| | #31 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Oct 2003 Location: Tampa Bay area, FL
Posts: 103
| Re: New title for male nurses? |
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| | #32 |
| aKa MagRedC5 | Re: New title for male nurses? Hello Cammer, Rather than re-name our profession for the sake of gender equality, gender acceptance in a non-traditional role, etc., we should focus our energy on educating the general public on the significant role nurses play in patient care. :cheers: BTW, personally I like the term male nurse and see nothing wrong with it. However, I'm perfectly content with the title of nurse, too.
__________________ Cary James Barrett, RN, BSN, CPT, Army Nurse ![]() |
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| | #33 | ||
| Senior Member Join Date: Oct 2003 Location: Tampa Bay area, FL
Posts: 103
| Re: New title for male nurses? Quote:
Quote:
:cheers: | ||
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| | #34 | |
| aKa MagRedC5 | Quote:
However, I'm perfectly content with the title of nurse, too.
__________________ Cary James Barrett, RN, BSN, CPT, Army Nurse ![]() | |
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| | #35 |
| Junior Member Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: New Orleans
Posts: 4
| Re: New title for male nurses? Great history lessons on this site. I am a nurse who happens to be male. You could always call yourself a RN.I love it when a child refers to me as a nurse and not a male nurse. This gives me hope that possibly the gender bias and perception of nursing is changing. I also find it very funny when old ladies (generally) introduce me to others as their male nurse. There is too much stress already associated with nursing to give a rats a** about semantics. We need nurses at our side and I think more male nurses would definitely benefit us all. I have found over the last 17 years of nursing that women can be so catty and petty. :dance: |
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| | #36 |
| Super Moderator Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: Florida
Posts: 161
| Re: New title for male nurses? When people ask me what I do for a living I usually tell them I'm an RN. When I introduce myself to patients I tell them that I'm their nurse. I never cared for the term male nurse. If they can't tell I'm a male by looking at me I have bigger problems than a title. Maybe because I work in a big city the fact that I'm male and a nurse really isn't an issue. I work in a trauma center and there's a lot of guys there: flight staff, EMTs, paramedics, docs and nurses. The only time on my job when gender seems to be an issue is when dealing with witnessing pelvic exams, female caths and LOLs. If it's a female doc I can be in on a pelvic (usually at HOB) there has to be an RN in the room. LOLs you just deal with. "Nurse" is a dated term - reminds me of lactating. Like "nursing" someone. But I think we're stuck with it. I think as more and more males go into nursing and as the population ages the term will be less gender-specific. As for females being catty... I'm not going there!! LOL |
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| | #37 |
| future skirt Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: in a van down by hte river
Posts: 19
| Re: New title for male nurses? As a paramedic in the great field of EMS, one in the process of starting a new career as an RN. (im trying to figure out how take my pre-reqs; attend nursing school; and still try to do a 24/48 shift.) i would rather be called nurse/male nurse or even sweetie than the things im called in this field. some of which are: "oh you're an ambulance driver" security guard ( we wear an awful white polyester shirt) officer as in police officer stretcher jockey band-aid and on the radio by fire dept. "commercial" as in "cancel commercial" we are not a private company our fellow EMS service on the other side of the county is. btw the british army calls their medics/male nurses "skirts" sincerely yours brett the skirt |
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| | #38 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Oct 2003 Location: Tampa Bay area, FL
Posts: 103
| Re: New title for male nurses? Quote:
Like you, I had to put up with "stretcher jockey," etc. but it was all in good fun. No one in EMS likes the term "Ambulance driver" though. There haven't been ambulance drivers in the USA in many years and it really does a disservice to an EMT or EMT-P to use that term. Calling a paramedic an ambulance driver is akin to calling a nurse a diaper changer. There's a lot more to the profession than just the basics. But being called a security guard was sometimes kinda funny. After all, we did wear a uniform similar to a "rent-a-cop." There are euphemistic names for just about every profession I guess. | |
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| | #39 | |
| aKa MagRedC5 | Re: New title for male nurses? Quote:
__________________ Cary James Barrett, RN, BSN, CPT, Army Nurse ![]() | |
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| | #40 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Alpena
Posts: 120
| Quote:
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