I'm currently a high school senior with ambitions of being a nurse practitioner. I live in a southern part of the united states and lets just say male nurses aren't too common where I come from. While pursuing my career in nursing I decided maybe I should take the CNA class that my local community college offers to high school students for vocational school. I entered the class with high hopes to see where nursing could take me, being the only one with a y chromosome has its advantages and disadvantages. Some of the girls tease me a little but its all just joking around, I am the strongest in the class so naturally I do a lot of lifting, nothing I wasn't expecting. My instructor is a very nice lady, she worked as am RN for 15 years before deciding to teach college. I do pretty well in the class, my test average is a 90 through 2\4 of the tests we will take. Are male nurses respected in a hospital setting?
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I'm currently a high school senior with ambitions of being a nurse practitioner. I live in a southern part of the united states and lets just say male nurses aren't too common where I come from. While pursuing my career in nursing I decided maybe I should take the CNA class that my local community college offers to high school students for vocational school. I entered the class with high hopes to see where nursing could take me, being the only one with a y chromosome has its advantages and disadvantages. Some of the girls tease me a little but its all just joking around, I am the strongest in the class so naturally I do a lot of lifting, nothing I wasn't expecting. My instructor is a very nice lady, she worked as am RN for 15 years before deciding to teach college. I do pretty well in the class, my test average is a 90 through 2\4 of the tests we will take. Are male nurses respected in a hospital setting?