Discrimination Against Men in Nursing

Nurses Men

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The following is a quote from a paper written by Shawn Gardiner describing a scenario in which discrimination in nursing against men is wide spread, oppressive, and accepted. I agree with him completely with regard to the same. I am a male RN, a paralegal, and a biochemist.

The Web site for the organization under which the quote was posted is entitled "Nurses Forum". It's URL is:http://www.nurses-forum.com/

The URL for the web site containing the quote is:http://www.nurses-forum.com/ubbthreads/printthread.php?Board=men&main=9617&type=post

"I just did a paper for freshman english here at Syracuse University, and happened to find this forum while researching. This is my paper if you're interested ...

The Hyper-Visibility of the Male Nurse and the Invisibility of the Male Nurse's Discrimination and Struggles

Nursing has been a profession throughout history. The first known record of nursing as a profession was in ancient Rome when groups of men organized to treat victims of the plague. The first American nurses were medics during the civil war; most of which were male. Women nurses, although the minority gained much recognition due to their involvement, and in 1901 the United States Nurse Corp was formed, a strictly female organization. Since then, the nursing profession has become primarily female dominated and therefore schools, organizations and workplaces all have turned towards female interests. In response to these actions and divisions, the nursing profession became stereotypically female in the mind of society, and the male nurse became invisible. The hyper-visibility of female nurses is very prevalent today, even as more male nurses join the nursing workforce. The new merge of males into the nursing profession is due to many different issues including higher pay, a greater demand for nurses, and an improvement in tolerance and understanding of diversity in society. Still, male nurses are stereotyped and face struggles in the classroom and in their profession. This is the result of decades of generalizing nurses as female, and in turn, male nurses face discrimination from educators, patients, and other nurses. Male nurses struggle with the stereotypes placed on them due to the dominance of women in the nursing practices. In this way, male nurses are not easily accepted by society, even with growing numbers in the field and people and groups pushing for equality for male nurses.

The Civil War began to shape nursing in America into its modern form. At that time males were the dominant gender in the field, because nursing was based around the military, and the military was primarily male. However, female nurses were most recognized for their nursing efforts in the war and still are today. A hyper-visibility of female nurses began due to the fact that women on the battlefield were a rarity. Women who undertook this job were the first to be a part of the on battle site military, and therefore were honored as daring and courageous, much more so than male military nurses. The, then, newfound popularity and familiarity of the female nurse drastically transformed the profession into being female dominated. In the late 1800's the American Nurses Association (ANA) was formed, then under the name Nurses Associated Alumnae and was strictly female. This rule remained until 1930 when the organization began to accept men, but in a once all female organization, male membership was rare. The United States Nurse Corp formed as part of the military in 1901 was also strictly female. It wasn't until the Korean War when men were finally allowed into this division. These two organizations dominated the two occupational fields in the United States, public and governmental. In this way these associations, not only affected, but guided the segregation in the field of nursing from their formation around the turn of the 19th century with decades of strict codes against male nurses.

Male nurses, today, account for about 5.7 percent of the Registered and Professional Nurses in America, the most popular types of nurses, and 5.4 percent of all nursing professions. In nursing schools, about 13% of students are male. This shows a strong rise in the male interest in the field of nursing. Increased male interest in the field of nursing can be tied to several issues. First, nursing school enrollment is down, and there is now a shortage of nurses in many areas throughout the United States. This has provoked interest in males because nursing is now a field with many job and advancement opportunities that other professions can no longer offer. Also, due to the increased need and also increased specialization of nurses, the wage of nurses is rising at a higher rate than many other professions. A job as a nurse can be a very efficient job for a male in a household with both working parents. In addition, with the growing acceptance and tolerance of breaking gender barriers in society today, males are more willing, and less embarrassed, to enter a female dominated field.

In addition to the increased advantages of males entering nursing, schools and job providers are also taking new steps to promote males into the nursing profession. A new slogan "Are you man enough to wear white" is part of a campaign by medical educators. This statement is specifically designed to break the feminine stereotype of nurses and, in contrast, promote a masculine attitude about the profession. This type of campaign has been successful because the rate of males to females entering nursing school has risen greatly. Sadly however, dropout rates in nursing schools for male nurses are higher than those for male nurses. After completion of college or nursing school, male nurses continue to struggle. Male nurses have a significantly lower job satisfaction and leave the profession at twice the rate of female nurses. This is most likely due to many factors that have risen due to the female dominance of the occupation.

Gender discrimination for nurses begins in the classroom where classes are focused primarily towards the female student. Books and other materials, especially older references can refer to nurses as "she", indicating all nurses are female, and mention males only as patients or doctors, never nurses. In this way, males have been placed in a learning environment with a sharp female bias. In the workplace, male nurses often stand out against the female nurses and are often treated differently by their supervisors, co-workers, and patients. In this way, male nurses feel and often are forced to perform at at a higher standard due to their hyper-visibility. Patients often resent or even reject male nurses, because they are uncomfortable, probably due to stereotypes and mental preconceptions. This is especially evident in labor and delivery departments of hospitals where male nurses may not be permitted either by their job description or patient request.

The nursing occupation is generally stereotyped as feminine, because of the job history and also qualities of a typical nurse. Nurses are expected to be caring, gentle, and compassionate, qualities stereotyped as female and rejected by males. In this way, male nurses have to break this barrier and in doing so are often generalized as feminine. This can lead to accusations of homosexuality or weakness, both strong and damaging classifications to males in modern society. These stereotypes are often very hard to deal with, and take strong self-confidence to get over. In addition, male nurses can be seen as unmotivated and under-achievers, as compared to other medical professionals, primarily doctors. These stereotypes can cause embarrassment and stress among male nurses in the workplace, and in public, which most likely leads to the high quitting rate.

Media has a large role in the portrayal of male nurses to the public. Movies and TV shows reflect life situations in a surreal manner, often times using stereotypes for character development and humor. One such from of media is "Meet the Parents" in which the character Gaylord (Greg) Focker, played by Ben Stiller, is a male nurse. The name "Gaylord Focker" is an obvious stereotypical characterization, which immediately implies homosexuality. His personality is depicted as flamboyant and his speech flippant. Engaged to his fiancée, Pam, Greg is criticized and made fun of by Pam's parents, specifically her father, for his homosexual-like flamboyancy, tall tales, and most importantly his occupation as a nurse. In a dialogue from the movie, Greg's occupation is clearly diminished by the characters of Jack Byrnes and Bob Banks.

Jack: Greg's in medicine too.

Bob: What field?

Greg: Nursing.

Bob: Ha ha ha ha. No really, what field are you in?

Greg: Nursing.

In this conversation, nursing as a male profession is clearly rejected, by the character of Bob, as a means for satirical humor. The laughing and requisitioning implies a denial of the possibility of a male nurse and is direct and demeaning. Through these types of media portrayal of male nurses, society is not only given the idea that males do not belong in the nursing profession but also that using male nurse stereotypes is acceptable for humor.

Humor, derived from males in the nursing profession, can come from sources outside of the media. T-shirts sold online at AllHeart.com can be found with the saying "Be nice to me/ when you're in the hospital/ Your butt is in My hands!" The T-shirt, entitled "Be Nice to Male Nurses Medical Humor T-Shirt" can be bought for $14.98 plus shipping and handling. This commercial example of humor expands the exploitation of male nurses, by almost literally selling the stereotypes. This T-shirt directly attacks and generalizes male nurses as aggressive and dangerous. The "Be nice to me..." statement, demonstrates a demand for power, which can lead the fear and suspicion of male nurses, both by patients and co-workers. In the utmost irony, the T-shirt is directly targeted for sale to male nurses, which are the people it is segregating against. A male in the nursing profession, who wears the shirt, would in fact be generalizing himself, and therefore only adding to the stereotypes that lead to the suspicion and fear as well as the other negative mentalities associated with male nurses.

Males in nursing have strong opinions toward the stereotypes and generalizations as well as the discrimination that these mindsets create. A poll by Male Nurse Magazine posed the question, "Do you feel that males are represented fairly within nursing?" In response almost two-thirds, over 65%, chose the response, "No, I feel we are overlooked at this time". According Male Nurse Magazine an increase in the choice of the "No ..." response has risen in rate, from previous surveys that posted the same question and choices. A clear majority of male nurses do feel that inequalities occur for them either in or outside of the workplace. This majority is growing, and therefore the broadness and importance of the unfairness is also increasing.

Males in the nursing profession are both invisible and hyper-visible in the scope of society. Visually in the work place they are hyper-visible because they stand out in a strongly female dominated profession. To patients and coworkers a nurse that has a title beginning with Mr. is unusual and therefore treated in a different manner. Patients and staff often deal with, and have different standards, for male nurses. This only adds to the hyper-visibility of the male nurse. Males in nursing are invisible in that their struggles and efforts to revise bias in nursing often times are under appreciated or unnoticed. Society and the media are not as interested in male nurses breaking gender barriers as women in male profession. Also, Women are usually given more respect and credibility for their efforts in breaking their barriers. In this way, male nurse occupational gender barrier movements are hyper-visible, especially compared to the women's movements.

Male nurses face the same type of struggles, and often at a higher level, than females breaking gender barriers in other professions. The typically suppressed female worker along with other groups are using several types of discrimination to hold back males in the field of nursing. This reveals a reverse segregation for male nurses which is gaining throughout society. Whereas stereotypes of certain groups are highly discouraged and penalized in today's society, jokes and generalizations of male nurses are often accepted in both society and the media. This greatly hampers the male nursing movements, and greatly affects male nurses in their confidence and mentality. This can lead to poorer job performance and poorer job satisfaction. Many male nurses are pushed to the point of leaving their job. The discrimination that male nurses face in America today needs to be recognized by society so that acceptance and respect can be given to both male and female nurses equally. If not, the previous stereotypes will remain, and male nurses will continue to be held down, unable to ever experience gender equality in nursing."

-Shawn

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End of Quote

:angryfire

Specializes in ICU/Ortho/Med surg.
We all have a right to have our preferences respected when receiving medical care. It has nothing really to do with the care giver...only the patient. We need to be sensitive to this.

...While I agree with you that a patient has the right to refuse care, they do not have the right to refuse care based on ANY protected class covered under the Civil Rights Act and/or subsequent addendums to this act.However, it is the undocumented but widely accepted policy of of most hospitals to decline to observe these Federal Laws on a case by case basis. WASP can't refuse care from anybody. Sir.:D

Pinfinity -- you are not completely correct. The courts have seen gender choice for intimate kinds of care in a different

category. The research and case law are out there. For a man or woman to want his or her privacy by having a same gender

caregiver for intimate procedures, is not the same as racial or ethnic or gender discrimination. If that were the case, why would the court sallow nursing to be so dominated by one gender? Men as a group haven't challenged civil rights legislation and demanded that they have the same opportunity for same gender care as do women. Women have more often led the battle here, and that's one reason why we see so many female nurses taking care of men, a good number of whom don't feel comfortable with this situation or are not willing to speak up. In most cases a women on OB-GYN is not challenged if she wants a female nurse even if one isn't readily available. One will be found because there are so many around. But a man who wants a male nurse for, let's say a foley cath, may be told one isn't available. This is gender discrimination, and when it is challenged in court, we'll find that the civil rights legislation you mention goes both ways.

Specializes in ICU/Ortho/Med surg.
Pinfinity -- you are not completely correct. The courts have seen gender choice for intimate kinds of care in a different

category. The research and case law are out there. For a man or woman to want his or her privacy by having a same gender

caregiver for intimate procedures, is not the same as racial or ethnic or gender discrimination. If that were the case, why would the court sallow nursing to be so dominated by one gender? I'm not sure it is the courts so much as it is the profession that is keeping the profession dominated by females.Maybe it is neither. i don't know. Perhaps it started way back with Floence N.? She was pretty clear on her attitude towards men. It's kinda like that today.

Men as a group haven't challenged civil rights legislation and demanded that they have the same opportunity for same gender care as do women. True, but men who seek legal recourse for perceived discrimination ON THE JOB are swiftly "dealt with" This diatribe of thought is baseless since we are talking about two seperate issues. Perhaps I should have been clearer on this point. But the intent of the original thread makes my comments self explanatory.

Women have more often led the battle here, and that's one reason why we see so many female nurses taking care of men, a good number of whom don't feel comfortable with this situation or are not willing to speak up. In most cases a women on OB-GYN is not challenged if she wants a female nurse even if one isn't readily available. One will be found because there are so many around. But a man who wants a male nurse for, let's say a foley cath, may be told one isn't available. This is gender discrimination, and when it is challenged in court, we'll find that the civil rights legislation you mention goes both ways.

True, and the burden of proof for the plaintiff is very heavy and almost unprooveable if you are a white male. circular reasoning I suppose? LOL!

Thanks for your input.

The 3 groups that are politically OK to discriminate against; Men, White people, Christians! so as a white male christian no one cares if I am discriminated against, in fact it is just attributed as poetic justice for all the wrongs ever perpetrated my men, whites, and christians. forget the fact that I am not reponsible for any of those events.

discrimination is a very bad bad thing...

we are all the same, we are all humans, we are all creations of...

well, i don't care if anyone discriminates me as a murse, as long as i know im doing the right thing and providing my very best nursing care to patients...

and if my co workers will do those horrible things stated in your thesis, well, i'll f*** the heck their brains out and make them beg for my nursing care for more! i know what i mean. lol lol lol

yeah, i read from a book that the first nurses were actually males. this was in India in the ancient times. and they were viewed as sacred and full of dedications and stuffs.:smokin:

Specializes in Med-Surg, Geriatric, Behavioral Health.

I placed a thread on this forum on exactly what you just mentioned. Done this some time back.

https://allnurses.com/men-nursing-forum/men-nursing-historical-96326.html

Peace

Specializes in ICU/Ortho/Med surg.

I have personally been discrininated against on the job; numerous times. I have been fired for no other reason but that I brought a copy of "Male Nurse" magazine to work and left it out conspicuously in the break room. (Where it suspisciously found it's way to the trash can...Hmm)Discrimination for males in nursing is a FACT.

It Happens.

It has just not happened to YOU yet

It seems kinda odd when I read posts like ...well i've never experienced it except for this one time...huh?

I think that it varies in severity geographically but it is still there; just under the surface. Whether intended as good natured bantor or blatantly as I have experienced it.

It started for me along with 3 other male nursing students in Nursing school; which in my opinion is where it is nurtured to a fine art. The clever female nurse with an axe to grind will pick up on these subtle cues and cultivate her own little garden of hostility toward the male species in this profession and alas: the torch has been successfully passed on to another generation....Ahhh

JMHO:rolleyes:

Im 17 years old and in Health Occupations, its for my CNA, and I am in a class (very small by the way) of 3 girls and me , the only male student. Do I get **** for it? All the time, but I take it as a compliment for defeating a sterotype, plus look whose with the ladies? Anyways I will enter the world as a Murse like many of you, but I just wonder is the difference that drastic that it will effect the outlining of my future career?

I am, or was, a 33-year-old nursing student at Montgomery College, Maryland. I had a teacher who really had it in for me because I am guy with an education. When I complained to the director of nursing I got nothing but deceit and push back. It's a totally crazy story. I filed a complaint with the college about it last week. It should be posted on www.montgomerycollegenursing.com very soon.

today, after months and years of belittlement, threats, harassment, humiliation in public in front of peers and patients, after working hard, doing more, proving and reproving myself repeatedly, i now realize there are hateful, mean, and more horrible words to describe the nursing instructors and staff at ***. i worked with all kinds and types of people for many years without any issues, only growth and joy, yet here, because of my race (w) my sex (m), and my age (53) i finally am giving up. i went from being an honor roll student excited to go to school to vomiting out of fear from what new assault would come my way from the next vindictive teacher.

i made it to my spring junior semester here after years of horrible treatment i accepted as "normal" for nursing school and then, i find out, what i thought was normal was not. i have been denied opportunities, i have been unjustly graded, i have been singled out and abused, i have experienced hostility because of my race, my sex and my age. it is with a great sadness i give up on what i worked for so long to attain. i have bent to the point of fracture. until you have been bullied and treated horrible by nursing instructors, you will not have sympathy for what this can do to you. when the tiny bit of confidence you gain is trashed repeatedly (when you were performing correctly) you can not understand or sympathize. i went to school nights for years to get my lpn, (and worked successfully with letters of praise from patients and supervisors) and went on to start to get the rn bsn we now have to have to even get an interview for a better job, (if there are even jobs listed for new grads). i am not saying have have not made mistakes--i have, it is part of learning--but i never deserved even a small portion of the vitriole and hate directed toward me for something i can not change.

female hate and discrimination towards men in nursing is real, it hurts, and it makes good men who would be good nurses leave the profession, and encourage men who might consider nursing to counsel men to chose other careers. any other profession where there was such inequity in sex, would be assailed with all sorts of help to achieve parity, except nursing. out of 12 men who started with me, we now are down to 5. more than 50 percent gone. no one thinks anything is wrong with that. if this disparity happened in the business school and half of the women or black men, or... what ever, failed or left, there would be outrage. i will never recommend a man become a nurse again. it isn't worth it.

you nurses who eat their young won't have me for a meal. i think i will go onto some other less negative profession where hate is not accepted and tolerated and laughed about by professionals who are supposed to be so culturally aware. i doubt any one here will read or sympathize, probably thinking i am weak, and should be culled from the crowd, but, mean girls turn into mean women, they do not usually get nicer. i don't see the change i have heard about and suspect it is another falsity. the old guard nurses are staying longer and getting meaner.

for a profession that claims to be so accepting and nurturing i think it is all a bunch of hooey now.

Just wait kiddo, just you wait, when the schedule at work gets done and you are on the charge nurses' s*** list for some unknown reason. You are young, you are naive and you will find out. Your back out will go someday, you will say one wrong thing, the edge of the razor men stand on to survive is NOT like the broad plain women saunter across. I do not like being like this, but I have tread that path and now have left the message on the wall, "Turn back or perish!" It is simply a matter of time before you will get hammered because you have testicles instead of teats. It is not a matter of "if" but "when".

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