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PORTRAYAL OF NURSING IN THE MEDIA

PORTRAYAL OF NURSING IN THE MEDIA. Allison Mentink, Christine Ostendorf, Jessica Gums University of Wisconsin - Eau Claire. INTRODUCTION.

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PORTRAYAL OF NURSING IN THE MEDIA

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  1. PORTRAYAL OF NURSING IN THE MEDIA Allison Mentink, Christine Ostendorf, Jessica Gums University of Wisconsin - Eau Claire

  2. INTRODUCTION • We have all heard stories regarding nurses: killer nurses, incompetent nurses, poorly trained nurses and of course the entertainment media have their “naughty nurses” • Negative/derogatory portrayal of nursing in the media has become more prevalent over the past 50 years. This has heightened with more negative images in the past 20 years. • The medias portrayal of nurses is one of the most difficult to compete with

  3. Media • Print ads • Radio • News coverage • Books • Internet • Television • Movies

  4. Wait! People Trust Nurses! • 2008 Gallup poll ranked nurses #1 for honesty and ethics • Trust is not the same as respect!

  5. Does it Matter? • Nursing is an autonomous profession • TV, movies and news accounts frequently give credit for the work nurses do to physicians or hospitals • People are affected by what they see and hear – this is why companies and politicians spend millions of dollars on advertising • Entertainment education • In the 1950s and 1960s, the American Medical Association asserted control over network television shows, ensuring scripts included heroic physicians

  6. Where are all the nurses? In 2008, 39 of 43 major characters on the top 5 U.S. health related prime time TV shows were physicians. In reality, there were 3 million nurses and 700,000 physicians; a 4:1 ratio

  7. REAL NURSES VS FICTIONAL NURSES

  8. Do people really believe what they see? • 2000 survey by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showed: • 52% of people reported getting information they trust to be accurate from a prime time TV show • Greater than 25% said such shows are among their top 3 sources for health information • 9 out of 10 regular viewers said they learned something about diseases from TV • Almost 50% took some action after watching the show • 42% told someone the storyline • 16% told someone to do something or did something themselves • 9% visited a clinic or physician

  9. How does the media currently view nurses? From 2003-2005, NBC’s daytime soap opera Passion’s had an orangutan play the role of Precious – a private duty nurse.

  10. EARLY IDEAS ABOUT NURSING • Angels of Mercy until end of WWII • 1920’s to end of WWII – pragmatic, even heroic • A Farewell to Arms (1932)

  11. 1930-1960 • 1930’s-1940’s – Dr. Kildare films introduced nurses as love interests • 1940’s-1960’s – series of juvenile novels about Cherry Ames • Adventurous, bright, young nurse crime solver • 1950’s-1960’s – AMA asserted control over network television • Heroic physician characters virtuous, no mistakes

  12. 1960-1980 • 1962-1965: The Nurses series • 1960’s brought the naughty nurse, balanced by the senior battle-ax • Quality of nursing portrayal decreased in both film and prime time television • One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975)

  13. 1960-1980 • 1960’s and 1970’s: increase in portrayal of explicit sexual activity • Catch 22 (1970) • M.A.S.H. (1972) • Kalischs of University of Michigan Nursing School published multiple studies in the 1980’s

  14. 1980’s – 1990’s • Nurses were shown as peripheral assistants to dominant physicians • St. Elsewhere 1982-88 showed occasional formidable nurse character • China Beach 1988-91 lead character colleen McMurphy was competent, tough army nurse but did not generally display much skill

  15. 1980’s – 1990’s • TV sitcom Nurses 1991-94 treated nurses with some respect • Nightingales 1988-89 featured sexy nursing students who spent so much time partially undressed that outraged nurses actually managed to chase the show off the air • ER 1994 One of the most influential health care shows in history. Fairly realistic scenes, some of the best depictions of nursing ever to appear on network TV, occasionally showed serious nursing skill and autonomy, but as a whole depicted nurses as the handmaiden, as a skilled physician assistant who must defer to him.

  16. 2000 - Present • 2000-2006 Strong Medicine on Lifetime had a handsome, articulate nurse midwife Peter Riggs, but other nurses were mute handmaidens • 2001-Present Scrubs, main nurse Carla Espinosa at times shows real skill, but also shows doctors starting iv’s and hanging medications and providing virtually all care • House stated nurses were invented to pick patients up when they fall and to get him coffee • Private Practice only has one nurse/receptionist character-male midwife student • HawthoRNe – Told from the point of view of nurses as they struggle against the odds to deliver the best care possible. • Several different nurses in different stages of their nursing careers.

  17. 2000 - Present • Nurse Jackie – Portrays an irresponsible nurse that is addicted to pain medications and does things the way she wants to, not the legal way.

  18. How do we portray ourselves?

  19. How has the Media’s Portrayal Affected Nurses? • Nursing shortage • Prevented men from entering nursing • Reduced respect and trust in nursing • Reduced the patient population of nurse practitioners

  20. What Can We Do? • Nurses must recognize that they have the power to change the profession • Project a professional image • Write letters to editors and producers • Hospital managers can promote nursing just like they do medicine • Media can consult with nurses • Hollywood can include characters to reflect real nursing work

  21. “Most people know they can’t get into a hospital without a doctor. What they don’t know is that they won’t get out of one – at least not alive – without a nurse.” - Nursing Historian Joan Lynaugh

  22. REFERENCES

  23. REFERENCES

  24. REFERENCES

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