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Census Bureau: Male Nurses Becoming More Commonplace
The nursing profession remains
overwhelmingly female, but the representation of men has
increased as the demand for nurses has grown over the last
several decades, according to a U.S. Census Bureau study
released today.
The new study
shows the proportion of male registered nurses has more than
tripled since 1970, from 2.7 percent to 9.6 percent, and the
proportion of male licensed practical and licensed
vocational nurses has more than doubled from 3.9 percent to
8.1 percent.*
The study, Men
in Nursing Occupations, presents data from the 2011
American Community Survey to analyze the percentage of men
in each of the detailed nursing occupations: registered
nurse, nurse anesthetist, nurse practitioner, and licensed
practical and licensed vocational nurse. The study, and
accompanying detailed tables, also provides estimates on a
wide range of characteristics of men and women in nursing
occupations. These include employment status, age, race,
Hispanic origin, citizenship, educational attainment, work
hours, time of departure to work, median earnings, industry
and class of worker.
"The aging of
our population has fueled an increasing demand for long-term
care and end-of-life services," said the report's author,
Liana Christin Landivar, a sociologist in the Census
Bureau's Industry and Occupation Statistics Branch. "A
predicted shortage has led to recruiting and retraining
efforts to increase the pool of nurses. These efforts have
included recruiting men into nursing."
Men typically
outearn women in nursing fields but not by as much as they
do across all occupations. For example, women working as
nurses full time, year-round earned 91 cents for every
dollar male nurses earned; in contrast, women earned 77
cents to the dollar men earned across all occupations.
Because the
demand for skilled nursing care is so high, nurses have very
low unemployment rates. Unemployment was lowest among nurse
practitioners and nurse anesthetists (about 0.8 percent for
both). For registered nurses and licensed practical and
licensed vocational nurses, these rates were a bit higher,
but still very low, at 1.8 percent and 4.3 percent,
respectively.
Other
highlights:
- There were 3.5 million employed nurses in 2011,
about 3.2 million of whom were female and 330,000 male.
- Of the employed nurses (both sexes), 78 percent were
registered nurses, 19 percent were licensed practical
and licensed vocational nurses, 3 percent were nurse
practitioners, and 1 percent were nurse anesthetists.
- While most registered nurses (both sexes) left home
for work between 5 a.m. and 11:59 a.m. (72 percent), a
sizable minority (19 percent) worked the evening or
night shifts.
- The majority of registered nurses (both sexes)
worked in hospitals (64 percent). The majority of
licensed practical and licensed vocational nurses worked
in nursing care facilities or hospitals (about 30
percent each). The percentages for hospitals and nursing
care facilities are not significantly different from
each other.
- In 2011, 9 percent of all nurses were men while 91
percent were women. Men earned, on average, $60,700 per
year, while women earned $51,100 per year.
- Men's representation was highest among nurse
anesthetists at 41 percent.
- Male nurse anesthetists earned more than twice as
much as the male average for all nursing occupations:
$162,900 versus $60,700.
The American
Community Survey provides a wide range of important
statistics about people and housing for every community
across the nation. The results are used by everyone from
town and city planners to retailers and homebuilders. The
survey is the only source of local estimates for most of the
40 topics it covers, such as education, occupation,
language, ancestry and housing costs for even the smallest
communities. Ever since Thomas Jefferson directed the first
census in 1790, the census has collected detailed
characteristics about our nation's people. Questions about
jobs and the economy were added 20 years later under James
Madison, who said such information would allow Congress to
"adapt the public measures to the particular circumstances
of the community," and over the decades allow America "an
opportunity of marking the progress of the society."
*The difference between the 2011 estimate and the
2000 and 2006 estimates for percentage of licensed practical
and licensed vocational nurses who are men is not
statistically significant.
-Story by
Story by U.S. Census Bureau
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