China’s male nurses face ‘prejudice and ridicule’
CAI, a male nurse at an ICU unit in a hospital in central China’s Hunan Province, is used to being misunderstood. “Some people think I must have psychological problems because they don’t understand why a man would do a ‘feminine’ job.”
Cai said he faces an array of difficulties beyond widespread social prejudice, in particular heavy pressure at work and the resultant stress.
Female nurses readily admit the importance of male nurses, who generally have greater physical strength.
“Sometimes we encounter drunk patients, and it feels safer with a male nurse around,” said Zhang Jin, a nurse at the hospital. It is not easy to convince some patients. Misunderstandings often lead to ridicule from both patients and their families.
According to a survey by Ningbo College of Health Sciences, almost 80 percent of respondents did not know much about male nurses, and 40 percent said they were not aware they existed.
Sun Qifeng of Shenzhen People’s Hospital said that when he joined the hospital in 2013, some people even refused his help.
“This was especially true with female patients,” Sun said. “For example, when doing cardiograms, they would almost always demand female nurses.” Ma Hengtai of Qinghai Provincial People’s Hospital agreed.
“When I started out, my uniform was the same color as a street sweeper’s,” Ma said. “Once, when I was dealing with a patient’s medicine, a passerby said, ‘Oh look! Mr Street Sweeper even knows how to use a syringe!’”
“The most frequent question I am asked of my job is, ‘You are a man, why did you become a nurse?’” Ma said. Some others call him “Mr Nurse,” and even worse, “pervert.”
Male nurses are usually employed in labor-intensive units such as ICUs, which means night shifts and long hours, putting huge physical burdens on them.
After work, Sun Qifeng often sits in the hospital’s waiting room for an hour before heading home because he feels “too tired” to move.
Embarrassment and ridicule have put some male nurses on edge, with many leaving the field.
At the end of 2014, China had about 3 million registered nurses, of whom only 1.9 percent were male, according to a report released by Huazhong University of Science and Technology. In Germany, around 30 percent of nurses are men.
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