Florence Nightingale was born in 1820 in Florence, Italy, the daughter of a wealthy landowner who was involved in the anti-slavery movement. He saw that she was educated in the classics as well as math and science. At the age of 17, she felt that she was called by God to some higher unknown purpose. (Ferrence and Nick, 2000)
Florence rejected many proposals of marriage. Going against her upper class parents' wishes, at the age of 25 she decided to become a nurse, a job usually reserved for the lower classes. It wasn't until age 31 that her parents relented. She went to Germany to study nursing. Two years later, she was appointed as superintendent of a hospital for invalid women in London. When the Crimean War broke out in 1854, Florence took 38 nurses to Turkey. She found the conditions deplorable.
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." (Ferrence and Nick)
She met great resistantce from doctors on the front when she attempted to improve conditions. Finally, when London newspapers took up her cause, she was allowed to reorganzie the barracks hospital, dramatically reducing the death rate by improving sanitation standards. Her continued crusading after the war resulted in the formation of the Army Medical College. She also published two books, Notes on Hospital (1859) and Notes on Nursing (1859). She went on to found the Nightingale School & Home for Nurses at St. Thomas's Hospital. She also instituted training for nurses employed in the workhouses for the poor. She was a staunch supporter of women's rights throughout her life. Suffering from poor health in her later life, she ultimately went blind and eventually became a total invalid, requiring full-time nursing care for 15 years until her death in 1910.
Nighingale's main intent was twofold: to focus on training those who took care of the sick and improving and controlling the environmental conditions of hospitals, and sickrooms. She was adamant about sanitation, good ventilation, and warmth. Her thought was to set the stage and employ good health practices that would allow for nature to take its course in the healing process, encouraging the individual's recuperative powers to take over.
Martha Rogers Ripley
Martha Rogers Ripley decided to become a doctor when she witnessed all the illness in the New England mill towns where her husband was a paper mill operator. In 1883 she received her M.D. from Boston University Medical School. When her husband became injured, the support of her family fell upon her shoulders. Moving to Minneapolis with her family she started a medical practice with emphasis on obstetrics and pediactrics. She opened a maternity hospital, which served all women regardless of their economic or marital state. In addition to medical care, social services were offered to the patients.
Ripley was a strong suffragist, a member of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, a fighter for public hygiene, well-known and respected far beyond her own city and state. The memorial plaque, installed in 1939, speaks of her as a 'champion of righteousness and justice' serving; with farsighted vision and sympathy.'"(Tinling 1986)
According to their own web site (Unitary Health Care, 2002), The Science of Unitary Human Beings provides a radical vision of nursing reality. It provides a framework for nursing practice, education and research that promises a move away from the previously predominant medical model approach to the delivery of nursing care." (Unity Health Care) It is based on regarding and individuals as a "unified whole which is more than and different from the sum of the parts."
The intention of nursing, according to Rogers, is that it should be both creative and scientific with the emphasis on achieving overall "well-being." (Unitary Health Care) The universe or environment is all about a continuous active flow of energy and matter, that can be tapped and encouraged by creative practioners. According to Rogers...
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