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Hospital leads in hiring male nurses

Beating stereotype as woman's job key to meeting demand

- Staff Writer

Published: Mon, Dec. 18, 2006 12:00AM

Modified Mon, Dec. 18, 2006 10:39AM

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Neil Williams II, a registered nurse for nearly a decade, still routinely gets mistaken for a doctor when he walks into a patient's room wearing a white lab coat over his blue scrubs.

It's a small reminder that old stereotypes die hard -- despite rising numbers of men choosing careers as registered nurses, and despite years of predictions that men will be key in easing a nursing shortage.

"That's still how society sees it," said Williams, 35, an assistant nurse manager in orthopedic surgery at Pitt County Memorial Hospital in Greenville. "A doctor is a male. A nurse is a female."

NURSING JOBS: NOT JUST FOR WOMEN

More men are choosing careers as registered nurses. In 1985, just 3 percent of licensed RNs in the state were male; as of 2005, 7 percent of the state's nurses were men. Major hospitals in North Carolina have varying success at attracting RNs who are men.

HospitalPercentage of RNs who are male

Pitt County Memorial

Hospital (Greenville) 10.5

UNC Hospitals 9.6

New Hanover Regional

Medical Center (Wilmington) 8.7

WakeMed 7.5

Duke Hospital 5.0

(DEMOGRAPHIC NUMBERS PROVIDED BY THE HOSPITALS; STATEWIDE DATA PROVIDED BY THE CECIL G. SHEPS CENTER FOR HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, UNC-CHAPEL HILL.)

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At Williams' employer, however, the nursing staff includes plenty of exceptions to that stereotype.

Pitt County Memorial Hospital, a private nonprofit teaching hospital affiliated with East Carolina University's medical training programs, boasts one of the best records nationally at hiring men as nurses. About 10.5 percent of the hospital's registered nurses are male -- a stellar showing considering that men make up only about 5.7 percent of registered nurses nationally.

Attracting more men to nursing is seen as one way to extend the supply of registered nurses, who perform much of the hands-on patient care in hospitals. As need for health care rises, driven by a growing and aging population, demand for nurses is expected to far outstrip the available supply.

North Carolina has made progress in bringing more men into the profession. About 7 percent of registered nurses in the state were men in 2005, up from 3.9 percent in 1992.

But the profession must make greater inroads if men are going to be a meaningful help in addressing the nursing shortage, said Billy Bevill, a registered nurse since 1977 who is vice president of recruiting and retention for the N.C. Center for Nursing.

"The biggest challenge is still getting men to see nursing as a masculine role," said Bevill, whose main task is to attract more qualified people of both sexes into nursing.

There's more than a little historical irony in nursing's stubborn image as "women's work."

Early nurses included holy men who organized to care for victims of bubonic plague during the Middle Ages. Men continued to provide nursing care up until the mid-1800s, when nursing legend Florence Nightingale marshaled a corps of female nurses to care for injured British soldiers during the Crimean War. Military doctors initially resisted the intrusion of females, but Nightingale's efforts eventually helped establish nursing as a respectable career for women. By the next century, the profession was almost entirely female.

Men are represented at every level of nursing at Pitt County Memorial. They are floor nurses, nurse managers and administrators. Even the hospital's chief nursing officer -- one of the hospital's senior administrators -- is a man.

The hospital's thorough integration of men into its nursing ranks recently won the hospital accolades as the nation's best workplace for male RNs, an award bestowed by the American Assembly of Men in Nursing.

What's surprising is that Pitt County Memorial has become a haven for men in nursing without any extraordinary efforts on its part.

Like any hospital angling for talent in a competitive market, Pitt does all it can to appeal to competent nurses of any sex or race.

"We haven't really said we're going to go out and target men," said Tom Czaplijski, the hospital's chief nursing officer. He trained as an RN nearly 30 years ago. "To some extent, we've been fortunate."

Location, location ...

One factor that may contribute to the hospital's success at attracting men is its proximity to ECU's Brody School of Nursing. The nursing school, which the American Assembly of Men in Nursing recognized in 2004 as the nation's most male-friendly school of nursing, does better than most at attracting male students. About 17 percent of its students are men, compared to an average of about 11 percent at other nursing schools in the state.

Staff writer Jean P. Fisher can be reached at 829-4753 or jfisher@newsobserver.com.

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