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The Truth About Nursing Decade Awards

Best and Worst Media Portrayals of Nursing 2010-2019

These awards have since been updated — we inadvertently left nine awards off the original list. Please click here for the updated awards. Thank you.

January 9, 2020

See the press release

The Best

Television

Best series

Newcomer award

Best nurse to superheroes

Film

Feature films

Documentaries

Reporting

Articles and short features

Long-form features

Coverage of nurse innovators

Public health advocacy by nurses

Activities that promote better understanding of nursing

Radio shows

Kids' books

Most Improved

 

The Worst

Television

Film

Reporting

Attacks on APRNs

Failure to recognize nursing autonomy

Abuse of the founder of modern nursing's name

Attacks on school nurses

Naughty nurse stereotyping

All out warfare on nurses award

These awards have since been updated — we inadvertently left nine awards off the original list. Please click here for the updated awards. Thank you.

  • Best Media Portrayals of Nursing 2010-2019
  •  

  • Best Portrayal of Nursing in a Television Series 2010-2019
  • Call the Midwife, (2012-present)

    Created by Heidi Thomas, from a memoir by Jennifer Worth; Heidi Thomas and Pippa Harris, executive producers; BBC and PBS.

    For a long-running drama that portrayed skilled, autonomous nurse-midwives delivering babies and providing a wide range of effective care to poor patients in 1950s and 1960s London.

  • Call the Midwife
  • Nurse Jackie, (2009-2015)

    Created by Evan Dunsky and Liz Brixius & Linda Wallem; executive producers Linda Wallem, Liz Brixius, Christine Zander, Mark Hudis, Caryn Mandabach, Richie Jackson, Clyde Phillips, Tom Straw, Liz Flahive; Showtime.

    For a dark comedy featuring substance-abusing emergency nurse Jackie Peyton and her protégé Zoey Barkow as fierce and resourceful patient advocates, providing expert holistic care to patients in New York City.

  • Nurse Jackie
  • Mercy (2009-2010)

    Created by Liz Heldens; executive producers Gail Berman, Lloyd Braun, Liz Heldens, Gretchen Berg, and Aaron Harberts; NBC.

    For a drama with nurse Veronica Callahan, a troubled Iraq War veteran, ably leading a crew of Jersey City hospital nurses who displayed strong psychosocial skills and fought for patients in innovative ways.

  • Veronica on Mercy

     

    Promising Newcomer Award

    • Bob and AbisholaBob Hearts Abishola

      Created and executive produced by Eddie Gorodetsky, Alan J. Higgins, Chuck Lorre, and Gina Yashere; CBS.

      For a new sitcom featuring the skilled, no-nonsense nurse Abishola, originally from Nigeria, who receives romantic attention from an earnest compression sock company owner named Bob after he has a heart attack.

     

    Best Nurse to Superheroes Award

    • Claire TempleClaire Temple, Marvel Studios

      The Temple character appeared in the Marvel Television shows Luke Cage, Daredevil, The Defenders, Iron Fist, and Jessica Jones, created by Cheo Hodari Coker, Dave Goddard, Douglas Petrie, Marco Ramirez, Scott Buck, and Melissa Rosenberg; Executive Producers Stan Lee, Jeph Loeb, Jim Chory, Alan Fine, Joe Quesada, Alison Engel, Dan Buckley, Allie Goss, Kris Henigman, and Cindy Holland; Netflix.

      For featuring nurse Claire Temple, a tough problem-solver who operated with autonomy and no apparent fear in providing skilled care to Marvel heroes in highly stressful situations.

     

  • Best Portrayal of Nursing in Film 2010-2019
  • Best feature film 2010-2019

    • BayMaxBig Hero 6

      Written by Jordan Roberts, Daniel Gerson, Robert L. Baird, directed by Don Hall and Chris Williams; Disney.

      For an animated adventure, a kind of Guardians of Silicon Valley, that featured a heroic robot "nurse" with diverse problem-solving skills, a vast knowledge of health care, and a persistent holistic focus. 

    These awards have since been updated — we inadvertently left nine awards off the original list. Please click here for the updated awards. Thank you.

     

    Best documentary

    • Carolyn JonesThe American Nurse

      Carolyn Jones, director and executive producer, Lisa Frank, executive producer; Diginext Films.

      For a fine feature-length documentary, based on the director's 2012 book of portraits, that profiled five nurses in practice settings including home health, a prison hospice, outpatient care of military veterans, and hospital labor and delivery.

    These awards have since been updated — we inadvertently left nine awards off the original list. Please click here for the updated awards. Thank you.

     

  • Best Reporting on Nursing 2010-2019
  • Best news articles and short features about nursing 2010-2019

  • Allana Akhtar, Business Insider

    For numerous helpful stories about the challenges nursing faces today, including articles in 2019 with the following dates and subjects:
    Dec 5 — worst states to be an NP;
    Nov 26 — nursing expertise that patients should know about;
    Oct 31 — naughty nurse costumes;
    Sep 20 — a strike by nurses in four states;
    Sep 16 — appointment of a dentist as interim director of the National Institute of Nursing Research;
    Aug 21 — a day in the life of a nurse;
    Aug 20 — nurse suicides;
    July 15 — the best part of being a nurse;
    May 24 — the toughest part of being a nurse;
    May 15 — calling all nurses: talk to me!
    Note to nurses: Pitch reporter Allana Akhtar stories — she is interested in nursing!

  • Allan Akhtar
  • Tina Rosenberg, The New York Times

    For articles explaining the value of the work of advanced practice registered nurses: "The Family Doctor, Minus the M.D.," October 24, 2012, and "In Delivery Rooms, Reducing Births of Convenience," May 7, 2014, New York Times.

  • Tina Rosenberg
  • Julia Bucher, The New York Times, July 3, 2013

    For "Advice for Caregivers of Relatives With Cancer," "Ask an Expert" column, a long piece in which the nursing professor and advanced practice nurse gave practical, sensitive advice about many aspects of coping with cancer.

  • Julia Bucher
  • Jeneen Interlandi, New York Times, May 27, 2019

    For "Nurses Know the Human Costs of Care. That's Why Many Want 'Medicare for All,'" an op-ed explaining why many nurses support efforts to expand Medicare coverage.

  • Jeneed Interlandi
  • Rebecca Tan, Washington Post, September 20, 2019

    For her op-ed "Why nurses, America's most trusted professionals, are demanding 'climate justice,'" explaining how nurses are addressing problems with the Earth, as it is in a "multi-system failure."

  • Rebecca Tan
  • Trevor Wilhem, Windsor Star, November 30, 2019

    For "Ontario nurses group launches petition to get Windsor police to carry naloxone," which highlighted the advocacy of nurses at the Registered Nurses Association of Ontario for police officers to start carrying naloxone with them to prevent opioid deaths.

  • Trevor Wilhelm

     

    Best long-form journalism on nursing

  • Larissa MacFarquhar, The New Yorker, July 11 & 18, 2016.

    For "The Threshold," a compelling report describing the work of hospice nurse Heather Meyerend, who provides expert physical and psychosocial care to patients and family members in South Brooklyn.

  • Larissa MacFarquhar
  • Emily Bobrow, The New Yorker, Dec. 22, 2019.

    For "A Midwife in the North Country," an engaging article on the efforts of nurse midwife Sunday Smith to bring effective, holistic obstetric care to underserved populations in upper New York State.

  • Emily Bobrow

     

    Best coverage of nurse innovators

  • Stephen Key, Forbes, August 29, 2018.

    For "How Three Women Beat the Odds to Become Award-Winning Inventors," which spotlighted nurse Rachel Walker, who has created impressive inventions for cancer patients, and who also addressed the barriers nurses and patients face—including how to overcome them.

  • Stephen Key
  • Blake Farmer, NPR, July 22, 2019.

    For "Nurses In Tennessee Preach 'Diabetes Reversal,'" — which highlighted the community-based, holistic work of two nurses to reduce the harmful effects of diabetes.

  • Blake Farmer
  • Richard Knox, National Public Radio (NPR), January 27, 2014.

    For "Silencing Many Hospital Alarms Leads To Better Health Care," on nurses' efforts to address the alarm fatigue that takes hundreds of lives every year in the clinical setting.

  • Richard Knox
  • Stacey Burling, The Philadelphia Inquirer, April 20, 2010.

    For the article "More nurses, less death," which addresses disputes about nurse staffing, including proposed legislative measures and research on how understaffing affects the quality of care.

  • Stacey Burling
  • Jane Elliott, BBC News, January 1, 2010.

    For "Bringing music medicine to the NHS," reporting that the Florence Nightingale School of Nursing and Midwifery in London has appointed its first "composer in residence."

  • BBC News logo

    These awards have since been updated — we inadvertently left nine awards off the original list. Please click here for the updated awards. Thank you.

     

  • Best Public Health Advocacy by Nurses 2010-2019
  • Kaci Hickox

    For her courage in advocating for humane, science-based policies regarding health workers who treat Ebola, reducing public fear and improving the treatment of those workers, including through "Her story: UTA grad isolated at New Jersey hospital in Ebola quarantine," Houston Chronicle, October 25, 2014, and "Stop calling me 'The Ebola nurse'" The Guardian, November 17, 2014.

  • Kaci Hickox
  • Three nurses for their first-person accounts of Ebola care in The Guardian piece "'A teenage girl bled to death over two days': Ebola nurses describe life and death on the frontline," October 13, 2014.

  • Bridget Mulrooney

    For explaining what it is like to be at the forefront of Ebola care;

    Bridget Mulrooney

    Sue Ellen Kovack

    For a detailed account of what nurses do in treating Ebola, including the daunting infection control procedures, as well as the experiences of Ebola patients;

    Sue Ellen Kovack

    Anine Kongelf

    For explaining the highs and lows of nurses caring for Ebola patients, emphasizing the joy when there are survivors.

    Anine Kongelf
  • Pam Cipriano

    For op-eds she wrote as president of the American Nurses Association on public health issues: "Let nurses do the ethical thing" in support of the Navy nurse who refused to force-feed prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, May 22, 2015, The Washington Post; "Antidote to Fear: Identify, Isolate and Inform" to quell the hysteria around the emerging Ebola crisis, January 12, 2015, The Huffington Post; and others 1, 2, 3).

  • Pam Cipriano
  • Theresa Brown

    For her op-eds promoting better health care policies: "Choosing How We Die," "Abortion wasn't always taboo in America," and "Ebola will elevate respect for nurses."

  • Thersa Brown
  • Mona Shattell

    For her op-ed on trucker health "Long-haul sweatshops," March 9, 2016, New York Times, and for her piece on the naughty nurse stereotype: "Hooters opens nursing school," Huffington Post, May 8, 2013. (Dr. Shattell is a member of The Truth About Nursing's advisory panel.)

  • Mona Shattell
  • Jason Jaewan Lee

    For his op-ed "Criminalizing health care professionals' mistakes dodges the real problem," Philadelphia Inquirer, February 21, 2019.

  • Jason Jaewan Lee
  • Jocelyn Anderson

    For her April 25, 2019 op-ed "This important state policy change on sexual assault care is long overdue," in the Pennsylvania Capital-Star advocating for the reversal of a Pennsylvania state policy that deprives patients of access to Sexual Assault Forensic Examiner (SAFE) nurses.

  • Jocelyn Anderson
  • Anonymous

    For the January 14, 2015 op-ed "A&E nurse: am I on the road to burnout and destruction?" published in the Guardian, a harrowing account of understaffing and other challenges of emergency nursing, including the accompanying moral distress.  

  • Anonymous

     

  • Best Activities by Nurses that Promote Better Understanding of Nursing in the Media 2010-2019
  • MarySue Heilemann

    For organizing the 2011 and 2012 conferences at UCLA to bring Hollywood and nursing together; for speaking on nursing in the media at a United Nations' forum on women and at the director's lecture at NINR; and for research on how media on nursing affects public health, including the creation of "Catalina: Confronting My Emotions," a multi-media webisode with psychotherapeutic bonus videos featuring a Latina nurse character who guides viewers to mental health resources. (Dr. Heilemann is a member of The Truth About Nursing's advisory panel.)

  • MarySue Heilemann
  • Diana Mason, Barbara Glickstein, and Kristi Westphaln

    For undertaking important research on the extent to which nurses are featured or quoted in the news media, as well as the reasons for nurses' infrequent appearances in that media, in the Woodhull Study Revisited.

  • Diana Mason, Barbara Glickstein, Krist Westphaln
  • Rodrigo Cardoso

    For his research published in books and articles, most of which are in Portuguese, but see "The exposure of the nursing profession in online and print media." (Dr. Cardoso is a member of The Truth About Nursing's advisory panel.)

  • Rodrigo Cardoso
  • Peggy Chinn and Adeline Falk-Rafael

    For their blog feature "Inspiration for Activism," which highlights the work of nurse activists, and for hosting the 2018 nursing activism conference, which inspired nurses to work together to amplify their voices.

  • Peggy Chinn, Adeline Falk-Rafael

     

  • Best Radio Shows for Nursing 2010-2019
  • Nurse radio show hostsFor nurses who are brave and articulate enough to speak on air about health care, and in doing so show society that nurses are college-educated science professionals who know what they are talking about — and who deserve respect.

     

  • Best Kids' Book for Nursing 2010-2019
  •  

  • Best Efforts to Make Amends Under Pressure Awards 2010-2019
    • Paul Krugman

      For publicly apologizing after calling nursing "menial" work in a 2017 New York Times blog post.

    • Paul Krugman
    • The Dr. Oz Show

      For publicly apologizing after depicting "nurses" as naughty physician playthings in a 2010 episode.

    • Dr. Oz
    • The View, ABC, 2015

      For publicly apologizing after suggesting in an episode that nurses have no business using stethoscopes.

    • Lab Rats, Disney, August 5, 2013

      For removing a line of dialogue telling viewers that nurse practitioners are inferior to physicians.

    • Lab Rats
    • Scrubbing In, MTV, 2013

      For taking several steps to make amends for , a "reality" show suggesting that nurses are frivolous partiers with little professional commitment.

    • Scrubbin In
    • Hooters, 2011

      For discontinuing the "It's the Cure, Baby" college basketball ad campaign in which a naughty nurse prescribed food.

    • Hooters
    • The Dallas Mavericks cheerleaders, 2012

      For discontining the use of naughty nurse outfits in a dance routine performed with the song "Bad Case of Loving You."

    •  

    • Worst Portrayals of Nursing in the Media 2010-2019
    • These awards have since been updated — we inadvertently left nine awards off the original list. Please click here for the updated awards. Thank you.

       

    • Worst Portrayal of Nursing in a Television Series 2010-2019
    • Shows of Shonda Rhimes

      For the globally popular Grey's Anatomy (2005-present) and spinoff Private Practice (2007-2013) featuring heroic physicians provided all important care, including tasks that nurses do in real life, while nurses were at best low-skilled helpers.

    • Grey's Anatomy / Private Practice logos
    • Shows of David Shore 

      For the globally popular House (2004-2012) and The Good Doctor (2017-present) featuring hospitals staffed almost entirely by brilliant physicians, with rare appearances by nurses as anonymous lackeys.

    • House and The Good Doctor
    • The Mindy Project (2012-2017) — created by Mindy Kaling; Fox / Hulu.

      For a sitcom in which the lead character and her OB-GYN physician colleagues were quirky but expert, while the nurse characters tended to be bizarre, ignorant stooges.

    • The Mindy Project with three nurses

      These awards have since been updated — we inadvertently left nine awards off the original list. Please click here for the updated awards. Thank you.

       

    • Worst Portrayal of Nursing in Film 2010-2019
    • Nurse 3D (2014)

      Written by Douglas Aarniokoski; directed by Douglas Aarniokoski, David Loughery; Lionsgate.

      An erotic thriller in which an uninhibited but vengeful nurse targets apparently deceitful men for severe punishment, reinforcing the naughty-axe stereotype.

    • Nurse 3D
    • Cloud Atlas (2012)

      Written by David Mitchell, Lana Wachowski, Tom Tykwer, Andy Wachowski; directed by Tom Tykwer, Andy Wachowski, Lana Wachowski; Warner Bros.

      For a film that sought transcendence but also featured Nurse Noakes, a violent battle-axe who confined elderly patients and was even worse than Nurse Ratched, in part because the movie seemed to link her malevolence to her gender ambiguity.

    • Nurse Noakes, Cloud Atlas

       

    • Worst Reporting on Nursing 2010-2019
    • Gina Kolata, New York Times

      For "At These Hospitals, Recovery Is Rare, but Comfort Is Not," June 23, 2014; and "Doctors Saved Lives, if Not Legs, in Boston," April 16, 2013 — health reporting that ignored nurses even when they were central to the story.

    • Gina Kolata

       

    • Worst Efforts To Exalt Physicians at the Expense of Nurses 2010-2019
    • Sandeep JauharThe New York Times

      For this physician's op-eds "Nurses Are Not Doctors," April 29, 2014, and "Shouldn't Doctors Control Hospital Care?," October 10, 2017, arguing that physicians should control all health care and that NPs can't provide high-quality, cost-effective primary care on their own — despite the vast body of research showing otherwise.

    • Sandeep Jauhar

       

    • Most Glaring Failure to Recognize Nursing Autonomy 2010-2019
      • Francis Collins, Director, National Institutes of Health, 2019

        For appointing a dentist as interim director of the National Institute of Nursing Research, and then, after thousands of nurses protested, appointing a biologist to replace the dentist as interim director.

      Francis Collins

       

    • Worst Abuse of the Founder of Modern Nursing's Name 2010-2019
    • Google / Ascension – "Project Nightingale," 2019.

      For using the name of Florence Nightingale—a pioneer in the beneficial use of health data—for an A.I. / machine learning project that reportedly used the health data of some 50 million patients, without their knowledge, raising serious privacy concerns.

    • Google Ascension Project Nightingale
    • Nuance — "Florence," 2017.

      For naming its electronic scheduler for physicians "Florence," as if Nightingale was all about helping with physician schedules, when in fact her focus was on autonomous nursing care and spirited patient advocacy -- often in the face of opposition from physicians.

    • Google Ascension Project Nightingale

       

    • Most Ignorant Attacks on School Nurses 2010-2019
    • The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, Comedy Central, October 24, 2012

      For insisting that military medics with a few weeks of health care training were overqualified to do school nursing, which Stewart mocked as being about "kickball," "bruising," and "tummy aches."

    • Jon Stewart
    • Patriot Act with Hasan Minhaj, Netflix, December 15, 2019

      For suggesting that school nurses are not actually nurses, and that they would treat a broken hip with "apple juice and crackers."

    • Hasan Minhaj
    • Glee, Fox, October 3, 2013

      For an episode of Ryan Murphy's show with "Nurse Penny," who had not yet gone to nursing school and who injected a student with urine instead of flu vaccine, using a needle she contaminated by practicing injection technique on a sausage.

    • Ryan Murphy

      These awards have since been updated — we inadvertently left nine awards off the original list. Please click here for the updated awards. Thank you.

       

    • Worst Naughty Nurse Stereotyping 2010-2019
    • For "naughty nurse" imagery in various media worldwide, but especially these notable examples:

    • Mariah Carey

      For the 2010 "Up Out My Face" music video in which she and Nikki Minaj dressed in naughty nurse costumes.

    • Mariah Carey
    • Cardi B

      For a 2019 Halloween concert in which she dressed as a naughty nurse.

    • Cardi B
    • Klondike Kandy Bars, Unilever

      For a television ad featuring a sexy candy bar "nurse" whose seduction of a Klondike ice cream bar "patient" ostensibly led to the birth of the new product.

    • Klondike
    • Subway

      For a 2014 television ad encouraging customers to dine at the sandwich chain so as to be able to fit into sexy Halloween costumes, including a naughty nurse outfit.

    • Subway naughty nurse

      These awards have since been updated — we inadvertently left nine awards off the original list. Please click here for the updated awards. Thank you.

       

    • All Out Warfare on Nurses Award 2010-2019
      • Amy SchumerInside Amy Schumer, Comedy Central, May 20, 2014

        For a segment called "The Nurses" (a parody of The Doctors) that viciously reinforced most major anti-nurse stereotypes, including the ignorant physician handmaiden, the petty battle-axe, and the naughty nurse.

      See our awards for the 2000-2009 decade here


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