Hero Worship of Nurses: Misplaced

We are nurses or aspiring nurses. Society looks up to us. We look up to each other. Sometimes when they look up, they find boogers in our noses - the same boogers in everyone's noses . We are only human after all. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

Time and time again, I see threads on this site along the lines of, "How could nurses be that way?"

It seems many people, the general public, and students especially, believe that nurses are bastions of compassion, love, caring, sugar, spice and everything nice. Nurses are supposed to be infallible care-giving superheroes, called by a higher power to spread goodness, love, fairy dust and medication all over the world, 24/7. Nurses are supposed to be nurse-like when they're at home, at the grocery store, at the library, at dinner parties, driving on the freeway, and even when they're patients themselves. In other words, nurses are supposed to be saints.

I too once harbored feelings like this even while I was working closely with nurses as a CNA. I had the privilege of working in a skilled nursing facility on the NOC shift with several of the most fantastic nurses I've ever met. They took great care of their patients, showing compassion to and helped maintain the dignity of their infirm patients. They gently guided cranky doctors (it was the NOC shift...) into making appropriate decisions for their patients. They made no mistakes that I saw, and they did it all with patience and with a great sense of humor. In my eyes, they could do no wrong. They were my inspiration to continue my education and become a nurse.

Until one day, my favorite nurse wasn't there for her shift and a new nurse was in her place. I asked around, and it turned out she had been fired for diverting narcotics. My favorite nurse, in all her saintly glory, had been stealing pain medication from sick people and even using it during her shift, right under my nose. I had no idea at the time, although I was later able to connect the dots between her behavior and the accusations leveled against her.

I couldn't believe I was so naive to believe her behavior was because she was sleepy.

I thought I knew the warning signs of drug abusers. She had even participated in the investigation of another nurse's possible diversion, and spearheaded new initiatives to combat drug diversion in the facility. My hero worship of nurses had blinded me to the obvious.

Let me tell you, the process of disillusionment is a lot like the grief process. I even took it a little bit personally; I felt that she had let me down. I looked up to her, and she fell off the pedestal where I'd placed her. To me, she was a fallen angel.

I was still in this process, without being aware of it, when I went to nursing school. I knew I was going to be a "true nurse," who acts only the best interests of my patients, and all of humankind, all the time. Lofty aspirations to be sure, but I knew I could do it. I felt like I was made to be a nurse, and I was going to be the best nurse the world had ever seen. I was putting myself on that pedestal my hero nurse had fallen from.

I flew right through nursing school with flying colors. All of my instructors, even the most difficult to please, told me I was going to make a great nurse. I was driven to be great. I was going to provide sound medical advice for my family and friends. I was going to heal the world... HA!

Then I started working as a nurse and found out pretty quickly that falling off that pedestal hurts. I was sure my first medication error was a harbinger of doom. I believed I was a terrible nurse to make such a horrible mistake. I had no right being in the realm of "true nurses," because I was not perfect.

I cried in my DNS's office.

I mentally beat myself up for days.

I dreaded going to work because I was scared of making another mistake. My DNS finally called me into her office for a little chat. What she said snapped me out of my little pity party.

She said, "You made a mistake. No harm was done to the patient. You reported the error yourself and took responsibility for your actions. Every nurse makes medication errors and other mistakes from time to time. WE ARE NOT PERFECT. WE ARE HUMAN. Learn from your mistake, try not to do it again, and move on."

It was a ridiculously simple sentiment and absolutely true. I can't say that my hero worship of nurses ended at that very moment, but working as a nurse for a couple years definitely did.

That we nurses are fallible humans is a fact. Some of us are smart, some of us are incredibly stupid. Some of us are very professional, some of us are not. Some of us have baggage that carries over into our work life. Some of us have disabilities. Some of us have problems at home. Some of us have issues that lead us to make poor decisions and may hurt others. Some of us, however abominable it may be, enjoy hurting others. Some of us treat people like crap, patient, student, coworker, family or friend. All of us make mistakes.

Most of us are good people, trying to make a living caring for others. We do a job most of society doesn't want to do.

The general public doesn't want to recognize that nurses represent a cross section of humanity that runs on a spectrum from spectacular to truly awful. Nobody wants to believe that we are just as human as they are. We are held to an impossible standard by society; We're all supposed to be perfect Florence Nightingales.

Part of this is understandable because people have to trust us with their lives and it makes people feel more comfortable to believe they are putting their trust in someone who must be perfect. But the standard leaves no room for our essential humanity. When we make mistakes, we are vilified because we could not meet that impossible standard.

I don't think this article is going to save anyone from experiencing the let down and disillusionment that comes with realizing that nurses are not superheroes or angels of mercy. That's something everyone has to find out on their own. But hopefully it will help some realize that we are only human, and that we can be good nurses despite our foibles.

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.

I think some of our own peers have placed this type of worship on their shoulders; if you ever heard from your instructors "Nursing is your LIFE" as I heard in nursing school, I am sure there have many that took that to heart-literally. I knew that nursing was an aspect of a career and I had to put effort into becoming a great nurse, but knew I also had my own life to enjoy; some still have echoes of that while flaming out on both ends and are unhappy at this moment because they have no "life".

Specializes in Nurse Educator; Family Nursing.

I'm sorry, but I am offended by all the "just" a human references. What other alternatives are there to being human? Are there other species that are nurses? I would prefer that we be known as just humans or a just human.

There's nothing wrong with expecting a lot out of nurses. Like it says in Scripture, " To whom much has been given, much more will be expected". That many nurses fail to live up to the standards placed on them doesn't surprise me. It will always sadden me, and in some cases shock me, but it will happen now and then. As corny as this may sound to some people, some of us really are called to do this. Doesn't mean we are somehow " better" , we are just coming from a different place

Specializes in Geriatrics, Dialysis.

Yep...big newsflash; nurses are not perfect! I love my job, but I get angry with it sometimes. I don't answer my phone on my day off because I am not going in to work to cover a hole that's been there for a week that nobody else wanted, so don't expect me to "pitch in" and "be a team player" when nobody else did. We are held to a higher standard not only by the Florence Nightingale syndrome that the public perceives, but by our employers and co-workers that always expect us to "pitch in" even when we don't really have time to help because we can barely get out own work done. I am a nurse, not a saint. I make mistakes [we all do], I just try to follow nursing procedure to minimize the risk that my mistakes are harmful to either my patients or my career.

After all, nurses are only human. We have our times of frustration with "the system", with certain patients, supervisors and a seemingly unrealistic-thinking public. One thing all of us can do is to be CIVIL to everybody! Hero worship? For me, not really. However, I found that my elderly father would call me from 100 miles away to ask about a simple thing his doctor said rather than to talk to my other sister (an elementary teacher with a master's degree) who lived less than a mile from him. I'm just a Diploma RN, no BSN. At least my dad thought a lot of me as a nurse. Who cares what others may think? I had the respect of my own father (By the way, he recently passed away at age 91). Thanks Dad!

Specializes in Med-Surg, Emergency, CEN.

Ok, clearly, I will be getting flamed for this, BUT...

I'm sick of people saying "Nurses don't get any respect!" "All they think is that we are sexual!" etc. THEN when people DO respect us, it turns into "Hero worship of nurses is WRONG!!"

Maybe I'm wrong, but I'm up to HERE with irritation about the whole topic. :sniff:

Specializes in Med/Surg/ICU/Stepdown.
Ok clearly, I will be getting flamed for this, BUT... I'm sick of people saying "Nurses don't get any respect!" "All they think is that we are sexual!" etc. THEN when people DO respect us, it turns into "Hero worship of nurses is WRONG!!" Maybe I'm wrong, but I'm up to HERE with irritation about the whole topic. :sniff:[/quote']

Ah, the beauty of human nature: to never be happy regardless of the situation. We are natural extremists. ?

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
Ok, clearly, I will be getting flamed for this, BUT...

I'm sick of people saying "Nurses don't get any respect!" "All they think is that we are sexual!" etc. THEN when people DO respect us, it turns into "Hero worship of nurses is WRONG!!"

Maybe I'm wrong, but I'm up to HERE with irritation about the whole topic. :sniff:

The issue is that being human is not respected either; hero worship is not RESPECT IMHO; it sets up a position where either nurses get disillusioned and/or burned when trying to achieve such a loft position.

I am respected for my knowledge as a NURSE as well as my knowledge as a human being; they are not always mutually exclusive, and in certain areas it is selective to the audience.

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
Ah, the beauty of human nature: to never be happy regardless of the situation. We are natural extremists. ?

I have to respectfully disagree with this.

I've learned as a child to be objective with the information presented in front of me; and that life has no definite YES or NO answers; my humble beginnings confronted me that life has a HUGE life of gray, and an "All or NOTHING" approach is character suicide; that's why I hold people to a humanistic viewpoint, not on a pedestal. :no:

Yes, nurses are held to super-human standards. When me or my family member is ill, I want that super-hero nurse caring for them. To have trust in the caregiver relieves anxiety and allows the patient to heal. That being said, I know nurses are not perfect, but we must continue to strive toward that perfection so that our patients are safe. When we stop caring about being the best we can be, the results will be poor patient care.

Specializes in LTC, med/surg, hospice.

I'm a nurse not a clergyman.

Specializes in Pediatrics, Emergency, Trauma.
Yes, nurses are held to super-human standards. When me or my family member is ill, I want that super-hero nurse caring for them. To have trust in the caregiver relieves anxiety and allows the patient to heal. That being said, I know nurses are not perfect, but we must continue to strive toward that perfection so that our patients are safe. When we stop caring about being the best we can be, the results will be poor patient care.

So, if you give safe, effective pt care but cannot get everything done, is that poor pt care???

No one is disputing to give safe,effective care; that isn't always perfect, and that's ok; there are going to be times where time runs out-it's a 24-hr business-or one will need help because the load is heavy, that in some people's eyes is not "nursey", one is supposed to be "super nurse" etc, etc, and THAT POV is off the mark at times.