Florence Nightingale's Role In Nursing

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Before this class, I always thought of nursing as respectable and challenging profession. I know in today’s society, nurses are overworked and don’t truly get the appreciation they deserve for their hard work. However, I never would have thought that in the 1800s, nursing was not even seen as a profession. Before learning about Florence Nightingale, we learned of a woman called Martha Ballard and her role in Midwifery. Later on, we learned about Florence Nightingale and her contributions to the nursing profession. Even though most of her contributions to the nursing profession were good, others were not so great. Her idea of a nurse as a middle class white woman only would affect the nursing profession for men and nonwhite women in the United …show more content…

Reading about midwifery was very eye opening. In my opinion, midwifery was the first profession that was practice by women. Midwifery was very important in the 1700’s when the United States was just starting as a nation. Women that practiced midwifery didn’t have any training, but they did have experience. This was the main reason why women preferred giving birth with the help of a midwife instead of a physician. Martha Ballard delivered about 700 babies. She was not only was she a midwife though, she was also a healer. She would prescribe folk medicine, nurse the sick, and even lay down the dead …show more content…

During the Victorian Era, nursing was seen as a profession for the lower class therefore when she told her parents about her interest in the nursing field, her parents quickly dismissed the idea. Nightingale though, was convinced this profession was calling from God. She was convinced it was her duty to make nursing a well-respected profession. Nightingale ended up going to the Crimean War with about 30 nurses to help out wounded soldiers. Even though the hospital was a living nightmare, Nightingale and the nurses made it work. One of Nightingale’s major contributions during the Crimean War was the way she recorded and organize her patients’ statistics. Nightingale came up with a chart called the Nightingale rose diagram. By the time that she left Scutari, the place where the Crimean War was taking place, the mortality rate for soldiers declined drastically. After the war, Nightingale had two goals in mind: the reform of army sanitary practices and the establishment of a nurse training school at St. Thomas’s Hospital in London (Houlihan, 5). She was passionate to make the nursing an outstanding profession and was determined to fight for the training for “proper” nurses. Florence Nightingale had many contributions that helped shaped the nursing profession into what it is

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