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A joke about “grown male nurses” lit the fuse—and we decided to take it all the way. We start by dismantling the tired myths around male nurses and talk honestly about why many of us chose this career: purpose, skill, and the privilege of helping people face to face. From there, we dig into the economics shaping the bedside today, including why Kansas spent $61 million on travel nurses at state psychiatric hospitals and why permanent roles still struggle to compete on pay and flexibility.
We open the books on what really keeps nurses moving: better hourly rates, schedule control, and the option to leave toxic cultures behind. That leads us into burnout—short staffing, workplace violence, and management failures—and the practical fixes that actually work, from safer ratios and predictable assignments to debt relief and real break protection. A recent settlement over unpaid meal breaks shows how auto-deductions and off-the-clock work erode trust and violate wage law. We share clear steps employers should take, plus the self-advocacy every clinician needs to protect time, pay, and safety.
The conversation shifts to maternal health with a heartfelt tribute to Dr. Janelle Green Smith, a respected midwife and DNP who died after childbirth. Her life’s work—safer pregnancies, better postpartum care, and evidence-based practice—frames a candid look at preventable complications and persistent racial disparities. We talk early warning signs, standardized protocols for hypertension and hemorrhage, telehealth check-ins, and building systems that listen to patients without bias. Through it all runs a simple theme: respect the people who deliver care, and outcomes improve for everyone.
If this resonated, tap follow, share it with a friend in healthcare, and leave a review telling us what topic you want us to tackle next. Your feedback shapes the next conversation.
Support the show
https://linktr.ee/WakandaRN
By Wakanda RNSend us a text
A joke about “grown male nurses” lit the fuse—and we decided to take it all the way. We start by dismantling the tired myths around male nurses and talk honestly about why many of us chose this career: purpose, skill, and the privilege of helping people face to face. From there, we dig into the economics shaping the bedside today, including why Kansas spent $61 million on travel nurses at state psychiatric hospitals and why permanent roles still struggle to compete on pay and flexibility.
We open the books on what really keeps nurses moving: better hourly rates, schedule control, and the option to leave toxic cultures behind. That leads us into burnout—short staffing, workplace violence, and management failures—and the practical fixes that actually work, from safer ratios and predictable assignments to debt relief and real break protection. A recent settlement over unpaid meal breaks shows how auto-deductions and off-the-clock work erode trust and violate wage law. We share clear steps employers should take, plus the self-advocacy every clinician needs to protect time, pay, and safety.
The conversation shifts to maternal health with a heartfelt tribute to Dr. Janelle Green Smith, a respected midwife and DNP who died after childbirth. Her life’s work—safer pregnancies, better postpartum care, and evidence-based practice—frames a candid look at preventable complications and persistent racial disparities. We talk early warning signs, standardized protocols for hypertension and hemorrhage, telehealth check-ins, and building systems that listen to patients without bias. Through it all runs a simple theme: respect the people who deliver care, and outcomes improve for everyone.
If this resonated, tap follow, share it with a friend in healthcare, and leave a review telling us what topic you want us to tackle next. Your feedback shapes the next conversation.
Support the show
https://linktr.ee/WakandaRN