Nursing Education, Practice, and Research in Pakistan

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essay on nursing profession in pakistan

  • Ghulam Abbas 2 ,
  • Shahid Shah 2 ,
  • Arzoo Asghar 2 ,
  • Faiz Ullah Khan 3 ,
  • Abid Mahmood 2 ,
  • Faeza Khan 2 ,
  • Saira Azhar 4 ,
  • Abid Hussain 5 &
  • Ruixing Zhang 5  

Nursing education plays a pivotal role in the development of essential nursing abilities necessary for professional practice and research. The clinical requirements are a crucial part of the nursing education process because they enable nursing students to apply and translate the theoretical knowledge they have learned in the classroom to their nursing practices in the clinical setting. The success of nursing students’ training objectives is greatly influenced by the efforts and cooperation of nursing faculty members. In order to effectively deliver high-quality instruction to nursing students, nursing professors and other nursing faculty members must work together to improve their interpersonal and professional skills. Nursing education in Pakistan has, up until recently, remained largely unrecognized due to a number of factors, including a shortage of trained faculty. The most common format for nursing education in Pakistan is a three-year diploma program. Students must appear for the licensing exam held by their individual provinces’ provincial nurses’ examination board at the conclusion of each school year. The country has been dealing with a nursing shortage as a result of poor hiring, low retention, and nurse emigration, which has added stress to both the nursing workforce and nursing students.

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Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Government College University, Faisalabad, Pakistan

Ghulam Abbas, Shahid Shah, Arzoo Asghar, Abid Mahmood & Faeza Khan

Department of Pharmacy Administration and Clinical Pharmacy, School of Pharmacy, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Xi’an, China

Faiz Ullah Khan

College of Pharmacy, University of Sargodha, Sargodha, Pakistan

Saira Azhar

School of Nursing, Zhengzhou University, Zhengzhou, China

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Abbas, G. et al. (2024). Nursing Education, Practice, and Research in Pakistan. In: Al-Worafi, Y.M. (eds) Handbook of Medical and Health Sciences in Developing Countries. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-74786-2_502-1

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DOI : https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-74786-2_502-1

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Qualitative study of socio-cultural challenges in the nursing profession in Pakistan

Sidra abbas.

1 Department of Gender Studies, University of the Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan

Rubeena Zakar

2 Department of Public Health, University of the Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan

Florian Fischer

3 Department of Population Medicine and Health Services Research, School of Public Health, Bielefeld University, Bielefeld, Germany

4 Institute of Gerontological Health Services and Nursing Research, Ravensburg-Weingarten University of Applied Sciences, Weingarten, Germany

Associated Data

Pseudonymised transcripts are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.

In a patriarchal social system, a women-dominated profession like nursing is mostly seen as a disempowered group due to its stereotypical image and negative connotations. The low social prestige of this profession is based on the roles typically assigned to men and women to maintain gender identity according to their performance and embodiment. The aim of this study was to explore the social and cultural challenges faced by nurses while creating their professional image within the regional context of Lahore (Punjab) in Pakistan.

A qualitative research design was chosen to conduct one-to-one, in-depth interviews with twelve nurses. Recruitment was based on purposive sampling from three large public hospitals in Lahore to learn about nurses’ perceptions of social and cultural challenges in the nursing profession. A thematic analysis was conducted using the data analysis software package NVivo 12 Plus.

Cultural values give preference for female nurses. We have identified four major themes related to the social and cultural challenges facing the nursing profession: 1) gender-segregated profession, 2) inappropriate portrayals by the media, 3) issues around marriage settlement, and 4) identity from a religious perspective. These conflicts are affecting the professional status and changing perceptions of nurses, who either do not choose to remain in the nursing profession or do not recommend nursing as a career option. These ongoing constraints are still perpetuating and increasing shortage of nurses within the Pakistani healthcare system.

The present study solely highlights nurses’ perspectives on redefining gender roles and gender integration within the nursing profession. It argues that there is a need for positive portrayals in the media for the removal of public misperceptions related to nursing. This would reduce the shortage of nurses along with increasing retention and improving the quality of healthcare delivered to the public.

The nursing workforce has faced a variety of socio-cultural challenges which have substantially changed its status [ 1 , 2 ]. Florence Nightingale, mother of the nursing profession, focused on working in a traditional caring practice, calling womanhood for maintaining harmony in prescribed societal moral values [ 3 ]. However, thousands of minority women who played the role like doing more with less, have downplayed the image of the nursing to sisterhood only [ 4 ]. Socio-cultural boundaries have affected the nursing profession, as it has been described in studies from Iran [ 5 ] and Spain, where also the strong influence of gender roles has been identified [ 6 ]. The media continues to portray stereotypical images of nurses being angels of mercy or sexy nurses [ 7 – 9 ]. Hindus believe that female nurses will not receive marriage proposals because they perform night duties and handle male patients [ 10 ].

In Pakistan, the inferior status of the nursing profession is related to a variety of stigmas because of its negative portrayal by the media [ 11 ], interacting with and touching male patients while caring [ 12 ], gender roles distribution on identity basis, and crossing social boundaries in the spotlight of Purdha [ 13 ], the religious and social practice of female seclusion among Muslim communities. All of these stigmas are intensifying the decrease in nurse-to-patient ratio [ 14 , 15 ].

In this study, the theory of gender performativity developed by Butler [ 16 ] and Le Blanc [ 17 ] was applied, along with the concept of objectification, in order to highlight this performativity and uncover its linkage to the situated identity of nurses within the given social context. This theory emphasizes the constructed identity of nurses which they have gained through their performativity of specific behaviours by following the virtue script of femininity. This results in a closure of culturally conditioned norms [ 17 ] and causes gender inequality for male nurses. The stereotypical portrayal and objectification of nursing [ 18 ] has placed nurses in a subservient position to physicians and compelled them to give their emotional and physical labour to others, which has devalued the image of the nursing profession. The social and moral dilemma of receiving unflattering descriptions [ 19 ] are reasons for a possible loss of self-belief, which affects the delivery of high-quality healthcare.

The present study aims to explore the social and cultural challenges affecting the image of the nursing profession, changing nurses’ perceptions and causing a shortage of nurses in clinical practice within the context of Lahore (Punjab), Pakistan. This study is significant, because it identifies the current status of nursing profession solely from nurses’ perspectives about their clinical experiences. The positive depiction of nursing profession to general public through media will remove socio-cultural stigmas of stereotypical image. Gender integration in nursing would increase acceptance of male nurses within nursing profession. In addition, it will ultimately reduce gender gaps in this profession. By redefining gender roles in caring practice from motherhood to an innovative profession, it would improve quality of healthcare and remove disparities of its public image. Such issues are very relevant and demand highlighting the problems of recruitment and retention in nursing profession.

A qualitative research approach was applied. Twelve one-to-one, in-depth interviews – each of them lasting about 90 min – were conducted until saturation point was reached. The interviews were based on a semi-structured interview guide, which was developed for this study (Additional file 1 ). The foremost questions of this study were: What kind of social challenges shape the image of nursing profession? What are the cultural issues for nursing profession which are affecting its image? What are the perceptions that prevail for nurses and nursing profession from a religious perspective? What type of gender differences and traditional values exist altering the status of the nursing profession? How is media portraying the image of the nursing profession? Furthermore, the prompt and subsidiary interrogation was part of the interview guide in order to clarify responses.

Participant recruitment

Three government hospitals were selected for the recruitment of study participants, because they are large public and teaching hospitals for nursing students and professionals in Lahore. Recruitment was based on purposive sampling. Study participants were recruited after we approached the senior authorities, including members of the research board and medical and nursing superintendents. Study participants included registered staff nurses, head nurses and deputy chief nursing superintendents from the emergency department, intensive care unit, and administration. Nurses of different ranks were considered suitable for interviewing due to their practical experience and sound knowledge of the supervision and training of nurses, and their continuous day-to-day interactions with clients [ 20 ]. All the nursing professionals had studied and worked most of the time in Pakistan (Table  1 ). Interviews were conducted within an eight-week period between September and November 2018.

Demographic profile of nursing professionals

NursesQualificationNumber of participantsAverage years of experience
Staff nursesDiplomas45 years
Head nursesDiplomas + specialty410 years
Deputy chief nursing superintendentDiplomas + post-graduation418 years

Data analysis

The interviews were recorded and translated verbatim into the English language [ 21 ]. Data analysis was conducted using the software package NVivo 12 Plus. We used a thematic analysis, in which transcribed data was added to form common codes by combing point of commonality. Data analysis went through the stages of compiling 1) nodes, 2) leading nodes, and then 3) common themes. Table  2 explains the process of data analysis. We used an iterative process, in which similar nodes and leading nodes were organised after the interviews with the first three participants. Further interviews with participants four to ten consolidated the same nodes. At this point, no new information was forthcoming. The last two interviews were organised to make sure the point of saturation about common themes had been reached.

Nodes, leading nodes, and common themes of socio-cultural challenges

NodesLeading nodesCommon themes
Assigned roles of men and women within society, for women motherhood and man bread earnerGender roles on basis of gender identitySegregated identity as a male and female nurse
Nurses are hard, dirty and rudeSilent voicesNegative image and inappropriate portrayal in media
Performing night duties outside home with male colleaguesNot reputable professionIssues around marriage settlement
Religious families want to attend their clients form preferably female nursesCultural stigmasIdentity from religious perspective

The present study describes the nurses’ point of view about the social and cultural challenges that they may face while creating their professional image. Traditional historical aspects of nursing indicate that the occupation embodies universal characteristics of the feminine. The results of this study revealed four key themes that emerged from the thematic analysis, which are interlinked with themes and sub-themes [ 22 ] relating to the social and cultural challenges facing the nursing profession: 1) gender-segregated profession, 2) inappropriate portrayals by the media, 3) issues around marriage settlement, and 4) identity from a religious perspective (Table  3 ).

Themes and sub-themes of social and cultural challenges in nursing

ThemesSub-themes
1. Gender-segregated profession

•Less acceptance or opportunities for male nurses

•Only feminine profession

2. Inappropriate portrayal in media

•Low profile professional as subordinate to doctors

•Portraying in caring role but not skillful professionals

3. Issues around marriage settlement

•Rejection, leave job or hide identity for marriage proposal

•Second class citizen belongs to less educated families

4. Identity from religious perspective

•Touching male clients in caring work makes nurses impure

•Concept of seclusion of women from the sight of male

Gender-segregated profession

The first theme that emerged from the study findings was segregation of nursing professionals on basis of their gender identity. Muslim societies mainly give preference to female nurses to care for their patients [ 23 ]. Butler [ 24 ] argued that the concept of a “natural sex” predates socialisation, which is the basis for being gendered. In patriarchal societies, it is obligatory for women to fulfil the needs of men [ 25 ], which perpetuates strict adherence to gendered roles. If men shuffle their role performance with female roles, their gender-identity gets lost with their pre-defined notions of manhood [ 26 ]. A staff nurse summarized this aspect as follows:

My female friend’s brother does not consider nurses to be good professionals – neither male nor female nurses. His point of view about nursing professionals is no more positive. I wish he would marry a nurse so he could understand their situations and how the judgement of societies is purely based on cultural stigmas. (Participant 8)

Inappropriate portrayals in the media

The study results illuminate another important theme related to the visibility and portrayals of the nursing profession in the media. The media disseminates a stereotypical image of nurses, along with the concept of objectification, which involves ignoring a person’s intellectual capacities only because of her gender identity. The public objectifies female nurses as handmaidens of doctors and to provide pleasure for their sexualized gaze. Buresh, Gordon and Bell [ 27 ] explained in their book “From Silence to Voice: the Truth about Nursing” that a key cause of the global nursing shortage is the lack of real respect for nurses, which devalues the nursing profession on the basis on performativity [ 24 ]. A ward head nurse from the intensive care unit, with 12 years of work experience, said:

I remember a drama serial called “Nurse” that was aired during my childhood. The image of nurses was that they took money from patients’ relatives for the sake of their poor families. The story of this drama was about kidnapping a newborn by a nurse for the sake of money. (Participant 5)

Issues around marriage settlement

Marriage settlements for nurses in this society also emerged as a challenge. The intimate nature of the nursing profession violates the social and cultural taboos in relation to bodily contact [ 28 ]. The public uses derogatory slang for nurses, such as calling them “sleeping pills” for physicians. Butler [ 29 ] explained the implications of language, which can be manipulated and used as a source of power in patriarchal culture. In this way, speech acts on women’s bodies as on a passive medium, in such a way that, in nursing, public slang leads to a sense of unsatisfactory performance. A head nurse with 12 years of work experience commented:

My former partner broke off our engagement just because I wanted to continue within the nursing profession. Now my present partner does not want me to continue further with my job in nursing. He wants me to leave this profession and join another. And just to satisfy him, I am studying a Master of Science in Psychology besides my nursing job. (Participant 9)

Identity from a religious perspective

The final theme emerging from the study results was the social identity of nurses from a religious perspective. Muslim societies stigmatise nurses for their interactions with male patients [ 12 ]. Within the nursing profession, the natural touching of bodies and patient privacy is an integral part of the nurse–patient interaction, regardless of culture. Butler [ 19 ] explained that gendering is a way to mark persons as subjects deserving of respect. Something strange happens to women, turning them into objects because of their feminine identity. In Catholicism and Islam, the covering of the female head signifies humility, submissiveness and dutifulness, and the nurse’s uniform also shapes a negative stereotypical image of their gendered, grounded nature within a dominant organisational culture [ 30 ]. A deputy chief nursing superintendent shared her experience of 18 years in the following way:

I had the experience of attending a male patient who belongs to a religious family. His wife said to me: “I am very much worried about Pakistani nurses; how will you protect yourself on the day of Akhrat (The Day of Judgment)?” (Participant 10)

The current study aimed to explore nurses’ perceptions about challenges that they might have faced during their clinical experience as they progress from being a student nurse to professional nurse. This has revealed very thought-provoking findings and points to the needs to discuss the situated identity of nursing [ 31 ]. These experiences explain why increasing numbers of nurses still hold the intention to leave their jobs, which is causing severe skills shortages in Pakistan.

Socio-cultural norms have reinforced the concept of gender-based segregation on the basis of role assignment. This has caused less acceptance of male nurses, because society does not consider nursing a suitable profession for men. The inherent qualities, traditional household roles, and fundamental nature of work are preferable characteristics that adhere to female nurses only. The gendered context is the construction of an identity of a person which is highly relevant to the division of labour work on behalf of performativity. In patriarchal societies, the continuous observance of gender roles denies the entry of men into female-dominated professions, but when men do come to join the nursing profession, they cannot sustain their prevailing role of hegemonic masculinity [ 26 ].

The presence of male nurses in the healthcare system changed over time. On the one hand, male nursing is beneficial for sharing the burden of duties, workload and gender balance within the profession. But on the other hand, male nurses are seen as separate identities in this feminine domain, which results in feelings of isolation and affirms their sense of not belonging or being acknowledged as part of the profession [ 32 ]. Gul [ 11 ] explained that the gender of nurses and the nature of nurses’ work both affect the image of the nursing profession and depict a scene of domestic doing that relates to femininity only. Professional identity may be highly relevant to female nurses and occupational career assessment may be highly relevant to male nurses [ 33 ]. If a man chooses nursing as a profession, then his motive will be to earn money as the breadwinner of his family. Boughn [ 34 ] explained that male nurses tend to place more importance on salary.

Media portrayals are not accurate about physical appearance, dress codes or doctor–nurse relationships. This is shown in the very stereotypical media portrayal of low-profile professionals. The on-screen representations of female nurses are characterised by their overestimation of the profession’s foundations, whereas male nurses are presented very rarely in the nursing profession [ 35 ]. An examination of 36,000 feature films highlighted that, in these films, nurses were depicted as self-sacrificing, strong and confident professionals in early times. The most popular medical dramas and television shows, like ER and Grey’s Anatomy [ 27 ], offered audiences the chance to learn very little about nurses, because physicians were portrayed as the dominant and appreciated health professionals in the medical field, whereas nurses were defined to play their subservient roles.

Studies explained that the nursing profession has partly influenced their invisibility in media by themselves for not raising their silent voices. The mass media image of nursing transformed its professional status from cliché to provocative vocation of female which is continuously damaging the public perceptions. For that reason, nursing professionals do not understand their position with respect to their profession and do not recommend others to join nursing as a career. Their reshaped conflicted identity receives less recognition of more powerful roles, because they have not been considered as autonomous healthcare providers or advocates of the clients. Rather, they are only seen as care workers within patriarchal organizational systems who are just working as competent machines of dominant physician [ 36 , 37 ].

In this study, most of the nursing professionals shared stories about facing issues around marriage settlement, because of the nature of nurses’ work and working environment. Nurses usually are not preferable choices for men in terms of marriage and face difficulties in finding life partners. This is due to their night shifts in hospitals as well as negative perceptions about nurse-doctor interactions and gender mixing at the workplace. Nurses’ work has been described in negative terms such as hard, dirty, and with minimal chances of marriage and family, as well as low paid [ 38 ]. Nurses who want to continue with their job after marriage are usually mounted by their husbands to discontinue their job. This results in less satisfaction of work performance in delivering healthcare.

Society does not give due regard to nurses and they have to face rejection in marriage proposals. Sometimes marriage settlement agreements include the conditions that they must either leave the nursing profession or not be accepted for marriage [ 39 ]. Hiding their professional nursing identity is one of the cultural practices employed by nurses to save the honour of their family and to receive social support. Nurses do not often recommend others to join their profession, unless they do so for the salary and get remuneration for their work as economic support.

The current study also collected information about nurses’ perspectives on religious aspects which is a cornerstone of this profession and influences nurses’ attitudes during nurse-client human interaction. Religious considerations are important in terms of the process of caring for and touching male patients during clinical practice. In Western societies, religion does not always have much influence upon people’s attitudes as it does from an Islamic perspective. The learned touching behaviour is the foundation of nursing, but this can be significantly changed by the nurses’ socio-cultural background and practice in nursing school [ 40 ].

Physical touch in nursing brings humanity and compassion in work patterns of care-oriented tasks. It provides emotional containment and empowers clients’ wellness. Nurse’s try to reduce caring tasks on their male clients to reduce the time of physical touching, although handling patients’ bodies has been labelled as the essence of the nurses’ role [ 41 ], but in Pakistani culture many dilemmas exist in society because people consider nurses to be impure from a religious point of view as they have to touch male patients and perform night duties outside the home. This crosses cultural boundaries of mobility and modesty and becomes a confusing puzzle for social fabrication of society [ 42 ].

Limitations

The overall limitations linked with qualitative research also apply to the interpretation of this study. One might expect that the study population is quite selective, as respondents have been recruited from large public and teaching hospitals. Furthermore, their willingness to participate in the study may lead to a selection bias. For that reason, it is not clear in how far the results are generalizable. A further limitation may occur in the form of data analysis. Although a thematic analysis is based on the articulated phrases, not expressed attitudes and non-verbal information has not been included. Religious practices and beliefs play a major role in perceptions and practices in the study region. Therefore, these aspects may have influenced the perceptions and reports of the study participants.

The current research has provided relevant insights into the interviewed nurses’ perceptions about the challenges they face due to gender discrimination, negative portrayals in the media, marital issues, and religious identity. These challenges, which the nurses had faced throughout their careers, from being a student nurse to their time as nursing professionals, caused inequalities for male nurses. For that reason, it has become a stigma which prohibits men from joining the nursing profession. Improper representation in the media of nurses being low-profile professionals, handmaidens to doctors, and tools of emotional gratification for the public has had negative implications for the image of the nursing profession. Adopting behaviour of having both overt and covert identities in order to meet the set standards of society for marriage settlements, to quit nursing or to not perform night duties on male patients ultimately means losing one’s self-identity as a professional. To overcome these challenges, there is a need to focus on adopting professionalism and boosting the silent voices of nurses through the media. The results may have implications on the nursing practice itself, but also on nursing education in particular, as more men are willing to be employed in the nursing profession.

Supplementary information

Acknowledgements.

We acknowledge support of the publication fee by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and the Open Access Publication Funds of Bielefeld University.

Authors’ contributions

The interviews were part of the PhD thesis conducted by SA. SA conducted data collection and analysis, RZ supervised this process. SA drafted the manuscript, RZ and FF revised it critically for important intellectual content. All authors reviewed the final version of the manuscript. The author(s) read and approved the final manuscript.

This research received no supporting funds from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sector.

Availability of data and materials

Ethics approval and consent to participate.

Ethical approval was taken from the Institutional Board of Research and Advanced Studies, University of the Punjab, Lahore. Informed written consent was taken prior to conducting interviews.

Consent for publication

Not applicable.

Competing interests

The authors declare that there is no competing interest.

Publisher’s Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Contributor Information

Sidra Abbas, Email: moc.oohay@25ardis_rahem .

Rubeena Zakar, Email: moc.liamtoh@994aneebur .

Florian Fischer, Email: [email protected] .

Supplementary information accompanies this paper at 10.1186/s12912-020-00417-x.

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A vision for nursing in Pakistan: is the change we need possible?

Adnan Yaqoob

Assistant Professor, Lahore School of Nursing, The University of Lahore

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Adnan Yaqoob , Assistant Professor, Lahore School of Nursing, The University of Lahore, sets out his vision for the future of nursing in Pakistan

Since its inception, the nursing profession has not been given proper recognition, especially in the developing world. Although nursing has the largest healthcare workforce, its contributions to healthcare systems are not properly acknowledged. There is need to develop a vision for the nursing profession, which must reflect the practice's professional qualification. Every profession in the world is entitled to a degree of autonomy that reflects the level of education and training required to enter that profession. Similarly, nursing should also be allowed to use the full scope of its educational credentials so that it can fully benefit society.

Nurses make up the largest part of Pakistan's healthcare workforce. However, nurses in Pakistan are often undervalued and their contribution to the healthcare system at all levels is underestimated ( Chauhan, 2014 ). If we look at the various roles of nurses around the world, we come to realise that they can run clinics, they can practise as specialists in their subspecialty (such as family medicine, cardiology and maternal and child health) and they have the potential to do much more ( O'Rourke, 2013 ). Unfortunately, in Pakistan's healthcare system, the horizon for nurses has been narrowed and their roles are limited to just administering medications, providing basic hygiene care and obeying doctors' orders.

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Nursing and Midwifery Journal of Pakistan (NMJP)

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Nursing & Midwifery Journal of Pakistan (NMJP) is online, open access, peer-reviewed and quarterly publishing journal under the collaboration of Pakistan Nursing and Midwifery Council and the University of Lahore. The esteemed journal is publishing original research papers, survey papers, informative articles, case studies, conference papers, meta-analyses, comparative studies and review papers purely in the field of nursing and midwifery for the first time in history as a special issue. This issue will offer nursing and midwifery scholars, researchers, clinicians and academicians to submit their full manuscript which meets the general criteria of significance in terms of education, research and practical implication. Nursing & Midwifery Journal of Pakistan has a highly professional and skillful team for paper reviewing and quality publishing. The journal ensures the novelty and strictly follow the similarity index policy in each research manuscript before publication.

Note: NMJP is complete waive-off the submission and publication fee for all nursing and midwifery authors registered with PNMC (Pakistan Nursing and Midwifery Council), fight towards COVID-19, as this is the year of 2020 -2021 for Nurse and Midwife according to WHO.

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essay on nursing profession in pakistan

  • DOI: 10.1186/s12912-020-00417-x
  • Corpus ID: 215559033

Qualitative study of socio-cultural challenges in the nursing profession in Pakistan

  • S. Abbas , Rubeena Zakar , F. Fischer
  • Published in BMC Nursing 14 January 2020

25 Citations

Men in the service of humanity: sociocultural perceptions of the nursing profession in south africa, challenges perceived by nursing professionals in physician-centred organizations: an exploratory qualitative study., professional image of nursing and midwifery in east africa: an exploratory analysis, cultural capability in the professional care of nurses for medical tourists in iran: a qualitative study, the image of nursing perceived by the society in the covid‐19 pandemic: a cross‐sectional study, applying intersectionality to address inequalities in nursing education., socio-cultural approach in developing the quality of clinical education in the millennium era: a literature review (new paradigm), the image of nursing among nursing and other healthcare professional university students: a mixed-method study., nursing students and nurses’ recommendations aiming at improving the development of the humanistic caring competency, nurses’ experiences of horizontal hostility: a study of public sector hospitals of pakistan, 48 references, gender segregation as a benefit - a qualitative study from pakistan., the impact of gender, culture, and sexuality on mauritian nursing: nursing as a non-gendered occupational identity or masculine field qualitative study., professional nursing in iran: an overview of its historical and sociocultural framework., gender performativity in nursing; men, power and the construction of the ideal nurse, nursing as a career choice for women in pakistan., perceived ethical values by iranian nurses, saudi nursing students’ attitudes towards the nursing profession, nurses' visibility according to the perceptions of the communication professionals., predominant discourses in swedish nursing, from angels to handmaidens: changing constructions of nursing's public image in post-war britain., related papers.

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Qualitative study of socio-cultural challenges in the nursing profession in Pakistan

Affiliations.

  • 1 1Department of Gender Studies, University of the Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan.
  • 2 2Department of Public Health, University of the Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan.
  • 3 3Department of Population Medicine and Health Services Research, School of Public Health, Bielefeld University, Bielefeld, Germany.
  • 4 4Institute of Gerontological Health Services and Nursing Research, Ravensburg-Weingarten University of Applied Sciences, Weingarten, Germany.
  • PMID: 32308557
  • PMCID: PMC7147052
  • DOI: 10.1186/s12912-020-00417-x

Background: In a patriarchal social system, a women-dominated profession like nursing is mostly seen as a disempowered group due to its stereotypical image and negative connotations. The low social prestige of this profession is based on the roles typically assigned to men and women to maintain gender identity according to their performance and embodiment. The aim of this study was to explore the social and cultural challenges faced by nurses while creating their professional image within the regional context of Lahore (Punjab) in Pakistan.

Methods: A qualitative research design was chosen to conduct one-to-one, in-depth interviews with twelve nurses. Recruitment was based on purposive sampling from three large public hospitals in Lahore to learn about nurses' perceptions of social and cultural challenges in the nursing profession. A thematic analysis was conducted using the data analysis software package NVivo 12 Plus.

Results: Cultural values give preference for female nurses. We have identified four major themes related to the social and cultural challenges facing the nursing profession: 1) gender-segregated profession, 2) inappropriate portrayals by the media, 3) issues around marriage settlement, and 4) identity from a religious perspective. These conflicts are affecting the professional status and changing perceptions of nurses, who either do not choose to remain in the nursing profession or do not recommend nursing as a career option. These ongoing constraints are still perpetuating and increasing shortage of nurses within the Pakistani healthcare system.

Conclusion: The present study solely highlights nurses' perspectives on redefining gender roles and gender integration within the nursing profession. It argues that there is a need for positive portrayals in the media for the removal of public misperceptions related to nursing. This would reduce the shortage of nurses along with increasing retention and improving the quality of healthcare delivered to the public.

Keywords: Cultural challenge; Gender-segregation; Nurse; Nursing; Social challenge.

© The Author(s) 2020.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interestsThe authors declare that there is no competing interest.

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Nursing Education in Pakistan: Challenges and Trends in Degree Program

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Qualitative study of socio-cultural challenges in the nursing profession in Pakistan

  • Sidra Abbas 1 ,
  • Rubeena Zakar 2 &
  • Florian Fischer 3 , 4  

BMC Nursing volume  19 , Article number:  20 ( 2020 ) Cite this article

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In a patriarchal social system, a women-dominated profession like nursing is mostly seen as a disempowered group due to its stereotypical image and negative connotations. The low social prestige of this profession is based on the roles typically assigned to men and women to maintain gender identity according to their performance and embodiment. The aim of this study was to explore the social and cultural challenges faced by nurses while creating their professional image within the regional context of Lahore (Punjab) in Pakistan.

A qualitative research design was chosen to conduct one-to-one, in-depth interviews with twelve nurses. Recruitment was based on purposive sampling from three large public hospitals in Lahore to learn about nurses’ perceptions of social and cultural challenges in the nursing profession. A thematic analysis was conducted using the data analysis software package NVivo 12 Plus.

Cultural values give preference for female nurses. We have identified four major themes related to the social and cultural challenges facing the nursing profession: 1) gender-segregated profession, 2) inappropriate portrayals by the media, 3) issues around marriage settlement, and 4) identity from a religious perspective. These conflicts are affecting the professional status and changing perceptions of nurses, who either do not choose to remain in the nursing profession or do not recommend nursing as a career option. These ongoing constraints are still perpetuating and increasing shortage of nurses within the Pakistani healthcare system.

The present study solely highlights nurses’ perspectives on redefining gender roles and gender integration within the nursing profession. It argues that there is a need for positive portrayals in the media for the removal of public misperceptions related to nursing. This would reduce the shortage of nurses along with increasing retention and improving the quality of healthcare delivered to the public.

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The nursing workforce has faced a variety of socio-cultural challenges which have substantially changed its status [ 1 , 2 ]. Florence Nightingale, mother of the nursing profession, focused on working in a traditional caring practice, calling womanhood for maintaining harmony in prescribed societal moral values [ 3 ]. However, thousands of minority women who played the role like doing more with less, have downplayed the image of the nursing to sisterhood only [ 4 ]. Socio-cultural boundaries have affected the nursing profession, as it has been described in studies from Iran [ 5 ] and Spain, where also the strong influence of gender roles has been identified [ 6 ]. The media continues to portray stereotypical images of nurses being angels of mercy or sexy nurses [ 7 , 8 , 9 ]. Hindus believe that female nurses will not receive marriage proposals because they perform night duties and handle male patients [ 10 ].

In Pakistan, the inferior status of the nursing profession is related to a variety of stigmas because of its negative portrayal by the media [ 11 ], interacting with and touching male patients while caring [ 12 ], gender roles distribution on identity basis, and crossing social boundaries in the spotlight of Purdha [ 13 ], the religious and social practice of female seclusion among Muslim communities. All of these stigmas are intensifying the decrease in nurse-to-patient ratio [ 14 , 15 ].

In this study, the theory of gender performativity developed by Butler [ 16 ] and Le Blanc [ 17 ] was applied, along with the concept of objectification, in order to highlight this performativity and uncover its linkage to the situated identity of nurses within the given social context. This theory emphasizes the constructed identity of nurses which they have gained through their performativity of specific behaviours by following the virtue script of femininity. This results in a closure of culturally conditioned norms [ 17 ] and causes gender inequality for male nurses. The stereotypical portrayal and objectification of nursing [ 18 ] has placed nurses in a subservient position to physicians and compelled them to give their emotional and physical labour to others, which has devalued the image of the nursing profession. The social and moral dilemma of receiving unflattering descriptions [ 19 ] are reasons for a possible loss of self-belief, which affects the delivery of high-quality healthcare.

The present study aims to explore the social and cultural challenges affecting the image of the nursing profession, changing nurses’ perceptions and causing a shortage of nurses in clinical practice within the context of Lahore (Punjab), Pakistan. This study is significant, because it identifies the current status of nursing profession solely from nurses’ perspectives about their clinical experiences. The positive depiction of nursing profession to general public through media will remove socio-cultural stigmas of stereotypical image. Gender integration in nursing would increase acceptance of male nurses within nursing profession. In addition, it will ultimately reduce gender gaps in this profession. By redefining gender roles in caring practice from motherhood to an innovative profession, it would improve quality of healthcare and remove disparities of its public image. Such issues are very relevant and demand highlighting the problems of recruitment and retention in nursing profession.

A qualitative research approach was applied. Twelve one-to-one, in-depth interviews – each of them lasting about 90 min – were conducted until saturation point was reached. The interviews were based on a semi-structured interview guide, which was developed for this study (Additional file 1 ). The foremost questions of this study were: What kind of social challenges shape the image of nursing profession? What are the cultural issues for nursing profession which are affecting its image? What are the perceptions that prevail for nurses and nursing profession from a religious perspective? What type of gender differences and traditional values exist altering the status of the nursing profession? How is media portraying the image of the nursing profession? Furthermore, the prompt and subsidiary interrogation was part of the interview guide in order to clarify responses.

Participant recruitment

Three government hospitals were selected for the recruitment of study participants, because they are large public and teaching hospitals for nursing students and professionals in Lahore. Recruitment was based on purposive sampling. Study participants were recruited after we approached the senior authorities, including members of the research board and medical and nursing superintendents. Study participants included registered staff nurses, head nurses and deputy chief nursing superintendents from the emergency department, intensive care unit, and administration. Nurses of different ranks were considered suitable for interviewing due to their practical experience and sound knowledge of the supervision and training of nurses, and their continuous day-to-day interactions with clients [ 20 ]. All the nursing professionals had studied and worked most of the time in Pakistan (Table  1 ). Interviews were conducted within an eight-week period between September and November 2018.

Data analysis

The interviews were recorded and translated verbatim into the English language [ 21 ]. Data analysis was conducted using the software package NVivo 12 Plus. We used a thematic analysis, in which transcribed data was added to form common codes by combing point of commonality. Data analysis went through the stages of compiling 1) nodes, 2) leading nodes, and then 3) common themes. Table  2 explains the process of data analysis. We used an iterative process, in which similar nodes and leading nodes were organised after the interviews with the first three participants. Further interviews with participants four to ten consolidated the same nodes. At this point, no new information was forthcoming. The last two interviews were organised to make sure the point of saturation about common themes had been reached.

The present study describes the nurses’ point of view about the social and cultural challenges that they may face while creating their professional image. Traditional historical aspects of nursing indicate that the occupation embodies universal characteristics of the feminine. The results of this study revealed four key themes that emerged from the thematic analysis, which are interlinked with themes and sub-themes [ 22 ] relating to the social and cultural challenges facing the nursing profession: 1) gender-segregated profession, 2) inappropriate portrayals by the media, 3) issues around marriage settlement, and 4) identity from a religious perspective (Table  3 ).

Gender-segregated profession

The first theme that emerged from the study findings was segregation of nursing professionals on basis of their gender identity. Muslim societies mainly give preference to female nurses to care for their patients [ 23 ]. Butler [ 24 ] argued that the concept of a “natural sex” predates socialisation, which is the basis for being gendered. In patriarchal societies, it is obligatory for women to fulfil the needs of men [ 25 ], which perpetuates strict adherence to gendered roles. If men shuffle their role performance with female roles, their gender-identity gets lost with their pre-defined notions of manhood [ 26 ]. A staff nurse summarized this aspect as follows:

My female friend’s brother does not consider nurses to be good professionals – neither male nor female nurses. His point of view about nursing professionals is no more positive. I wish he would marry a nurse so he could understand their situations and how the judgement of societies is purely based on cultural stigmas. (Participant 8)

Inappropriate portrayals in the media

The study results illuminate another important theme related to the visibility and portrayals of the nursing profession in the media. The media disseminates a stereotypical image of nurses, along with the concept of objectification, which involves ignoring a person’s intellectual capacities only because of her gender identity. The public objectifies female nurses as handmaidens of doctors and to provide pleasure for their sexualized gaze. Buresh, Gordon and Bell [ 27 ] explained in their book “From Silence to Voice: the Truth about Nursing” that a key cause of the global nursing shortage is the lack of real respect for nurses, which devalues the nursing profession on the basis on performativity [ 24 ]. A ward head nurse from the intensive care unit, with 12 years of work experience, said:

I remember a drama serial called “Nurse” that was aired during my childhood. The image of nurses was that they took money from patients’ relatives for the sake of their poor families. The story of this drama was about kidnapping a newborn by a nurse for the sake of money. (Participant 5)

Issues around marriage settlement

Marriage settlements for nurses in this society also emerged as a challenge. The intimate nature of the nursing profession violates the social and cultural taboos in relation to bodily contact [ 28 ]. The public uses derogatory slang for nurses, such as calling them “sleeping pills” for physicians. Butler [ 29 ] explained the implications of language, which can be manipulated and used as a source of power in patriarchal culture. In this way, speech acts on women’s bodies as on a passive medium, in such a way that, in nursing, public slang leads to a sense of unsatisfactory performance. A head nurse with 12 years of work experience commented:

My former partner broke off our engagement just because I wanted to continue within the nursing profession. Now my present partner does not want me to continue further with my job in nursing. He wants me to leave this profession and join another. And just to satisfy him, I am studying a Master of Science in Psychology besides my nursing job. (Participant 9)

Identity from a religious perspective

The final theme emerging from the study results was the social identity of nurses from a religious perspective. Muslim societies stigmatise nurses for their interactions with male patients [ 12 ]. Within the nursing profession, the natural touching of bodies and patient privacy is an integral part of the nurse–patient interaction, regardless of culture. Butler [ 19 ] explained that gendering is a way to mark persons as subjects deserving of respect. Something strange happens to women, turning them into objects because of their feminine identity. In Catholicism and Islam, the covering of the female head signifies humility, submissiveness and dutifulness, and the nurse’s uniform also shapes a negative stereotypical image of their gendered, grounded nature within a dominant organisational culture [ 30 ]. A deputy chief nursing superintendent shared her experience of 18 years in the following way:

I had the experience of attending a male patient who belongs to a religious family. His wife said to me: “I am very much worried about Pakistani nurses; how will you protect yourself on the day of Akhrat (The Day of Judgment)?” (Participant 10)

The current study aimed to explore nurses’ perceptions about challenges that they might have faced during their clinical experience as they progress from being a student nurse to professional nurse. This has revealed very thought-provoking findings and points to the needs to discuss the situated identity of nursing [ 31 ]. These experiences explain why increasing numbers of nurses still hold the intention to leave their jobs, which is causing severe skills shortages in Pakistan.

Socio-cultural norms have reinforced the concept of gender-based segregation on the basis of role assignment. This has caused less acceptance of male nurses, because society does not consider nursing a suitable profession for men. The inherent qualities, traditional household roles, and fundamental nature of work are preferable characteristics that adhere to female nurses only. The gendered context is the construction of an identity of a person which is highly relevant to the division of labour work on behalf of performativity. In patriarchal societies, the continuous observance of gender roles denies the entry of men into female-dominated professions, but when men do come to join the nursing profession, they cannot sustain their prevailing role of hegemonic masculinity [ 26 ].

The presence of male nurses in the healthcare system changed over time. On the one hand, male nursing is beneficial for sharing the burden of duties, workload and gender balance within the profession. But on the other hand, male nurses are seen as separate identities in this feminine domain, which results in feelings of isolation and affirms their sense of not belonging or being acknowledged as part of the profession [ 32 ]. Gul [ 11 ] explained that the gender of nurses and the nature of nurses’ work both affect the image of the nursing profession and depict a scene of domestic doing that relates to femininity only. Professional identity may be highly relevant to female nurses and occupational career assessment may be highly relevant to male nurses [ 33 ]. If a man chooses nursing as a profession, then his motive will be to earn money as the breadwinner of his family. Boughn [ 34 ] explained that male nurses tend to place more importance on salary.

Media portrayals are not accurate about physical appearance, dress codes or doctor–nurse relationships. This is shown in the very stereotypical media portrayal of low-profile professionals. The on-screen representations of female nurses are characterised by their overestimation of the profession’s foundations, whereas male nurses are presented very rarely in the nursing profession [ 35 ]. An examination of 36,000 feature films highlighted that, in these films, nurses were depicted as self-sacrificing, strong and confident professionals in early times. The most popular medical dramas and television shows, like ER and Grey’s Anatomy [ 27 ], offered audiences the chance to learn very little about nurses, because physicians were portrayed as the dominant and appreciated health professionals in the medical field, whereas nurses were defined to play their subservient roles.

Studies explained that the nursing profession has partly influenced their invisibility in media by themselves for not raising their silent voices. The mass media image of nursing transformed its professional status from cliché to provocative vocation of female which is continuously damaging the public perceptions. For that reason, nursing professionals do not understand their position with respect to their profession and do not recommend others to join nursing as a career. Their reshaped conflicted identity receives less recognition of more powerful roles, because they have not been considered as autonomous healthcare providers or advocates of the clients. Rather, they are only seen as care workers within patriarchal organizational systems who are just working as competent machines of dominant physician [ 36 , 37 ].

In this study, most of the nursing professionals shared stories about facing issues around marriage settlement, because of the nature of nurses’ work and working environment. Nurses usually are not preferable choices for men in terms of marriage and face difficulties in finding life partners. This is due to their night shifts in hospitals as well as negative perceptions about nurse-doctor interactions and gender mixing at the workplace. Nurses’ work has been described in negative terms such as hard, dirty, and with minimal chances of marriage and family, as well as low paid [ 38 ]. Nurses who want to continue with their job after marriage are usually mounted by their husbands to discontinue their job. This results in less satisfaction of work performance in delivering healthcare.

Society does not give due regard to nurses and they have to face rejection in marriage proposals. Sometimes marriage settlement agreements include the conditions that they must either leave the nursing profession or not be accepted for marriage [ 39 ]. Hiding their professional nursing identity is one of the cultural practices employed by nurses to save the honour of their family and to receive social support. Nurses do not often recommend others to join their profession, unless they do so for the salary and get remuneration for their work as economic support.

The current study also collected information about nurses’ perspectives on religious aspects which is a cornerstone of this profession and influences nurses’ attitudes during nurse-client human interaction. Religious considerations are important in terms of the process of caring for and touching male patients during clinical practice. In Western societies, religion does not always have much influence upon people’s attitudes as it does from an Islamic perspective. The learned touching behaviour is the foundation of nursing, but this can be significantly changed by the nurses’ socio-cultural background and practice in nursing school [ 40 ].

Physical touch in nursing brings humanity and compassion in work patterns of care-oriented tasks. It provides emotional containment and empowers clients’ wellness. Nurse’s try to reduce caring tasks on their male clients to reduce the time of physical touching, although handling patients’ bodies has been labelled as the essence of the nurses’ role [ 41 ], but in Pakistani culture many dilemmas exist in society because people consider nurses to be impure from a religious point of view as they have to touch male patients and perform night duties outside the home. This crosses cultural boundaries of mobility and modesty and becomes a confusing puzzle for social fabrication of society [ 42 ].

Limitations

The overall limitations linked with qualitative research also apply to the interpretation of this study. One might expect that the study population is quite selective, as respondents have been recruited from large public and teaching hospitals. Furthermore, their willingness to participate in the study may lead to a selection bias. For that reason, it is not clear in how far the results are generalizable. A further limitation may occur in the form of data analysis. Although a thematic analysis is based on the articulated phrases, not expressed attitudes and non-verbal information has not been included. Religious practices and beliefs play a major role in perceptions and practices in the study region. Therefore, these aspects may have influenced the perceptions and reports of the study participants.

The current research has provided relevant insights into the interviewed nurses’ perceptions about the challenges they face due to gender discrimination, negative portrayals in the media, marital issues, and religious identity. These challenges, which the nurses had faced throughout their careers, from being a student nurse to their time as nursing professionals, caused inequalities for male nurses. For that reason, it has become a stigma which prohibits men from joining the nursing profession. Improper representation in the media of nurses being low-profile professionals, handmaidens to doctors, and tools of emotional gratification for the public has had negative implications for the image of the nursing profession. Adopting behaviour of having both overt and covert identities in order to meet the set standards of society for marriage settlements, to quit nursing or to not perform night duties on male patients ultimately means losing one’s self-identity as a professional. To overcome these challenges, there is a need to focus on adopting professionalism and boosting the silent voices of nurses through the media. The results may have implications on the nursing practice itself, but also on nursing education in particular, as more men are willing to be employed in the nursing profession.

Availability of data and materials

Pseudonymised transcripts are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.

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Acknowledgements

We acknowledge support of the publication fee by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and the Open Access Publication Funds of Bielefeld University.

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Sidra Abbas

Department of Public Health, University of the Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan

Rubeena Zakar

Department of Population Medicine and Health Services Research, School of Public Health, Bielefeld University, Bielefeld, Germany

Florian Fischer

Institute of Gerontological Health Services and Nursing Research, Ravensburg-Weingarten University of Applied Sciences, Weingarten, Germany

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The interviews were part of the PhD thesis conducted by SA. SA conducted data collection and analysis, RZ supervised this process. SA drafted the manuscript, RZ and FF revised it critically for important intellectual content. All authors reviewed the final version of the manuscript. The author(s) read and approved the final manuscript.

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Abbas, S., Zakar, R. & Fischer, F. Qualitative study of socio-cultural challenges in the nursing profession in Pakistan. BMC Nurs 19 , 20 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12912-020-00417-x

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Importance Of Nursing Profession In Pakistan

Importance Of Nursing Profession In Pakistan

Nurses care for the injured and the sick, and their services are well-recognized and appreciated. For this reason, nursing is a profession that is growing in popularity around the world. With the growing demand for professional nurses, this profession has emerged as a critical component of the healthcare and medical sectors.

Nursing is becoming more popular in Pakistan, as it is in other countries, particularly among female students. Part of this is due to the increased demand for healthcare services, but it is also due to the fact that nursing is, without a doubt, a noble profession.

If you’re a student considering a career as a nurse in Pakistan , this blog is a must-read. It will tell you about the importance of nursing in Pakistan.

Table of Contents

Nursing Scope: Specifically in Pakistan

The ever-expanding scope of nursing is all about improving healthcare practices on a daily basis. Without a doubt, the role of nurses in hospitals is critical, whether it is assisting doctors or responsibly caring for patients’ general health. Nurses have good pay scales for this. However, in Pakistan, the grade scale for nursing is dependent on several factors, such as the university you graduated from, your level of expertise, etc.

Every year, a large number of nursing graduates are hired in public and private hospitals, and the demand has only grown in recent years. Consider yourself fortunate if you want to pursue a degree in Nursing. The scope of medical laboratory technology in Pakistan is expanding, and diagnostic centers are springing up all over the country. As a result of this, the scope of nursing is expanding as more nurses, along with medical technologists, are needed for diagnosis. Nursing programs are now available at a number of private and public universities.

What Options Are There For Nursing Graduates?

After completing a nursing degree, you will have a variety of career options. Some of them are as follows:

●     Medical helper at an old age home

●     Superintendent at a nursing hospital

●     Forensic Nurse

●     Nursing Lecturer

●     Healthcare Researcher

●     Nurse Supervisor

●     Professor of Nursing

●     Nursing Administrator

Industries That Recruit Nurses In Pakistan:

Nurses’ work may vary depending on the nature of their job, but their primary role remains the same: to serve as health care facilitators. Furthermore, as the scope of public health in Pakistan expands, the system requires health care specialists. Several private and public sectors require nurses for a variety of positions. The following are some of the top industries that hire nurses:

●     Medical institutes

●     Orphanages

●     Schools

●     Hospitals

●     Clinics

●     Nursing homes

●     Training institutes

●     Military

●     Factories

If you’re a recent graduate, you can choose from any of these segments.

A Nurse Salary in Pakistan

Nursing salaries in Pakistan vary depending on a variety of factors such as your experience and qualifications. In Pakistan, the average nursing salary ranges between Rs.40,000 and Rs.60,000. This is also determined by the university/institute and the skills you’ve acquired.

Is the profession valued in Pakistan?

If you want to be a nurse but are unsure whether the profession is valued in Pakistan, you should know that nursing is respected in Pakistan. Also, the scope is constantly expanding as the demand for nurses grows. Nursing is a highly significant career path if you are motivated to pursue a great career in the healthcare industry.

To Wrap Up:

Pakistani nurses are in high demand in other countries as well. If you choose nursing as a career, you will have the opportunity to work in prestigious hospitals and clinics. You will eventually be able to focus on a specialization.

Profession is valued in Pakistan you should know that nursing is respeçt in Pakistan thanks

you welcome

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  6. A vision for nursing in Pakistan: is the change we need possible?

    Abstract. Adnan Yaqoob, Assistant Professor, Lahore School of Nursing, The University of Lahore, sets out his vision for the future of nursing in Pakistan. Since its inception, the nursing profession has not been given proper recognition, especially in the developing world. Although nursing has the largest healthcare workforce, its ...

  7. Nursing Education in Pakistan, Trends and Challenges of Future

    Nursing profession is the key partner of health care industry which going through transformational changes considering diverse needs arise from the society and population in which it should be practiced. A diverse complex of political, economic, socio-cultural and environmental factor is directly affect profession through numerous routes. Therefore, existing status along with trends and ...

  8. PDF Transformation in Nursing Education in Pakistan : Challenges and Way

    Transformation in Nursing Education. 3. Among the most important health-related factors that impact health care in Pakistan includes: Demographic changes. Health transition and demographic trap. Technological advancement. Level of patient knowledge and decision making. Complexity of care. Emergence of new nursing sciences like quality assurance ...

  9. Current situation and challenges concerning nursing education in

    Education, Medicine. 2017. TLDR. The study concludes that student's theoretical knowledge is better than the training performance in the nursing department, and the faculty at the clinical setting is not up to the standard that can decrease the theory and practice gap and enhance the nursing student's performance.

  10. Nursing Education in Pakistan, Trends and Challenges of Future

    Nursing profession is the key partner of health care industry which going through transformational changes considering diverse needs arise from the society and population in which it should be practiced. ... existing status along with trends and challenges should be consider while planning future direction of nursing education in Pakistan ...

  11. Nursing Education in Pakistan: Challenges and Trends in Degree Program

    Nursing education in Pakistan has transferring from three years diploma to BSc Nursing, and degree. will be minimum quali cation for bed side practice till 2020. Numbers of nursing institutes o ...

  12. A vision for nursing in Pakistan: is the change we need possible?

    Adnan Yaqoob , Assistant Professor, Lahore School of Nursing, The University of Lahore, sets out his vision for the future of nursing in Pakistan. Br J Nurs . 2020 Jan 9;29(1):70-72. doi: 10.12968/bjon.2020.29.1.70.

  13. Current situation and challenges concerning nursing education in Pakistan

    The PNC was founded in 1948, and the first nursing curriculum was formed in 1973. Nursing education has changed greatly since it was first introduced (Younas et al., 2019a). The Nursing Faculty ...

  14. PDF Future Direction of Nursing Education in Pakistani Context

    In Pakistan nursing profession is gaining attraction because it deals with the increasing demands of health problems. Chronic diseases, prolongation of old ages (geriatric care) and increasing demands of nursing service become integral part of ... papers were evaluated to discuss the strategies and future direction of nursing education in ...

  15. Nursing and Midwifery Journal

    Click Here to access the main page of NMJP. Call for Paper at: [email protected]. Submission Deadline: 10th February 2021. Nursing & Midwifery Journal of Pakistan (NMJP) is online, open access, peer-reviewed and quarterly publishing journal under the collaboration of Pakistan Nursing and Midwifery Council and the University of Lahore.

  16. Qualitative study of socio-cultural challenges in the nursing

    DOI: 10.1186/s12912-020-00417-x Corpus ID: 215559033; Qualitative study of socio-cultural challenges in the nursing profession in Pakistan @article{Abbas2020QualitativeSO, title={Qualitative study of socio-cultural challenges in the nursing profession in Pakistan}, author={S. M. Shariq Abbas and Rubeena Zakar and Florian Fischer}, journal={BMC Nursing}, year={2020}, volume={19}, url={https ...

  17. PDF Qualitative study of socio-cultural challenges in the nursing profession in

    The present study aims to explore the social and cul-tural challenges affecting the image of the nursing pro-fession, changing nurses perceptions and causing a. '. shortage of nurses in clinical practice within the context of Lahore (Punjab), Pakistan.

  18. Nurse leader empowerment, challenges and coping strategies among

    The overwhelming feeling of being oppressed shatters nurses' confidence and self-esteem and hinders their growth and development of the profession as well.Methods: To guide professional growth and empowerment of nursing in Pakistan, a qualitative descriptive study was aimed to discover challenges, strategies and outcomes of empowerment of ...

  19. Nursing: A Profession in Need in Pakistan

    Abstract. The objective of the review is to focus on the need of nursing profession and challenges faced by nurses in Pakistan while persuading nursing career as their profession. A systematic ...

  20. Qualitative study of socio-cultural challenges in the nursing

    The present study solely highlights nurses' perspectives on redefining gender roles and gender integration within the nursing profession. It argues that there is a need for positive portrayals in the media for the removal of public misperceptions related to nursing. ... 1 1Department of Gender Studies, University of the Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan ...

  21. (PDF) Nursing Education in Pakistan: Challenges and Trends in Degree

    Academia.edu is a platform for academics to share research papers. Nursing Education in Pakistan: Challenges and Trends in Degree Program ... No. 4 62 Pakistan. Journal of Professional Nursing, 25(4), 240-248. 9. Ryan, M. E., & Hodson, K. E. (1992). Employer evaluations of nurse graduates: a critical program assessment element. The Journal of ...

  22. Qualitative study of socio-cultural challenges in the nursing

    The nursing workforce has faced a variety of socio-cultural challenges which have substantially changed its status [1, 2].Florence Nightingale, mother of the nursing profession, focused on working in a traditional caring practice, calling womanhood for maintaining harmony in prescribed societal moral values [].However, thousands of minority women who played the role like doing more with less ...

  23. Importance Of Nursing Profession In Pakistan

    Nursing is becoming more popular in Pakistan, as it is in other countries, particularly among female students. Part of this is due to the increased demand for healthcare services, but it is also due to the fact that nursing is, without a doubt, a noble profession. If you're a student considering a career as a nurse in Pakistan, this blog is a ...