By BRETT ADAMSON
For Brett Adamson, becoming a nurse was a gateway into helping the world’s most disadvantaged people. In 2005 Brett began working for the medical humanitarian aid organisation, Médecins Sans Frontières. That year was part of an emergency nutrition project in Ethiopia where he spent six months treating kids with severe malnutrition. What followed was a growing sense of responsibility that led him to Afghanistan, where he spent six months treating trauma patients, and more recently to South Sudan working as an emergency nurse in a refugee camp.
Yet despite having helped countless people around the world, Brett still has to defend his decision to work as a nurse in what has traditionally been a female dominated role. Here Brett tells his story hoping to break down the stereotypes associated with the male nurse.
I became a nurse because ultimately I was interested in people. It was a way for me to explore humanity through caring for people.
I had left high school quite early on and had been working for a few years as a furniture maker. But by my early 20s I had a growing sense of responsibility and decided to go into nursing.
Historically the first nurses were male, but that was a very long time ago. Now it’s very much a gender defined role, one that has historically been dominated by women. And the work force certainly reflects that. You are never a nurse; you are the ‘male’ nurse.
Top Comments
Yep, being a male and a nurse makes for a different experience of it all. Yes, sometimes you're excluded from the conversations at the desk, and sometimes patients are resistant to being looked after by a male, but other patients actively seek out male nurses, or at least respond better to them.
Brett's right, the first group of organized nurses were male, caring for the sick pilgrims during the 12th century. When I started nursing back in 1982, 5% of Australian nurses were male...now it's skyrocketed to 7% :)
I've seen a change in the population of doctors rotating onto nights...most are now female. I think the point Brett was making about doctors is that due to their job of being the ones diagnosing and putting a treatment plan together, they can't usually stay with the patient for long, but because nurses carry out that plan, we're at the bedside far longer. we see the patients die...the doctors see them after they've died (in general, and excluding code blues.)
I'll never forget one patient....
"I'd like a nurse"
"...I'm Tony, one of the nurses.
"Oh no dear I want a REAL nurse please."
Just read this article by chance. I was supposed to do nursing when I was out of uni. Instead, I trained to be a lawyer, a solicitor, and now finally at 28 years old I realize that it was my biggest mistake in my life, apart from owning a chiwawa...or chiwa?, the small dog. I am one of the few people on this planet that have not much regrets, but this one hit me really hard like a yellow school bus. I wanted to do nursing, but my parents were saying that it is a sissy job, no prospects and they didn't even wanted to pay for it. I at that time was lazy, and did not work and studies like most uni students did. Had I done it, I wouldn't have needed my parents to support me. Now,having worked, I am considering paying for myself the next 3 years through uni. Although I have heard about a shorter route, I was advised against it as it would not give me more exposure. My only regret is not hearing my inner intuition and voice and be mature enough to have to pursue this course. After being in the legal line for 5 years, I dare to say that most lawyers are not any anywhere near what nurses do, and I feel that the amount of pressure and physical pain that one goes through during courtroom battles are nothing compared to wht these wonderful people do in the wards. God bless you all nurses and doctors alike