FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE Florence Nightingale is a woman like no other; Nightingale is the epitome of why nurses are the professionals they are today. Although stories have it that Nightingale helped soldiers during the Crimean War die more comfortably instead of preventing them from dying, Nightingale was seen as the “founder of modern nursing and the pioneer of public health back in the 1850’s” (Brown, 2013). As the legendary Angel of Crimea, Nightingale, was known to have improved the bodily cleanliness, hygiene, and sanitary care the military was receiving in Scutari, while hospitalized after the war. Once the war was over, having decreased the rate of soldiers’ deaths in Scutari by two thirds, Nightingale devoted her last 11 years to the …show more content…
Despite the oppositions that Nightingale had to endure from her family Nightingale chose to continue with her desire to become a nurse. In 1854, Nightingale left her comfortable, rich life to care for soldiers after being invited by Sydney Herbert, where along with fellow nurses Nightingale was exposed to horrific living conditions that increased death secondary to infectious processes, once the Crimean War was over, Nightingale made it her mission to improve the quality of care and the surroundings that the military was exposed to. Subsequently, Florence Nightingale became famous for her provision of leadership for public health; for allowing nursing to be a known, respectful and fulfilling …show more content…
A professional career in which Nightingale would establish needed education and responsibilities and remain respectable until the end of time. Upon returning from a war, Nightingale was one of the first nurses to statistically research and document the impact of environment on patients. Nightingale wrote about sanitary practices, infection rates, and ventilation; it was Flo’s understanding that determined that environmental aspects such as clean air, sunlight, noise, along with a healing touch, can significantly contribute to health outcomes. Additionally, “Nightingale established nursing education by writing the first textbook on the subject in 1960, entitled Notes of Nursing” (Sampson, 2012, p.221). Nightingale’s text outlined the principles of the nursing profession, encouraged proper care of families, and educated on illnesses that were effecting society and the management of such. Within the text, Nightingale emphasized the importance of patient observation and the ability to provide proper care and the importance of sanitary conditions, and a proper
“In these conditions, it was not surprising that in army hospitals, war wounds only accounted for one death in six. Diseases such as typhus, cholera, and dysentery were the main reasons why the death rate was so high amongst wounded soldiers” (Spartacus, 2011, ¶ 10). Nightingale went on to establish sanitary guidelines to improve nursing quality, statistical ways of obtaining data, and most importantly environmental factors to improve patient quality. What we know of Florence Nightingale is that although she was born into a wealthy family, she had a different drive in her life towards helping other humans. Nightingale demonstrated pure altruism, but why? What constitutes for her behaviors and traits, there must be a key to unlocking the personality development of Florence Nightingale.
In an article by Maev Kennedy, “ Florence Nightingale attest that she became a national hero after dramatically reducing the mortality rate at the Scutari hospital during the Crimean war...Official records show that by February 1855, the mortality rate had fallen from 60% to 42.7% and then, once a fresh water supply was introduced, it dropped further to 2.2%.” The death rate had changed from better conditions for sanitation and soldier's hygiene. I think the main reason why Florence Nightingale had become such a sizeable hero is because she thought of options on how to heal soldiers more effectively.According to Henry Wellcome, a pharmaceutical entrepreneur, “"The army is in splendid health, only seven deaths in a week and one of them a fit of apoplexy from drunkenness.” Thus, the death rate had dropped dramatically. The British Army had started to maintain healthy soldiers and prevent diseases.From the evidence here it shows how much of a big improvement the Uk had. The evidence also shows how War journalists improved conditions for soldiers, by showing the situations wounded soldiers were
negligently cared for and the hospital itself had a lack of basic essentials ( McDonald,L
Nightingale turned away from the traditional role of becoming a wife and mother to instead become one of the fist women nurses. During the cramian war she revolutionized heth care by implementing simple hygeen practesess like had washing and ladering linins on patient beds. Her work led to the saving of coutless live. The femist movemt used her as an axample of the difference and inpact that an educated wouman could make on society as a whole (3 Burton) in
Florence nightingale was born on the 12th of may 1820. She was considered as the founder of modern nursing. She started her carrier as a nurse for poor and sick at the age of 24. During Crimean war she came to prominence while serving as a nurse, where she tended to wounded soldiers. During her service she took notice of the dirtiness and deterioration of the military hospitals. Thereby she took action by making sanitary improvements establishing standards for clean and safe hospitals. Thus she helped to bring down
Florence Nightingale was an immense impact on nursing, who “became famous for her revolutionary work as a nurse during the Crimean War” (Kent 30). “She dedicated her life to improving conditions in hospitals, beginning in an army hospital during the Crimean War,” (3 Registered). Her actions were then used by “concerned individuals, rather than by professionally trained nurses” during the Civil War, (Registered 279). Many of Nightingale’s ideas were brought into modern times, but with the improvement of technology and licensed nurses. With the influence and patience of Florence Nightingale, nursing has evolved into an outstanding career.
I will be summarizing Notes on Nursing: What It Is and What It Is Not by Florence Nightingale. Notes on Nursing: What It Is and What It Is Not was first published in 1860 with the last edition being published in 1969 (Adams-Wending, 2010). Nightingale’s theory addresses the importance of providing an environment that is conducive to the healing process for patients (Nightingale, 1860). Nightingale’s theory of the environment was based off the idea that disease was caused by smell of decomposing matter (Adams-Wending, 2010). The theory is broken down into thirteen “canons” of nursing (Nightingale, 1860). The thirteen topics within this theory are: ventilation and warming, health of houses, petty management, noise, variety, taking food, what food?, bed and bedding, cleanliness of rooms and walls, personal cleanliness, chattering of hope and advices, and observations of the sick. Nightingale (1860) states that ventilation is to make the air the patient breaths as fresh as the air outside. This also goes into detail of removing chamber pots
This theory focuses on the relationship between the patient and nurse and improves the patient’s surrounding environment in the hospital to benefit healing. Nightingale narrowed it down to a few major concepts, which include: noise, light, air, ventilation, cleanliness, variety, and diet (Zborowsky, 2014). She started off by buying new linens, ordering quality food, making sure clean water was available, and instructing her team of nurses scrub the hospital clean. Nightingale decreased the noise as much as possible, provided a warm room, proper lighting for the time of day, and made sure everything was as sanitary as possible. Her main goal and motivation behind doing all this work
Throughout history, society has considered women to be the natural caregivers of children, family, and community. Women were naturally thought of as nurses because the act was said to be an extension of their role in the home. They were called in to homes to help deliver babies or as wet nurses to breastfeed. In the 1800’s, women began taking care of soldiers. It was then that Florence Nightingale cared for soldiers in the Crimean War. During this time she revolutionized the role by setting standards of cleanliness and reducing infection. The legacy of nursing continues to be enriched by those who continue to follow the example of nursing pioneers. They refuse to be bound by others’ views
Imagine a room in a hospital; you are lying on a bed, with linens since your admission, the room is very cold and dark at the same time, without proper ventilation. The bathroom you have does not have proper drainage; outside environment is as noisy as having a construction site as a neighbor. Health care providers come in just for the job and merely not care about you; their hands are not even clean and washed. Imagine these kinds of situation, what kind of environment are you having? Do you a place to heal or a place to die? Since the beginning of Modern Nursing, these scenes are commonly practiced and are usual in a way that it is considered a normal place to rest and be taken care of.
While it is important to be able to care for patients who are ill, Florence felt that is was even more important to be able to prevent the health problem from existing in the first place. As such, she is a pioneer of public health as well. Public health utilises an upstream approach where the main goal is preventing the health problem from even existing. It has increased in popularity as its long term approach saves both money and resources that the healthcare system utilises. The focus of disease prevention as well as health promotion were a primary goal for Florence Nightingale and those she worked with. Modern nurses places an even greater emphasis on public health than in previous eras due to today’s population and health needs. Florence Nightingale pioneered a new methodology of nursing which continues to have impact today (McDonald, 2010).
Florence Nightingale, born in 1820, revolutionized nursing as it is today. Throughout her time working with the wounded soldiers during the Crimean War, she noted that more soldiers were dying of infections than from wounds. Therefore, she worked to ensure sanitation as well as sufficient health and healing practices amongst her patients. From care to prevention, Nightingale’s practices were able to set the foundation for nurses today. Nightingale distinguished that a healthy environment is essential to one’s health and thus her tenets of ventilation, cleanliness, light, as well as nutrition set the bases of the City of Toronto’s tuberculosis program for the under-housed, homeless, and the correctional population.
Florence Nightingale was born in Florence, Italy. Her parents named her after the city she was born in. She was born on May 12,1980, she was raised mostly in Derbyshire England. Many people when they hear Florence Nightingale think about her as a nurse and for her fight for better hospital care. Florence did a lot more in her life than achieve better hospital conditions, and become a nurse. She was a brilliant mathematician, and used statistics to apply them to achieve her reforms. Florence was a well-educated woman in a number of fields other than math;
Florence Nightingale was born in Florence, Italy, on May 12 1820. She was the younger of two children born into affluent British family. From a young age, Plorence Nightingale was in philanthropy, taking care of the ill and poor people. By the time she was 16 years old, she believed that her true calling was in nursing. Upon confronting her parents about her ambitions in becoming a nurse, they forbade her from doing so. In 1844, Nightingale proceeded to enroll herself as a nursing student at the Lutheran Hospital of Pastor Fliedner in Kaiserswerth, Germany. Therefore after completion nightingale returned to London, and after a year of being hired at Middlesex hospital became superintendant. She developed many techniques that brought down the death rate significantly during a cholera outbreak. In late 1854, Nightingale received a letter from Secretary of War Sidney Herbert, asking her to organize a corps of nurses to tend to the sick and fallen soldiers in the Crimea. Nightingale rose to her calling. She quickly assembled a team of 34 nurses from a variety of religious orders, and sailed with them to the Crimea just a few days later. The soldiers, who were both moved and comforted by her endless supply of compassion, took to calling her "the Lady with the Lamp." Others simply called her "the Angel of the Crimea." Her work reduced the hospital’s death rate by two-thirds. While at Scutari, Nightingale had contracted "Crimean fever" and would never fully recover. In August 1910
Florence Nightingale, a well-educated nurse, was recruited along with 38 other nurses for service in a hospital called Scutari during the Crimean War in 1854 . It was Nightingale's approaches to nursing that produced amazing results. Florence Nightingale was responsible for crucial changes in hospital protocol, a new view on the capabilities and potential of women, and the creation of a model of standards that all future nurses could aspire towards.