{"id":1158,"date":"2015-09-09T08:00:41","date_gmt":"2015-09-09T08:00:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/industry\/blog\/uncategorized\/5-unexpected-prejudices-faced-nurses\/"},"modified":"2023-05-31T16:39:10","modified_gmt":"2023-05-31T23:39:10","slug":"5-unexpected-prejudices-faced-nurses","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/en-us\/industry\/blog\/healthcare\/2015\/09\/09\/5-unexpected-prejudices-faced-nurses\/","title":{"rendered":"5 unexpected prejudices faced by nurses"},"content":{"rendered":"
It\u2019s official! I finally graduated with a doctorate in nursing practice. It was 8 years ago that I started nursing school, yet it seems like yesterday that I told my high school counselor I wanted to become a criminal-profiler-philosopher-painter-inventor. Turns out, being a nurse practitioner isn\u2019t too bad either.<\/p>\n
What drew me to the nursing profession were the science courses, holistic philosophy of treatment, and ability to begin clinical care immediately. I entered nursing school in August 2007 full of determination, armed with a stethoscope and pathophysiology textbook. Like your prototypical type-A nurse, I came equipped with pens, sticky notes, highlighters, three-ring binders, reference books, coffee, and my computer. However, what I wasn\u2019t prepared for were the five unlikely prejudices on my journey to becoming a doctor of nursing practice.<\/p>\n
You are too smart for nursing school.<\/b><\/p>\n
The first time I heard this was from a family member. Then I heard it again from friends and colleagues. Initially, I was confused by this assertion: \u201cUh oh, I must not be very smart because nursing school is actually really challenging.\u201d Over time I realized that the problem was a public misunderstanding. Actually, I was smart enough to go to nursing school.<\/p>\n
Here are a few things I think the world should know about nursing school. First, we take science classes. Yes, that means we study anatomy, physiology, chemistry, microbiology, pharmacology, and pathophysiology. Second, we must pass standardized benchmarking exams every year. Third, we don\u2019t wear white dresses and hats. Fourth, we aren\u2019t all women, and the number of males entering the profession continues to grow. Fifth, we undergo extensive clinical rotations beginning in our undergraduate studies. Sixth, we are not trained to obey doctor\u2019s orders; in fact, we are educated to provide autonomous and collaborative care of all individuals either sick or well across all settings.<\/p>\n
Licensed practical nurses are not real nurses.<\/b><\/p>\n
During my undergraduate studies, I worked as a mental health specialist & student nurse at a child and adolescent psychiatric hospital. A licensed practical nurse (LPN) on my unit became my mentor and inspiration: she supported me, empowered me, and guided me. She taught me how to lead group therapy sessions, monitor medication side effects, and effectively use de-escalation techniques. I will never forget her passion and enthusiasm for caring for children with mental illness.<\/p>\n
Throughout my career, I\u2019ve heard registered nurses (RNs) and nurse practitioners (NPs) make unnecessarily negative statements about the competence of LPNs: \u201cThey\u2019re not real nurses.\u201d This is absolutely not true. Licensed practical nurses, registered nurses, and nurse practitioners are all real nurses, and we work side by side, inextricably bound by the vision of improving our patients\u2019 lives.<\/p>\n
You can\u2019t go straight from nursing school to nurse practitioner school.<\/b><\/p>\n
After about three years of nursing school, I knew I wanted to be a nurse practitioner. I admired the nurse practitioners I encountered in practice, and I was fascinated by their role in patient care. However, when I decided to go straight to nurse practitioner school, I was met with resistance. Instead of affirmations or words of encouragement, my undergraduate professors advised me otherwise, saying, \u201cYou need at least one year of medical-surgical nursing experience first.\u201d<\/p>\n
Ultimately, I attended nurse practitioner school immediately after graduation. Because I never worked as an RN, I am sometimes referred to as a \u201cnon-nurse nurse practitioner.\u201d This term has shadowed me through my masters and doctorate program making me constantly question my \u201cnurse-ness.\u201d However, despite my lack of RN experience, I still became a great nurse practitioner.<\/p>\n
Now that you\u2019re a nurse practitioner, when are you applying to medical school?<\/b><\/p>\n
To become a medical doctor, you must go to medical school. To become a dentist, you must go to dental school. To become a nurse practitioner, you must go to nurse practitioner school. Asking a nurse practitioner when she is going to medical school is nonsensical, yet I\u2019m asked this question all the time.<\/p>\n
Nurse practitioners are a distinctive type of healthcare provider who diagnose and treat medical conditions. We prescribe medication, order and interpret diagnostic tests, and perform invasive procedures. Nursing theory serves as the foundation of our philosophy of care: we approach patient care holistically by emphasizing health promotion, disease prevention, and health education.<\/p>\n
Nurse practitioners choose to specialize in acute care, adult health, family health, gerontology, neonatal health, oncology, pediatrics, psychiatry, or women\u2019s health. We subspecialize in immunology, cardiology, dermatology, emergency, endocrinology, gastroenterology, neurology, occupational health, orthopedics, pulmonology, sports medicine, and urology. Nurse practitioners don\u2019t need to go to medical school because they are already nurse practitioners.<\/p>\n
A doctor of nursing practice is not a doctor.<\/b><\/p>\n