Gender attitudes and stereotypes in nursing

Introduction: In 1993, Annette M. Links, conducted the study on gender attitudes and stereotypes in nursing. Objectives: To describe attitudes of nursing students to stereotypes of the nurse. To evaluate the evolution of perception of gender stereotypes of nursing students. Subjects and methods: Obs...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: María Dolores Burguete Ramos, José Ramón Martínez Riera, Germán Martín González
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad de Alicante 2012-06-01
Series:Cultura de los Cuidados
Subjects:
Online Access:https://culturacuidados.ua.es/article/view/2010-n28-actitudes-de-genero-y-estereotipos-en-enfermeria
Description
Summary:Introduction: In 1993, Annette M. Links, conducted the study on gender attitudes and stereotypes in nursing. Objectives: To describe attitudes of nursing students to stereotypes of the nurse. To evaluate the evolution of perception of gender stereotypes of nursing students. Subjects and methods: Observational, descriptive and diachronic. Structured survey was conducted 440 freshmen. At the end of third year, she passed the same questionnaire to 307 students. The data were entered into a database in Xbase format and used the program SPSS 15.0. It has been used t test. For the means for schools, ANOVA test was used. Significance level > 0.05. Results: Agreement in which women are more affectionate than men. Women are seen as more caring (P = 0.011), less independent (P = 0.000), less intelligent (P = 0.011), less leadership (P = 0.000) and less possibility of promotion (P = 0.015). The men consider sex objects young nurses (P = 0.029) and bossy older (P = 0.018). Conclusions: The results suggest evidence of the persistence of images of nurses in accordance with female stereotypes: Gender makes a difference in the surveyed population.
ISSN:1699-6003