"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

I am offended by ANYONE who does not stand up for our profession.

Letting others degrade us by portraying us as sex objects, bimbos, airheads, ect, means that we agree with their opinions of us. Personally, I am a single parent with two girls who both want to be NURSES. I am proud of the work that I do because I literally hold peoples lives in my hands, whether it be with a medication that is keeping them alive or the urgent call I am making to the Dr. who has no idea what is wrong with the patient, because he refuses to take time away from his golf game or boat to actually come in and see them. I commend all of us who continually say, I HAVE HAD ENOUGH! but clock back in the very next day to do it all over again.

I used to like The View because of their diverse prospective on current events. But this has really changed my mind about the show. For someone to say "My sister-in-law is a Nurse" then turn around and portray us they way that she did, is a disgrace to both her family and our profession. Everyone I know has been in the hospital or had some loved one in an ECF , at some time in their life. Who was there for every ache, pain, c/o or whim? THE NURSE! Yet, still we suffer this kind of abuse.

It is disgusting that people can show us in this kind of light and it be accepted as just plain fun. I worked hard to get where I am at. As I am quite sure most of you all have too.

Maybe if enough of us STAND UP and say we will not accept this portrayal anymore, whether it be in fun or not, we will finally quit getting our butts rubbed from horny patients, and thought of as bed-bathing sex object and be treated with the RESPECT we all so rightly deserve.

EXACTLY lateblumer. It's like saying firefighers only rescue cats from trees. It's an insult to our hard work, professionalism, knowledge and dedication.

Hi everyone:

J&J has released this statement today regarding The View:

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Statement from Johnson & Johnson to nurses

We are very sorry to learn that you were offended by sequences in Monday's primetime program on ABC, "The View." The depiction of a nurse in the skit was meant to be humorous, and really dealt with consumer gullibility; but it was clearly offensive to a number of people who have written to us, and we want to apologize for that.

We hope you understand that as a sponsor of network television programs, such "The View," we are not given the chance to review, let alone control, program content, except to know what the general theme of the program will be. Our opportunity to have a say in this program was further limited because the show was presented "live."

Despite that, we were a sponsor and we are very concerned about your reactions and have conveyed our own feelings and reactions to the producers.

We hope you also know Johnson & Johnson has devoted considerable resources to a national effort we initiated last year to help address the nursing shortage. This program, called "Dare to Care," includes television messages that portray nurses as the heroes they truly are. In addition Johnson & Johnson has raised millions of dollars to fund scholarships for both nursing students and faculty and has created a special website, http://www.discovernursing.com, where schools and nurses can order promotional materials free of charge to help with their recruiting efforts.

In view of this commitment, to learn that you were offended by something we sponsored is of great concern to us. We have questioned the producers of The View and believe it was not their intention to insult anyone.

Again, we're sorry you were upset by the program and we appreciate your taking the time to express your views on this matter.

-----------------(end of message from J&J)

Everyone--please note that The View has not responded to anyone that I know of yet, nor have they said that they would make any effort to make amends to the nursing profession. I say let's keep up the pressure on them and send more letters and ask The View and ABC to do a nurse-friendly show, or better yet, help us get a TV show about nurses produced on primetime. Or they could at least donate some money to an image campaign for nurses.

Please see our write-up on The View for info on where to send the letters.

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

Even if you only have one sentence to say--please tell them.

J&J, one of The View's main sponsors should also be made of aware of your ire toward The View for their anti-nurse show.

J&J's comment form is

http://www.jnj.com/contact_us/contact_us_form.htm?catg=General+Inquiries

Thank you for advocating for the nursing profession!

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Sandy Summers, MSN, MPH, RN

Executive Director

The Center for Nursing Advocacy

I stopped watching The View long ago because of unflattering comments made about another group of people. Specifically, Christians, and not in a joking manner. I feel they tend to generalize instead of dealing with individuals. I only wish I could have seen this episode so I could respond. It has taken lots of years to develop the profession of nursing to the level it is now. It takes very little negative publicity to loose the respect of the public.

Specializes in Gerontological, cardiac, med-surg, peds.

I don't watch the View. Tried watching it a few times and it was just too, well, BORING. I also don't generally agree with the panelists' viewpoints.

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