Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Ten Ridiculously Awesome Nurses from Pop Culture

Pop culture is full of interesting nurses, from our favourite movies, to young adult fiction, to the small screen, to the classic comic book. These men and women offer humour, pull at our heartstrings, inspire hope and sometimes offer a sinister glimpse of humanity's darker lining. But one thing all, or most of these characters offer is unconditional care and that's what makes them nurses. That and four years of university followed by a pass on the NCLEX and a lifetime of countless specialization courses.

Schooling aside, here are our ten favourite fictional nurses:

10. Hana
Hana is the innocent Canadian nurse in the English Patient. She grows up too quickly in order to help the wounded in WW II. She care's for the badly burned Almásy and casts her own notions of romantic love on his bandaged face.


9. Nurse Ratched
The lead antagonist in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, 'Big Nurse,' as the patients call her, is a strong force to challenge. She ultimately defeats Randle McMurphy, the loveable but moral less protagonist, but loses her voice in the battle. Her awesomeness stems from her unreeling will to maintain order.


8. Abby Lockhart
We watched her gain experience as a nurse, become a practicing physician and breakup and reunite with ex's almost every week. She was a rock in the ER and one of the stronger nurses.


7. Greg Focker
"Oh, you can milk just about anything with nipples." Enough said. Sidesplitting laughs…


6. Annie Wilkes
Definitely the most disturbed nurse on this list. Her obsession with Paul Sheldon, a romance writer, takes a sadomasochistic turn when she rescues him from a car crash and brings him home to care for. The most memorable scene by far is the ankle-breaking scene.


5. Jackie Peyton
After completing her run on the Sopranos, Edie Falco was given the title role in the Showtime comedy-drama Nurse Jackie. Her character balances her working life, with a complicated personal life that includes an addiction to prescription pills. But the show is more about the workplace interactions, than the powerful pull of addiction.


Awesome quote from Executive Producer Liz Brixius:

Every medical show out there has been about doctors. Doctors are absolutely unable to do what they have to do without nurses. We want to tell those stories.

4. Linda Carter
From the comic world, comes Marvel's Night Nurse heroine, Linda Carter. The melodramatic tagline for the series: Enter the world of DANGER, DRAMA and DEATH!" The short-lived comic run featured no superheroes and was ahead of its time in addressing social issues in a illustrative medium.


3. Margaret Houlihan
Loretta Swit played 'Hot Lips' Houlihan for 11 seasons on M.A.S.H. During the course of the show her head nurse character moved from rigid disciplinarian to a more humanist management style. The men in camp unfairly humiliated her on more than one occasion, but she always kept her head high.


2. Phil Pharma
"This is that scene in the movie." Philip-Seymour Hoffman delivers this self-aware line as he tries to connect his dying patient with his absent son. It shows the passion that nurses have for not just the health of their patients, but also their souls.

1. Carol Hathaway

She made the tough decisions when others couldn't. She decided not to become a doctor, but continue making a differenceas a nurse. She ended up marrying George Clooney's character, Doug Ross. Three big wins!