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- Males make up around 11% of the nurses in the UK, 9% in the US, 6.4% in Canada, 1% in China, 6% in Japan.
- Experts believe there are various factors responsible for the lack of male representation in the profession.
- Factor 1: Stereotyping.
- From childhood, we get exposed mostly to imagery of a female nurse.
- In fact, one of the words used to refer to a senior nurse is matron, which comes from matr — ‘mother’From Old French Matrone, from Latin matrona, from mater, matr — mother.
- Florence Nightingale, who established the principles of modern-day nursing, is believed to have said that men’s “hard and horny” hands were “not fitted to touch, bathe and dress wounded limbs”.
- The name ‘nurse’ also doesn’t help — one of the meanings is ‘to breastfeed a baby’.
- Factor 2: Constraints imposed by decision-making bodies.
- In England, the Royal College of Nursing, the profession’s union, did not admit men as members until 1960.
- A number of nursing schools in America didn’t admit males until 1982.
- This meant fewer male nurses, to begin with, to guide the next generation of men into the profession.
- And some countries also have high reservation quotas for females in nursing.
- E.g., In India, in a 2019 meeting held by the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), 80% of the nurse posts were reservedAIIMS Nurses Union alleged gender discrimination in the reservation and this may be repealed but it highlights the mindset skew. for females.
- Factor 3: Concerns about male touch.
- Men don’t actively seek this profession because of reported concerns that their touch when providing care might be misinterpreted and result in accusations of sexual inappropriateness.
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Image courtesy of Dimitri Houtteman through Unsplash
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