Florence nightingale copy

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HAPPY NURSES DAY 12 th MAY

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Transcript of Florence nightingale copy

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HAPPY NURSES DAY12th MAY

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Florence Nightingale

What work might this person be doing?

What sort of person do you think she is?

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Florence NightingalePIONEER OFMODERN NURSING

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You ask me why I do not write something.... I think one's feelings waste themselves in words, they ought all to be distilled into actions and into actions which bring results.

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Florence Nightingale

Born in Florence, Italy

12 May 1820 A wealthy family

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Born to very wealthy, educated parents • Traveled extensively, owned multiple estates • Father was Cambridge educated, mother was a strong supporter of the abolition of slavery

• Father believed women should have a strong education • Florence and her sister learned Italian, Latin, Greek, history and mathematics. Florence especially excelled in mathematics.

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Florence Nightingale

Returned to England in 1821

Taught at home with her older sister

Florence was a very clever child

One of Florence Nightingale’s childhood homes – Lea Hurst, Derbyshire

The Nightingales spent part of the year here and part of the year in Hampshire

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Nurses are the heart of healthcare.Nurses are the hospitality of the hospital.  

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Florence Nightingale had a broad education

and came to dislike the lack of opportunity for females in her

social circle.

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Florence Nightingale

In 1837, when she was 17, she felt a “calling” to help people

She visited sick people at their homes

Her parents wanted her to get married

She had other ideas and travelled in Europe looking at hospitals

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Her parents wanted her to marry a rich man, but she wanted to become a nurse. Her parents were opposed to this, as nursing was considered to be a job for poor women.

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Doctors are the Brain Of the hospital and

Nurses are the Heart

of the Hospital,If Brain fails ,heart

will be manage,But if Heart fails

nothing will manage

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Florence Nightingale

Parents did not want her to become a nurse

She studied medicine books herself for years

She was 30 when her parents let her go to Germany and Paris to study nursing

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Eventually, when Florence was 31, her father gave her permission to train. in 1853 she was appointed resident lady superintendent of a hospital for women in Harley Street, London.

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Hospitals in 1830’s

Often people who went into hospital died

They were Dirty

Badly run

Nurses didn’t know what to do

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Florence Nightingale

In 1854 the Crimean War broke out – England was at war with Russia

People in England heard that soldiers in hospitals were poorly treated.

Florence was invited to take a group of 38 female nurses to work in hospitals in the Crimea.

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Crimean War Crimean War 18541854

Reports of the sufferings of the sick and wounded in English camps inspired Florence to enlist her services

She was offered “plenary authority over all nurses and the fullest assistance and cooperation from medical staff.”

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She went to work

Scrubbed the floors

Cleaned the wards

Washed the bedclothes

Made the men comfortable

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•In the night she carried a lamp so she was called “The Lady with the Lamp”

•Soldiers kissed her shadow

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Constant attention by a good nurse may be just as important as a major operation by a surgeon.

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They began to get betterSitting up, cheerful and happier!

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Florence Nightingale

War finished in 1856 Florence returned to England.

She wanted to improve hospitals in this country

Conditions in hospitals began to improve

1883 Royal Red Cross

1907 Order of Merit

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Letter from Queen Victoria

Thanking “Miss Nightingale and her ladies” for all their hard work                     

   

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She was given a diamond brooch with ‘Blessed are the merciful’ engraved on it

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The trained nurse has become one of the great blessings of humanity, taking a place beside the physician and the priest.... ~William Osler

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Florence Nightingale

Florence died of old age in 1910 She was buried near to her

parents’ home in Hampshire.

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Until recently her picture was on our British £10 note

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She was famous all over the world

She changed hospitals all over the world

There is a museum in London which celebrates her life and work

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A nurse will always give us hope,an angel with a stethoscope.

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Florence is remembered today as the person responsible for improving conditions in hospitals and making nursing an acceptable job

Florence Nightingale

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Tidbits Tidbits → Florence inspired Jean Henri Dunant , one of five founders of the International Committee of the Red Cross (Geneva Switzerland) which in turn inspired Clara Barton to form the American National Red Cross.

→ There is a psychological effect named after her called “The Nightingale Effect,” whereby nurses and doctors fall in love with their patients.

→ Florence was known during the Crimean war as The Lady with the Lamp, as she would tirelessly make rounds of the patients after everyone had already retired for the night.

→ Florence wrote many books throughout her life on nursing, the most notable and widely used was: Notes on Nursing: What Nursing Is, What Nursing Is Not (1860)

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In a NutshellIn a Nutshell

Florence was:

→ A pioneer of nursing

→ The Founder of Modern Nursing

→ A reformer of hospital sanitation methods

→ Credited with proving that nursing could be a respectable profession

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