By Krucial Staffing

February 17, 2022

6002 Views

ADVERTISEMENT

Breaking Stereotypes: Nursing Portrayals in Today’s Media and Their Impact

Krucial Staffing provided this article.

Written by: Maureen Borberg

A common trope found in modern media is the popularity of medical television shows and movies. The inner workings of the hospital, the lives of doctors and nurses, and the plethora of diseases and injuries provide a constant stream of content for networks. Medical shows pique our interest. While many of the patients are familiar with the hospital and its procedures, we are unaware of how our care is administered. As a society, we trust the trained medical professionals tasked with caring for us when we cannot care for ourselves. It is important to note that most medical shows are not claiming to be accurate in the actual administration of patient care. They serve more of a reality TV purpose, created for pure entertainment. However, when we dig a little deeper, there are underlying biases and stereotypes influencing the tone of most shows. These tropes can be detrimental to the way we are influenced to treat medical professionals of certain specialties. We asked our nurses and other clinical staff how they felt their professions are represented in the realm of medical entertainment. The overwhelming response was simple: their representation is inadequate.

Full scope of duties, never fully pictured

The most popular grievance among our nurses is that the full scope of their duties in the hospital is never fully pictured. They are generally characterized as supporting personnel and secondary caregivers. Nurses on television shows tend to be pushed around by both patients and doctors alike. They are forced to grapple with demeaning attitudes and words of contempt due to their “lowly station” in the hospital hierarchy. The Hollywood representation of their specialties is not only inaccurate but degrading. The duties which occupy nurses in the hospital are vital to the successful treatment of patients, and yet, these tasks are often overlooked. It is essential to recognize that our nurses provide the lifeline between patients and doctors, but this is not their only purpose.

Not merely the “doctor’s helpers

Nurses are responsible for the lion’s share of patient care in the hospital. They should not be portrayed as lower-class medical professionals with no influence over treatment. Our nurses shared a common sentiment; they are not merely the “doctor’s helpers” but are the backbone of every healthcare system and should be recognized as such. Standard medical shows display a relationship between doctor and nurse, which discredits the nurse’s position in the hospital and misrepresents their actual job description. In an authentic and ideal hospital setting, nurses work with doctors to provide efficient assistance. There is a degree of respect between the medical professions that ensures successful care.

Other specialties failed to be recognized

The final misrepresentation brought to our attention was how other specialties in the hospital failed to be recognized. While nurses play a vital role and should be credited, Respiratory Therapists, Certified Nurses Assistants, Emergency Medical Technicians, and so many other specialties receive even less visibility in medical dramas and comedies. Their contributions are scarcely recognized. Our staff made it clear that these professions provided irreplaceable assistance and worked hard to keep the hospital operating smoothly. They are trained in their specialty just like their fellow medical professionals and should be identified as valuable team members.

If you are looking for the most accurate and enjoyable show as recognized by our pool of nurses, turn your head to NBC’s critically acclaimed show, ER. This television series was renewed for fifteen seasons after its premiere in 1994 and became a staple in the world of medical dramas. Another long-running television show, Grey’s Anatomy, failed to elicit the same amount of excitement from our nurses. They deemed it the most inaccurate Hollywood portrayal of hospital life, with inattentive and dull nurses.

The misrepresentation of nurses in modern television is a common occurrence that can influence our medical professionals’ treatment based on nothing more than stereotypes. Nurses are commonly identified in this form of entertainment as supporting personnel, with their duties seldom acknowledged. They are occasionally characterized as muted or foolish, with little to no influence over patient care. Their vital, everyday tasks in real life are excluded, their roles simplified and portrayed as merely “doctor’s helpers.” However, this is not the case nor how they should be represented. Nurses are pivotal in communicating needs to all other members of the healthcare system and advocating for their patients.

Coworkers are hardly recognized

Their coworkers who take on the title of RRT, CNA (Certified Nursing Assistant), and EMT are hardly recognized for their contributions. This lack of representation of other clinical professionals continues to undermine their work and importance to the healthcare system. These stereotypes perpetuated by the Hollywood medical scene can be detrimental to our caregivers in real life. Once we can identify these biases and propagandist portrayals of medical professionals, we can treat our nurses with the respect and admiration they deserve.

Interested in looking more about emergency response and/or contract travel options? Check out emergency response and healthcare staffing company, Krucial Staffing. Krucial Staffing specializes in high volume, rapid response staffing, driven by a mission to serve others at their greatest time of need. To learn more about what positions they currently have open, then check out their Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, or Twitter page for more information.

We hope you found this article on the misconception of nursing on television shows enjoyable. Are there any other misconceptions you have found? Comment them below.

Are you looking for your next travel nurse assignment? Click here to view our job board. Do you need housing for an upcoming assignment? Click here to search our housing page.

If you are a new travel nurse or looking into becoming a travel nurse:

Travel Nurse Guide: Step-by-Step (now offered in a PDF Downloadable version!)

By Gifted Healthcare

June 14, 2019

17988 Views

ADVERTISEMENT

Nursing Spotlight: TV Shows, Movies, and Series Featuring Nurses on Screen

This article provided by: Gifted Healthcare

tv shows and movies for travel nurses
Photo by Seth Cottle on Unsplash

Travel Nurses work hard and deserve downtime just like everybody else. And when it’s time to relax, there’s nothing better than getting cozy and watching a great movie or TV show.

And when it’s time to relax, there’s nothing better than getting cozy and watching a great movie or TV show.

Do you have a favorite nurse from the silver screen? You may find a new one when you check out our list of great movies and television shows about nursing and medicine.

Read on for a list of classics and under-the-radar gems.

TV Shows

Nurse Jackie

Nurse Jackie is a medical comedy-drama television series starring Edie Falco that ran from 2009 – 2015 on Showtime. The show follows ER Nurse Jackie Peyton’s daily routine at All Saints’ Hospital, a hectic New York City facility.

Nurse Jackie was popular with both audiences and critics due to Jackie’s raw portrayal as an exceptional yet flawed clinician. The show deals with present-day topics like opioid addiction and the current state of the U.S. healthcare system.

Nurse Jackie is a dark but comedic take on nursing, written with intelligence and depth. You can stream it on Netflix.

Call the Midwife

Call the Midwife is a fascinating period drama that follows young midwife Jenny Lee, who works in 1950’s East London. The show was originally adapted from Jennifer Worth’s memoirs, who worked as a midwife in an East London convent following World War II.

Call the Midwife spotlights the heroic and often thankless work of nurses serving patients in an impoverished community. Critics have praised it for its unique blend of social commentary on present-day female social issues with accurate post-WWII London portrayals.

If you like historical dramas, plan on being glued to the screen once you start watching Call, the Midwife. You can binge all 8 seasons of it on Netflix.

HawthoRNe

HawthoRNe is a medical drama starring Jada Pinkett Smith as Christina Hawthorne, a Chief Nursing Officer at Richmond Trinity Hospital in Richmond, Virginia. The show highlights Christina Hawthorne’s passion for nursing, depicting her as a tireless advocate for her patients and staff.

Given the countless stream-able options of modern television, HawthoRNe is often overlooked. However, it’s a broader, mainstream alternative to the dark and intense shows that make up so much of modern-day television.

You can stream all 3 seasons of HawthoRNe on Amazon Prime.

Movies

M*A*S*H

We begin the movie side of the list with a classic.

M*A*S*H is a 1970 war movie based on Richard Hooker’s famous novel, MASH: A Novel About Three Doctors. M*A*S*H was one of the most popular films of the 1970s and inspired the famous television series of the same name.

The movie takes place during the Korean War. It follows two combat surgeons, “Hawkeye” Pierce and “Duke” Forrest, through various trials and tribulations as they adapt to practicing medicine during wartime.

M*A*S*H is an important release in the history of cinema, and one of the first modern films to revolve around the medical profession. You can find it on Amazon Prime and YouTube.

WIT

Wit is a 2001 television movie based on a Pulitzer Prize-winning play of the same name. It follows Vivian Bearing’s life, a professor of English literature after she is diagnosed with Stage IV ovarian cancer.

Although Wit’s main character is not a nurse, one of its most important characters is. The only person who shows Vivian compassion and care is nurse Susie Monahan, and the two develop a bond that plays a major role in the movie’s central lesson.

Wit is a powerful exploration of the impact that a great nurse can make on a patient. Find it on HBO Now and HBO Go.

Patch Adams

Our list ends with a feel-good classic. Patch Adams follows Hunter “Patch” Adams, a former psychiatric patient who decides to become a doctor after a life-changing stay in a mental institution. Adams’ methods as a physician, which emphasize humor and compassion, are controversial among his colleagues and serve as the central theme in the film.

We’ve included Patch Adams on our list due to its positive portrayal of the nurse’s role. Throughout the movie, Adams encourages his medical students to work closely and respectfully with nurses, highlighting them as integral players in quality patient outcomes.

Stream Patch Adams on Amazon Prime.

From comedies to period dramas, there is a diverse range of great movies and television shows about nursing and medicine. Your next favorite could be on our list, just waiting to be watched.

No matter which one you choose, we hope you get some much-deserved R&R so that you can seize the day (or night) like the all-star Travel Nurse that you are! We hope you found this list of tv shows & movies for travel nurses helpful and fun!

If you are a new travel nurse or looking into becoming a travel nurse:

Travel Nurse Guide: Step-by-Step (now offered in a PDF Downloadable version!)