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Florence Nightingale
(1820 - 1910)
Famous for her work in
the military hospitals
of the Crimea,
Nightingale
established nursing as
a respectable
profession for women.
Florence Nightingale
was born on 12 May
1820, and named after
the Italian city of
her birth. Her wealthy
parents were in
Florence as part of a
tour of Europe. In
1837, Nightingale felt
that God was calling
her to do some work
but wasn't sure what
that work should be.
She began to develop
an interest in
nursing, but her
parents considered it
to be a profession
inappropriate to a
woman of her class and
background, and would
not allow her to train
as a nurse. They
expected her to make a
good marriage and live
a conventional upper
class woman's life.
Nightingale's
parents eventually
relented and in 1851,
she went to
Kaiserwerth in Germany
for three months
nursing training. This
enabled her to become
superintendent of a
hospital for
gentlewomen in Harley
Street, in 1853. The
following year, the
Crimean War began and
soon reports in the
newspapers were
describing the
desperate lack of
proper medical
facilities for wounded
British soldiers at
the front. Sidney
Herbert, the war
minister, already knew
Nightingale, and asked
her to oversee a team
of nurses in the
military hospitals in
Turkey. In November
1854, she arrived in
Scutari in Turkey.
With her nurses, she
greatly improved the
conditions and
substantially reduced
the mortality rate.
She returned to
England in 1856. In
1860, she established
the Nightingale
Training School for
nurses at St Thomas'
Hospital in London.
Once the nurses were
trained, they were
sent to hospitals all
over Britain, where
they introduced the
ideas they had
learned, and
established nursing
training on the
Nightingale model.
Nightingale's
theories, published in
'Notes on Nursing'
(1860), were hugely
influential and her
concerns for
sanitation, military
health and hospital
planning established
practices which are
still in existence
today. She died on 13
August 1910.
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