91制片厂 football player opts for career in helping

Wednesday, November 16, 2016
Jeff Carter '19

Jeff Carter '19 is going to be a nurse. The fact that he鈥檚 a 6-foot-3, 275-pound offensive lineman on the 91制片厂 football team just makes his story more interesting. And yet, why wouldn鈥檛 a 6-foot-3, 275-pound man become a nurse, especially with the role model he鈥檚 had?

鈥淢y mother is an LPN (licenced practical nurse), and she鈥檚 the best person in the world, so why wouldn鈥檛 I want to do what she does?鈥 Carter says, adding that his love of helping people, and of science, moved him to 鈥渙ne-up her鈥 and go for a bachelor鈥檚 degree in .

Carter also has a love of football. It started in seventh grade in his hometown of Jericho, Vermont. His father, a youth minister, asked him if he wanted to give the sport a go, and Carter said sure. Turns out he was pretty good; in 2014 he was Mount Mansfield Union High School鈥檚 defensive player of the year and lineman of the year.

But listen to him talk about nursing and it鈥檚 clear that his passion rises above the gridiron. This semester he started his first clinical, working once a week at the Edgewood Centre, a Portsmouth, New Hampshire, nursing home that also provides short-term care and rehabilitative services.

鈥淓veryone has a little light in them,鈥 Carter says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e holding on to something here, something special. I get to be part of seeing that, and that鈥檚 been awesome.鈥

The desire to have close connections with patients, and the stories he鈥檚 heard his mother tell, led Carter to choose nursing instead of considering medical school. 鈥淚 want to have the kinds of interactions she鈥檚 talked about,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檝e experienced a little bit of that already, and that鈥檚 what I want to do, have that direct contact.鈥

Carter knew he wanted to be a nurse when he was in high school, and took a few related classes 鈥 anatomy and physiology, human growth and development, medical terminology 鈥 that provided an introduction to the field while earning him college credit.听

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鈥淭hose courses taught me how to study,鈥 Carter says.

Between his studies and clinical work and football practice and games, Carter has little free time. Because of his crammed schedule, he has to miss practice one day a week. At first he wondered how his teammates would feel about that but soon learned it wouldn鈥檛 be an issue.

鈥淭hey鈥檝e taken it really well. No one resents that I鈥檓 not there,鈥 Carter says.

The red-shirted sophomore is not alone in choosing nursing as his major. According to the U.S. Census, the number of registered nurses who are male has more than tripled since 1970, from 2.7 percent to听9.6 percent, and continues to increase. What those statistics don鈥檛 reflect is the philosophical change: Nursing is no longer viewed as a career only for females.

In fact, though few, men have served as nurses in America since the 16th century. During the Civil War, the poet Walt Whitman volunteered as a nurse after his brother was wounded, later writing about the experience in 鈥淭he Wound-Dresser.鈥

Right now Carter isn鈥檛 sure what kind of nursing he will do when he finishes his schooling, although he says pediatrics has a special appeal to him; on Sundays he volunteers in the nursery at the church where his father works.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the highlight of my week,鈥 Carter says, adding, 鈥淚鈥檓 a pretty simple guy; blue jeans and a T-shirt, that鈥檚 my life. And I鈥檓 OK with that. I think there is something to being ordinary that people don鈥檛 realize.鈥

Photographer: 
Jody Record 鈥95 | Communications and Public Affairs | jody.record@unh.edu