Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Sep 10, 2020 · Her experiment in the formal education of nurses spread beyond the boundaries of Britain to be emulated worldwide. This prompt adoption by many nations of her school of nursing concept was facilitated through the activities of those who became known as the Nightingale disciples.

    • Design and Sources
    • Ten Ethical Themes in Early Nursing Literature of The UK
    • Conclusion
    • Author

    This study entailed a page-by-page physical review and content analysis of the earliest British nursing journals and the earliest UK nursing textbooks and nursing ethics books, dating from the 1880s. The Nursing Record (NR), which becomes the British Journal of Nursing (BJN) in 1902, was published from 1888–1956 and was reviewed in its entirety. Th...

    Nursing as a Profession, Vocation, Calling, or Trade ...early nursing leaders sought to create nursing as an educated, scientific, profession...Following Nightingale’s vision, early nursing leaders sought to create nursing as an educated, scientific, profession for women working outside domestic service or the home, for which nurses would be paid a...

    Many of the issues that these ten themes address have persisted from the start of modern nursing for well over 150 years, and have been refractory to resolution. Their ultimate resolution lies, as early nurse leaders insisted, in the united voice and action of nurses worldwide – and in nurses’ participation in social and health policy reform. If nu...

    Marsha D. Fowler, PhD, MDiv, MS, RN, FAAN, RSA Email: mfowler@apu.edu Dr. Fowler holds a PhD in Social Ethics and has researched the history and development of US nursing ethics for 40 years. She held a Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Fellowship n Medical Ethics at Harvard University, and is the recipient of the ANA Honorary Human Rights Award. She recently ...

  2. Aug 13, 2020 · Regretfully, 11 of Nightingale's nurses died of illnesses during the war. This article looks at the contribution Florence Nightingale made to the establishment of formal education for nurses in the years following her return.

  3. Apr 27, 2020 · But with the COVID-19 pandemic highlighting similarities between Nightingale’s experiences and those of nursing staff today, it’s taken on new significance. Nightingale was named after her birthplace – Florence, Italy. Her parents were influential, upper-class, and gave her a thorough education.

  4. May 18, 2024 · Nightingale was mainly concerned with women’s education, recognising that education was crucial to their empowerment and independence. She argued for better educational opportunities for women and girls, stressing that they should receive the same quality of schooling as men.

  5. Apr 7, 2020 · Nightingale foreshadowed the solution of the ongoing nursing shortage—to enhance the education of nurses and enable them practice to the fullest extent of their educational preparation.

  6. People also ask

  7. Sep 29, 2020 · We reflect on being clinical teachers and we consider the significant changes in nursing education from Nightingale’s day and how the transition of nursing education into the academy has influenced the clinical teacher’s role.