big words and everything. For the first time since my mother's frantic phone call that dad had chest pain and she was driving him to the hospital, I had a clear idea what was going on. I sat with dad until physician rounds started and then, out of courtesy, I got up and started gathering my things to leave. My ICU didn't encourage family to stay for teaching rounds, and I wasn't going to expect "professional courtesy."

Dad's nurse surprised me by telling me I should stay for rounds. And then he introduced me to dad's doctor. "this is Mr. Farmer's other daughter, Ruby," he said to the group. "this one's a real nurse."

I never got invited to participate in rounds again -- I was never there at the inhospitable hour of 6am again. But dad's doctors made a point of seeking me out for the "family updates" and more than once, when my sister was highly visible on the unit, called me to their offices for a private conversation. It was probably far easier to talk to me, a CCU nurse who actually understood what they were saying than to either my mother -- who was probably already sliding into dementia -- or my sister the Gucci nurse. I've often regarded that introduction -- as "a real nurse" -- one of the nicest compliments I've ever received!

Specializes in ER, Cardiac, Hospice, Hyperbaric, Float.
Real nurses don't come in and make idiot demands that make staff cringe and wish they don't have to deal with those people!

AMEN!!! I actually hesitate to say I am a nurse, but at some point, it will come out (mainly because of the types of questions I ask and how I phrase the questions). And I usually do my best to NOT complain about stupid stuff - since I actually DO work in the trenches, I know how it is. And the last thing I want the nurse(s) caring for my loved ones to feel is like they don't want to deal with us! Usually when someone is a pain in the butt and says, "I'm a nurse," my suspicion is that they are either a "Gucci nurse", an office assistant in a medical practice, or they have a nurse halloween outfit at the very best. REAL nurses aren't like that, seriously (although we do sometimes make crummy patients - at least, I know that _I_ do).

Ruby Vee,

your stories make me laugh AND cry.

Sorry for the loss of your father.... :(

Specializes in Oncology&Homecare.

It seems to me that it all boils down to respect. Whether a "Gucci Nurse" or a "CCU Nurse" we each have a niche. We all come into a hospital room with our skill set. We also enter with our prejudices. What we must enter with is a respect for the staff and the patient. Of course, we all want the best for our family members. It is how we go about it that counts.:D

Ruby you are the best!:yeah:

Specializes in ER.

I dont agree with your sisters actions but she is still a REAL nurse. This post is one of the reasons hospital nursing is so discouraging. Just because she is no longer at the bedside does not make her less of a nurse. I'm so sick of nurses and their fierce competition...Do you like when a physician says you are JUST a nurse? I think not.

Dear Ruby,

Thank you for such a lovely article--I too have been told that I am a 'real nurse' and it truly is the best compliment. Hoping your Dad pulled through and your Mum is ok.

I think the real issue here is the lack of respect shown the "gucci nurse" (what a nasty title to give to someone) as her sister has chosen a different nursing track then working in a hospital. So all the DON's ADON's, VP's Nursing mangers etc are not "real nurses". Shame on all of you for thinking just because she does not do bedside nursing that this makes her less of a nurse! Once a RN always a RN! It appears that there are more family issues here than nursing issues and perhaps that is the greater tragedy for this patient, his wife and daughters.

Specializes in Internal Med/ ID, Geriatric.

Your story put a smile on my face, it reminds me of how the the field of nursing is becoming flooded with people who are only in it for the "money" I have ran across quite a few people who ask what I do and when I tell them I'm a male nurse one of the first responses out of their mouths is "ohh the money is killer I bet... I was thinking on going back to school, maybe I should go into nursing good money I hear.:grn:" They seem to skip over the fact that I was a CNA am a LPN right now working and my way up, getting ready to go back to school for my RN. So big KUDOS to all the REAL nurses out there who are in it for the patients and to give healing care, we need you more than ever. And thank you Ruby for sharing your story keep up the good work. :yeah:

Gucci Nurses voted for Obama Good luck to all the real hard working nurses

In my 27 years of nursing experience, there have only been two administrative nurses that I had any respect for. Unfortunately the higher ups got rid of both of them for getting too close to us bedpan slingers. Anyone that goes into management has to sell their soul. God help you if you get a boss with an MBA.

Specializes in CCU, SICU, CVSICU, Precepting & Teaching.
i think the real issue here is the lack of respect shown the "gucci nurse" (what a nasty title to give to someone) as her sister has chosen a different nursing track then working in a hospital. so all the don's adon's, vp's nursing mangers etc are not "real nurses". shame on all of you for thinking just because she does not do bedside nursing that this makes her less of a nurse! once a rn always a rn! it appears that there are more family issues here than nursing issues and perhaps that is the greater tragedy for this patient, his wife and daughters.

perhaps you're right. perhaps i've let her nastiness to the staff taking care of our father and her stated professional intention to create policy with the intention of getting rid of as many rns as she could and hiring unlicensed workers in their stead in order to "cut costs" and "save money" blind me to her more stellar virtues as a nurse. perhaps i've taken her words about "cushy staffing" to heart when what i saw was nurses running themselves ragged trying to accomplish as much as she demanded with minimal resources. perhaps it was the voice dripping with disdain when she introduces me to people as "my sister. she's just a nurse." maybe it was the fact that she didn't understand the disease process or treatment plan for my father, but she wanted to direct his care anyway because she "outranked" me, the person who does that sort of work for a living at one of the top-rated hospitals in the country. or maybe i'm just jealous because mom always liked her best.

i have a lot of respect for nursing managers. not just managers, but nursing managers, who keep abreast of what is actually happening in the nursing units they supervise. my current manager is one of the best . . . and i've had a few good ones in the past. the don at my last position was a brilliant individual with lots of insight, creativity and political skills. i truly admired her as a don. (as a bedside nurse, she sucked even when she was a bedside nurse, but she was a brilliant manager.) the difference, i think, is that those dons, managers, adons, etc. had respect for nurses and the work we do. none of them viewed nurses as interchangeable bodies with licenses to plug into slots willy nilly without respect to skills, education, training or preference.

i beg to differ with you that "once an rn, always an rn". i've met an awful lot of former rns who are no more nurses than my golden retriever, nor would i want them taking care of me. they might be truly nice people with many stunning virtues, and some of them may be reality stars, country singers, mds or policy makers in hospital chains, but definitely not nurses.

You must be one of them. Many of the nurses in administrative postions have never worked on the floors and have no idea what real nurses face on a daily basis. They are the ones that think if you bring in a pizza to the staff it will retain them, when what we really want and deserve is respect and a decent wage.

Specializes in Home health was tops, 2nd was L&D.

Loved this original post. Could have been my life this yr except I do not have a Gucci RN sister, I have a Gucci big wig government engineer type sister who is positive she knows much more than any RN or MD. Dad died in April, she flew in twice to address the staff!!! I gave up my Real Job to be there for 4 mos. And now Mom is terminal, chairbound and living with me after moving from FL. I gave up my real job after 40 days to do it all over again. She was notified of situation 5 x till she text back and said "So put her in nursing home."

The point I make is no matter what field there are REAL people and GUCCI people( My grown children refer to her as the "Ice Princess". The writer did not mean any offense to mgmt, non-bedside nurses, admin people. That was not the jest of the post, she was merely referring to those who act/work/ get into the mud and those who would not break a nail!!

I just pray when I need it I will get the "REAL" version.