A Patient/Family Care Study on Pneumonia

dc.contributor.author Adelaide Konadu
dc.date.accessioned 2023-01-13T15:12:30Z
dc.date.available 2023-01-13T15:12:30Z
dc.date.issued 2022-08-01
dc.description This care study was supervised by Amos Owusu
dc.description.abstract Although the origins of nursing predate the mid-19th century, the history of professional nursing traditionally begins with Florence Nightingale. Nightingale, the well educated daughter of wealthy British parents, defied social conventions and decided to become a nurse. The nursing of strangers, either in hospitals or in their homes, was not then seen as a respectable career for well-bred ladies, who, if they wished to nurse, were expected to do so only for sick family and intimate friends. In a radical departure from these views, Nightingale believed that well-educated women, using scientific principles and informed education about healthy lifestyles, could dramatically improve the care of sick patients. Moreover, she believed that nursing provided an ideal independent calling full of intellectual and social freedom for women, who at that time had few other career options. In 1854 Nightingale had the opportunity to test her beliefs during Britain’s Crimean War. Newspaper stories reporting that sick and wounded Russian soldiers nursed by religious orders fared much better than British soldiers inflamed public opinion. In response, the British government asked Nightingale to take a small group of nurses to the military hospital at Scutari (modern-day Üsküdar, Turk.). Within days of their arrival, Nightingale and her nurses had reorganized the barracks hospital in accordance with 19th-century science: walls were scrubbed for sanitation, windows opened for ventilation, nourishing food prepared and served, and medications and treatments efficiently administered. Within weeks death rates plummeted, and soldiers were no longer sickened by infectious diseases arising from poor sanitary conditions. Within months a grateful public knew of the work of the “Lady with the Lamp,” who made nightly rounds comforting the sick and wounded. By the end of the 19th century, the entire Western world shared Nightingale’s belief in the worth of educated nurses.
dc.identifier.issn ISSN
dc.identifier.uri https://ir.nmtcerekum.edu.gh/handle/123456789/85
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher Holy Family NMTC Library, Berekum
dc.relation.ispartofseries RGN22/008; 008
dc.title A Patient/Family Care Study on Pneumonia
dc.type Case Study
dspace.entity.type
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