"The View" insults nursing

Nurses General Nursing

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"The View" doesn't seem to include nursing

June 16, 2003 -- Tonight's prime time episode of ABC's "The View," which

consisted of a "His and Her Body Test" designed to impart basic health

information, included an attack on nursing, with co-host Meredith Vieira

appearing disguised as an "ugly nurse"--as Vieira herself put it in

previews--for comic interactions with passersby in a New York mall,

including one segment in which Vieira cared for a woman's "shin splints"

by drawing a happy face on her leg.

The episode was structured around a series of multiple choice questions on health issues, with an unsurprising focus on sexuality, and it did convey some useful information. The talk show's four co-hosts and a few celebrity guests offered serious and joking answers to the test questions. A rotating crew of physicians served as quizmasters, supplying the correct answers and graciously accepting praise (such as Vieira's comment that those with the highest total quiz scores were so smart they should have gone to medical school), as well as the other benefits of appearing on national television. Of course, the lack of any real nurses on a show devoted to the patient education and preventative care at which they excel, though unfortunate, is hardly unusual in a media environment still dominated by physician-centric views.

But what made the episode so anti-nurse was Vieira's "ugly nurse" segments. In contrast to the high regard the show displayed for the articulate, telegenic physicians, the "ugly nurse"'s appearance was cosmetically sabotaged. ("The View"'s web site describes these segments as Ms. Vieira "harassing unsuspecting folks at New York's Nanuet Mall when she went undercover disguised as a nurse.") The "ugly nurse" displayed no real expertise. Instead, she asked shoppers inane questions about faking orgasms and whether happy faces relieved the pain of shin splints. To the extent these segments had a conscious purpose beyond getting laughs, it may have been to emphasize how badly the average person needs the kind of guidance the episode provided, a point also made in one physician's recounting of the results of a poll the home audience had taken using the quiz questions. But the effect of using a "nurse" for this was to reinforce a harmful stereotype, namely that nurses are ditzy lightweights without knowledge or skills.

The "ugly" element operated as a curious final kick, since it is still far more common to see the reverse stereotype of the attractive "naughty nurse" in the media. We can only speculate that the show, sensitive to some women's issues, could see the problems with objectifying a female character, so it chose to go in the opposite direction.

Today, in the midst of a nursing shortage that is one of the nation's gravest public health problems--when dedicated, highly skilled nurses save or improve millions of lives every day despite short staffing that endangers their patients' health and their own well-being--it is sad that some seem to feel that female empowerment involves slavishly embracing medicine, to which women can now aspire, while blatantly disrespecting nurses, over 90% of whom are still women. To see these attitudes on Barbara Walters' "The View"--a popular, award-winning show celebrated for being progressive on women's issues--is more than a little ironic.

We encourage anyone who objects to this episode's "view" of nurses to write to "The Viewmaster" at the show's web site and urge the show to make amends to the nursing profession by creating a primetime show about the rewards of working in the nursing profession. If you do send an email, please send us a copy of it at [email protected] so that we can monitor the effectiveness of this campaign. Thank you.

http://www.nursingadvocacy.org/news/2003jun16_the_view.html

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Sandy Summers, MSN, MPH, RN

Specializes in pre hospital, ED, Cath Lab, Case Manager.

I wrote a letter of protest to The Viewmaster AND to Johnson and Johnson who sponsored the show. J&J had this big publicity campaign how they spent two million dollars on ads promoting the nursing profession and set up their website to try and attract people to the nursing profession, then they paid for that show. Stupid, stupid, stupid.

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.
Originally posted by 3rdShiftGuy

Just because it was a joke and in fun doesn't make it right. But perhaps I'm a bit sensitive as a gay man having seen many negative protrayals of gay people in the media just for fun. It still perpetuates (sp?) stereotypes, even if it is meant in good humor.

The "I respect nurses, but let me joke about them" doesn't quite work with me. I'm not a bitter prude, and I'm sure if I say it I would have laughed. I know we shouldn't take ourselves too seriously. I didn't see the episode so I can't really comment any further.

But jokes at the expense of the dignity of another group or profession can be a sticky issue with me.

WHAT AN INSIGHTFUL post 3rd Shift guy. But I am not surprised. You have an excellent "grip" on issues like this. ITA!

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

3rdShiftGuy, I was thinking, you ought to send those very words to the sponsors and producers of that Idiot show. REALLY. You post is that good....succinct and to the point and true!!!!

Specializes in Hospice.

I watched the show, and I didn't find anything offensive to me. It was all in good fun.........a comedy sketch. As a :nurse: LPN for years now, and currently in that elusive RN program.......I think it's ok to LIGHTEN UP..........joke around.......please......we aren't all that stuffy. Besides, the joke about the president daily.......it ain't nothin' but a thang..........:D

Originally posted by NurseDianne

I watched the show, and I didn't find anything offensive to me. It was all in good fun.........a comedy sketch. As a :nurse: LPN for years now, and currently in that elusive RN program.......I think it's ok to LIGHTEN UP..........joke around.......please......we aren't all that stuffy. Besides, the joke about the president daily.......it ain't nothin' but a thang..........:D

Lighten up? When the media routinely portrays nurses as handmaidens, sex objects and angels of mercy, the public gets the wrong impression about our profession. This makes teenagers less likely to want to join our profession and parents of bright and success oriented children less likely to encourage them to become nurses. Instead, these talented people join other professions and hence, we don't have enough nurses and we especially don't have enough nursing faculty. So when poor media exposure leads us to a nursing crisis like the one we are in today, can you really just toss this aside as a joke? Media coverage of nursing is a matter of life and death--for the nursing profession as well as for our patients. The sooner we all realize this and start working to define nursing's image instead of letting the media do it for us, the sooner we can start controlling our own profession and our lives.

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Sandy Summers, MSN, MPH, RN

Wonderful letter Untamed!

UntamedSpirit, I liked your letter so much that I just want to sign my name to the bottom of it! BRAVO!!!

Gator

What Merideth did was play upon many of the old cliches of nursing: we're ditzy, don't have any real contribution to the medical profession, and either we're old crones/tramps/effeminate males (take your pick of stereotypes).

oh, everyone knows the only reason to become a nurse is to marry a doctor!

:rolleyes:

Gator

I consider the source when I hear comments. Figures.

If you really want to make a difference, get the national nursing associations after them. I guarantee, they'll be mocking new professions and issuing public apologies. Who do you think the majority of their viewers are? Women. What gender are the majority of nurses? Bingo (Sorry guys, you haven't caught up yet :) ).

Specializes in Step down, ICU, ER, PACU, Amb. Surg.
Originally posted by Gator,SN

UntamedSpirit, I liked your letter so much that I just want to sign my name to the bottom of it! BRAVO!!!

Gator

Please feel free to plagerize(sp) my letter, signing your own name and sending it off. I recieved a respose from Ms. Summers...

Hi Christie:

FANTASTIC letter to The View!! Really well done. Thank you. And this is

the first letter we have received from a military hospital! Are you in

the military or are you a civilian nurse?

Please try to get others at Westpoint involved in protecting nursing's

image. We need all the help we can get.

Thank you,

Sandy

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Sandy Summers, MSN, MPH, RN

Executive Director

The Center for Nursing Advocacy

203 Churchwardens Rd.

Baltimore, MD 21212-2937

410-323-6185

cell 443-253-3738

[email protected]

http://www.nursingadvocacy.org

Specializes in Step down, ICU, ER, PACU, Amb. Surg.

Oh :imbar..........thank you for all your kind words in reference to my letter. Just trying to stand up for myself and all my other co-workers nation/world wide. And Tweety....please, I encourage you to send your words to the producers. Very perceptive and profound.

Specializes in midwifery, ophthalmics, general practice.

I didnt see the show- we dont get it here but I do agree that I am fed up with the sterotyping of nurses. I hate the way mens eyes light up with beds when I say I am a nurse!! grrrrrrr and I would love to know why it is ok to sexually harrase a nurse?? if my patients harasse me then they quickly find that they no longer have a doctor- my docs are very good about that and wont tolerate it- either from men or women (our male docs occasionally have problems!)

ohhh going to have a pimms!!!!!!!

Karen

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