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  1. May 12, 2021 · With its passing, the General Nursing Council was formed to set up and maintain a register of nurses; and so – on 30 September 1921 – the first State Register of Nurses was opened. The first nurse to appear on the register was Ethel Gordon Fenwick, a woman who had spent the past 30 years campaigning for the state registration of nurses.

  2. 1928. Scottish bacteriologist Sir Alexander Fleming discovers penicillin. 1932. Lancet Commission on Nursing explores how to make nursing more attractive to young women in order to deal with shortage of trainees. 1937. Bernard Fantus starts the first blood bank at Cook County Hospital in Chicago.

  3. Ethel Fenwick: always caring, always nursing. Ethel Gordon Fenwick, née Manson, was a former matron of St. Bartholomew’s Hospital in London who spent 30 years campaigning for the state registration of nurses. Ethel’s tireless efforts resulted in the Nurses Registration Act 1919, which brought nurses together under one profession.

  4. Oct 7, 2019 · 1921 – The Nursing Register opened in September, irrevocably changing modern British nursing. Ethel Gordon Fenwick was the first to sign the register, becoming ‘state registered nurse number one’. 1983 – The United Kingdom Central Council for Nursing, Midwifery and Health Visiting (UKCC) replaced the General Nursing Council.

  5. Aug 9, 2019 · Despite this, the Act was finally passed in 1919 and Fenwick was the first to sign it becoming “State Registered Nurse No.1” in 1921. The register was held initially by the General Nursing Council, which later became the United Kingdom Central Council and is now known as the Nursing and Midwifery Council.

  6. Thomas, Rob, "The Labour Market for Nurses in the UK: 1997-2006," Teaching Business & Economics (2008) 12#2 online; Tooley, Sarah A. The History of Nursing in the British Empire - Primary Source Edition (2014) Webster, C. "Nursing and the Crisis of the Early National Health Service," Bulletin of the History of Nursing Group (1985) 7:4-12.

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  8. Dec 4, 2019 · The College of Nursing, founded in 1916, influenced the debate during the war. Its founders – Sarah Swift, Arthur Stanley MP, Annie Warren Gill, Mary Rundle and Rachael Cox-Davies – believed a college could unify nurses to improve training and advance their profession. As the need for skilled nurses on the front lines of World War One grew ...

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