As far as I know it started with Cory Bernardi. On 31 January 2018 Cory wrote these two untruths, amongst others:
1. “The nursing and midwifery board, from 1 March this year, will insist their members acknowledge “white privilege” on demand.”
and
2. “Nurses must acknowledge white privilege and voice this acknowledgment [sic] if asked – which is compelled speech.” Source www.corybernardi.com/nursing_bruised_egos
Neither of these statements are remotely true.
When Cory and his political party repeatedly Tweeted the lie, I was really irritated that nurses were being intentionally misrepresented by non-nurses, and responded:
And now we interrupt @corybernardi‘s + @AuConservatives‘ confected outrage with a copy of the actual policy. #oznurses #wenurses pic.twitter.com/rpP9QBfDNc
— Paul McNamara (@meta4RN) February 5, 2018
.
Please do not trust me because I’m a nurse.
Please do not mistrust Cory because he’s a politician.
Please read the actual policy yourself.
Read it and make up your own mind. The relevant section is a one-pager:

Nursing and Midwifery Board of Australia (01/03/18) Code of conduct for nurses, via http://www.nursingmidwiferyboard.gov.au/Codes-Guidelines-Statements/Professional-standards.aspx
See how it says nothing at all about white privilege? You’d think that would be the end of the story. But no.
A few weeks later another non-nurse started trotting out the same nonsense as Cory Bernardi. This time it’s a bloke called Graeme Haycroft chatting to Peta Credlin on SkyNews. Graeme was on TV representing an organisation called Nurses Professional Association of Queensland (NPAQ). He acknowledged that his organisation was the only one that was fighting the new code of conduct, and that the Australian Health Practitioners Registration Authority and all the mainstream nursing unions have agreed to it. Graeme also acknowledged that he was quoting from the glossary of the code, not the code itself. Nevertheless Graeme and Peta broadcast the lie that nurses and midwives would need to stop and discuss their white privilege with their Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander patients, before providing any clinical care [source].
Doesn’t that sound unbelievable?
Well, that’s because it is.
Don’t trust me because I’m a nurse.
Don’t mistrust Graeme because he’s setting-up a business.
Read the actual policy yourself.
NPAQ describes itself as an alternative to the Queensland Nurses and Midwives Union, which is the Queensland branch of Australia’s largest union: the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation. At the end of the SkyNews segment it becomes clear what Graeme’s interest in this matter is. Remember, he’s not a nurse. He’s described as the founder of NPAQ. Graeme makes it very clear that he’s making a pitch for more members to join NPAQ instead of the union. It’s just that he’s misrepresenting the truth to do so. The little rascal.
OK, got it.
Graeme needs a lever to make his business work. That’s probably all we need to know about him and NPAQ.
But the lie is a contagion. The media is its vector.
The lie was spread on South Australia’s Today Tonight, it pops-up in news.com.au and affiliates some UK papers, and via a Melbourne political blogger & illustrator who explained her understanding thus: “…nursing staff are required to acknowledge white privilege using dialogue & communication.”
Aha! Now I see the problem!
Yoda they are reading like.
Backwards talking are they.
Twisted are the words being.
The actual excerpt from the glossary (that is: the glossary, not the policy) reads “…cultural safety provides a de-colonising model of practice based on dialogue, communication, power sharing and negotiation, and the acknowledgment of white privilege.” Turning the words around backwards creates a slightly different meaning. That’s what Cory, Graeme and Peta have done. The little rascals.
Look, these people have pretty good language skills. I don’t think they’re stupid. I don’t think they’re making an naive error. I think their actions are intentional. I think they are intentionally misrepresenting a single phrase in the glossary as a policy instruction. I think they’re being loose with the truth. I reckon they’re as dodgy as.
Even if they not dodgy, they’re the wrong people to be commenting.
Cory Bernadi is not a nurse.
Graeme Haycroft is not a nurse.
Peta Credlin is not a nurse.
The various journalists who repeated the lie are not nurses.
Yet each of them have taken it upon themselves to speak on behalf of nurses and about nursing policies that nurses were consulted and collaborated on.
It’s infuriating!
I’ve been muttering into my iPad thinking/saying things like, “Keep your uninvited uninformed opinions to yourselves you irritating bunch of arseclowns!”
And that’s when the penny dropped.
That’s when I realised that Cory, Graeme, Peta and the journos were giving me a lesson in white privilege.
I was getting angry that these people dared to speak on my behalf, on my area of experience and expertise, without consulting with me or others from my nursing background.
How dare they?
It’s as if they don’t respect nurses. It’s as if they don’t really understand nurses, the nursing world view, our nursing political systems or our nursing culture.
I’m not used to shabby treatment like that. White blokes like me with a steady job don’t get much practise in being patronised, belittled or having our opinions hijacked in the mainstream media.
The mainstream media is much more likely to misrepresent Aboriginal and Torres Strait people (looking at you Sunrise). They’re not alone: refugees, Africans, Muslims and Asians cop their fair bit of flack too (looking at you Pauline Hanson). It goes further: women who dress too slutty or not sexily enough, or are too skinny, too fat, too bossy, or too opinionated will also cop it in the media – especially if they have one of those race or religion things going on as well.
But not me. I’m a white employed male. I don’t usually cop that crap.
What Cory, Graeme and Peta have done is they’ve given me a small taste of what it’s like to have your self-identity misappropriated and misrepresented. They’ve shown me what it’s like when non-nurses assume the voice of nurses. These three, and others, talking about- and over- nurses gives me a small taste of how disempowering and degrading it would be to have that happen all the time.
The discredited rants of Cory, Graeme and Peta will be a brief flash-in-a-pan, and I probably didn’t need to get angry. However, they have helped me to reflect. It has given me a small insight into how it must be a nagging irritation for those who often have their identities misappropriated and misrepresented.
I acknowledge that I have privileges as a white employed man. I don’t take those privileges for granted, and am grateful for my good fortune. #countingmyblessings
Although Cory, Graeme and Peta have amplified my insight, I don’t intend to thank them. I still think they’re as dodgy as.
I’m a nurse. I’m very comfortable with the new policy, and encourage anyone with concerns to read it https://t.co/CxovqIAFW9
— Paul McNamara (@meta4RN) March 26, 2018
Addit
NPAQ are trying a fear argument now (see Twitter). It needs rebuttal.
I was introduced to this definition of cultural safety as a student nurse (1988-1991). It’s a good fit for nursing. It’s a humble, nurturing mindset. Nurses understand that pain, nausea, kindness and cultural safety are all subjective patient experiences.
Wait. There’s more.
There are better credentialed and more articulate responses to this matter than mine,
Recommended references/readings include:
- Tara Nipe (25/03/18) On the matter of privilege (this is the blog that I wish I wrote: it’s much clearer and more succinct than mine)
- Joint statement by the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation, the Australian College of Nursing, the Australian College of Midwives and the Congress of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Nurses and Midwives (23/03/18) Cultural safety: Nurses and midwives leading the way for safer healthcare
- Ruth DeSouza via Melissa Sweet/croakey (26/03/18) Busting five myths about cultural safety – please take note, Sky News et al
- Janine Mohamed, CEO @CATSINaM (24/03/18) Cultural safety matters – the conversation we need to keep having
- Media Watch (26/03/18) White privilege outrage
- Luke Pearson (24/03/18) The truth behind the Nursing Code of Conduct lie
- Sarah Stewart (29/03/18) Fake news and lies! Nurses, midwives and white privilege
End
Thanks for reading.
As always your comments are welcomed in the section below.
Paul McNamara, 28 March 2013
Short URL: meta4RN.com/white
+update on 29/03/18 re typos + references/recommended reading
+update on 30/03/16 as rebuttal to NPAQ
Thanks for your blog post Meta4RN. I am also questioning the professionalism of the 2500 nurses who remain represented by the dodgy lie-telling para-association …NPAQ. I seriously hope they are rescinding their memberships. To willing and knowingly be represented by this organisation seriously calls into question their professional competency to act as an informed, evidence-based and safe practitioner.
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Well done Paul… and eloquent and powerful WTF!
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Great response Paul to an attempt to derail an important conversation in our profession ie why all nurses and midwives need to engage in cultural safety while providing person centred care. I totally agree if you are not a nurse don’t speak as if you are! Mark Aitken proud registered nurse.
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Well said well put and on the mark As a non nurse its great to see a profession that is leading the way and trying to improve the situation not just stick their head in the sand and say its all ok because that’s the way we have always done it, or look to blame justify the situation by the actions of others.
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