Published Nov 23, 2017
48 members have participated
SherlockRN
5 Posts
This question is related to SOCIAL use, not professional use of "Dr."
When addressing an invitation/card to a DNP and her husband, do I use "Dr. & Mr. Jones"? I am thinking yes, since her professional rank is higher than his.
Shanimal
184 Posts
Your format is correct if it's a very formal invitation.
meanmaryjean, DNP, RN
7,899 Posts
I have a DNP and the only people I expect to call me 'Doctor' are my kids.
True story
DizzyJ DHSc PA-C
198 Posts
I agree, it is appropriate for a formal invitation. I only use Dr. designation when an application/reservation requests a prefix and it has the option to choose Dr. over Mr.
Thank you, Shanimal, BSN, RN; I felt it was proper etiquette yet wasn't sure. I appreciate your response.
I am not sure I understand your response,meanmaryjean, DNP, RN. Do you feel I "should" or "should not" use in addressing an invitation to mail to someone's home?
Thank you, DizzyJon. I agree with your use of the prefix.
chare
4,322 Posts
...Do you feel I "should" or "should not" use in addressing an invitation to mail to someone's home?
No, I don't think you should. And in my opinion this is nothing but snobbery, especially as you felt it necessary to include this "I am thinking yes, since her professional rank is higher than his" with your question.
No pretentious intent. I was taught "professional rank" rules in social address, yet wasn't sure, given the contention around using "Dr." with DNP. Nonetheless, I found a reliable source for my answer, see below.
Take care~
Nurse L.
According to Emily Post, "When a married woman uses the title "Dr." (either medical or academic) socially, addressing social correspondence to the couple is a little trickier. If her husband is not a doctor, address letters to Dr. Sonia and Mr. Robert Harris. Her name comes first because her professional title "outranks" his social title". From Emily Post
mmc51264, BSN, MSN, RN
3,308 Posts
I have always seen Mr and Dr John Smith. Never seen the woman first. Not sure how she would be addressed formally (usually iit is Mrs. John Smith) Not sure how much Emily Post is used anymore, kind of sad. Sexist but old school.
Jules A, MSN
8,864 Posts
I wonder if the OP was looking to suck up to a professor. Why in the world would anyone address a social invitation to a NP as Dr?
broughden
560 Posts
Because they put in the time and effort to earn the degree, just like an MD or PhD did?
Because in a formal invitation situation its the proper thing to do?