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Title: NURSING YESTERDAY AND TODAY


1
CHAPTER 15
  • NURSING YESTERDAY AND TODAY

2
Nursings Public Image
  • 25 years ago, society perceived nurses in
    gender-linked task-oriented terms
  • Popular media have improved somewhat in the
    portrayal of nursings image

3
Nursing Defined
  • 1859 Nightingale
  • 1950 Henderson
  • 1963 Rogers
  • 2002 American Nurses Association

4
Nursing Leaders
  • Florence Nightingale
  • Lillian Wald
  • Margaret Sanger
  • Adelaide Nutting
  • Mildred Montag
  • Mary Elizabeth Mahoney
  • Virginia Henderson

5
Florence Nightingale
6
Florence Nightingale
  • Best known of the nursing leaders
  • Was considered the founder of modern nursing
  • Innovative thinker
  • Acted as a change agent

7
Background
  • Born in Florence, Italy, in 1820
  • Father saw to her education
  • Always showed an interest in the welfare of those
    less fortunate
  • Insisted in going to Kaiserworth to become
    trained as a nurse

8
Crimean War
  • Nightingale was commissioned to go to the Crimea
    to investigate the conditions and make
    improvements
  • She found a disaster

9
Changes in Care
  • Nightingale and nurses cleaned environment
  • Delivered nursing care
  • Wrote letters to families

10
The Nightingale School
  • This was an independent educational institution
  • Her book, Notes on Nursing What it is and what
    it is not, set the fundamental principles of
    nursing

11
Health-Care Reform
  • Nightingale kept statistical records
  • These records convinced the British to make
    reforms
  • Her work marked the beginning of modern military
    nursing
  • Her work led to hospital reform

12
Lillian Wald
13
Background
  • Born in Ohio
  • Attended the New York Hospital School of Nursing
  • Thought she wanted to continue in medical school
    and entered Womens Medical College in New York

14
The Visiting Nurses
  • Wald and Brewster established a settlement house
    in New Yorks Lower East Side
  • They built an independent nursing practice
  • Eventually, they developed a respected reputation
    among hospitals and physicians

15
The Henry Street Settlement House
  • Established 2 years later
  • Grew into a well-organized social service system
  • Multiple services were available

16
Other Accomplishments
  • Developed school health nursing
  • Organized the Childrens Bureau
  • Nursing Service Division of the Metropolitan Life
    Insurance Company

17
Margaret Sanger
18
Background
  • Born in Corning, New York
  • Attended the White Plains Hospital School of
    Nursing
  • Worked at the Manhattan Eye and Ear Hospital
  • Married and became a homemaker

19
Advocate and Social Reformer
  • Sanger was concerned about the working conditions
    of people who lived in poverty
  • A major strike in Lawrence, Massachusetts,
    influenced her life
  • She intervened on behalf of the children

20
Sanger the Public Health Nurse
  • Sanger was assigned to maternity cases on the
    Lower East Side
  • While caring for a young mother who had attempted
    to self-abort, Sanger began to see a need for
    education in family planning

21
Reform
  • Sanger worked toward making contraceptive
    information available to women
  • She opened the first birth control clinic in the
    United States
  • Sanger was arrested she walked to the
    courthouse, refusing to ride

22
Creation of Planned Parenthood
  • Sanger established Planned Parenthood
  • Today this organization offers birth control
    information and family planning counseling

23
The Feminist
  • Sanger can be considered an early feminist
  • She was independent and assertive at a time when
    it was not considered politically correct for a
    woman to be outspoken
  • She used her nursing background to promote
    political change

24
Adelaide Nutting
25
Background
  • Nutting was the first graduate of the Johns
    Hopkins School of Nursing
  • As a nursing student she won an essay contest
  • She became a close friend of Isabel Hampton, the
    director of the Johns Hopkins School of Nursing

26
Nursing Education
  • Nutting developed the prototype for diploma
    school education
  • She added a background in the basic sciences
  • Nutting believed that the profession needed
    autonomy to advance

27
Major Contributions
  • Nutting created the Department of Nursing and
    Health at Teachers College at Columbia University
  • She became the first professor of nursing in the
    world
  • She was instrumental in developing university
    education for nursing

28
Mildred Montag
29
Background
  • Developed the curriculum for associate degree
    nursing programs
  • Proposed two levels of nursing
  • Described a curriculum to educate what she
    referred to as the technical nurse

30
Contributions to Nursing
  • Associate degree nursing (ADN) education has
    exerted a profound impact on nursing education
  • ADN is the primary model for basic RN education

31
Contributions to Nursing
  • Montags major achievement was to shift nursing
    education from hospital, service-based facilities
    to institutions of higher learning

32
Mary Elizabeth Mahoney
33
Background
  • She was born free on May 7, 1845, in Dorchester,
    Massachusetts
  • She showed an interest in nursing during her
    adolescence
  • She worked for 15 years at the New England
    Hospital for Women and Children
  • She was as a cook, held a janitors position, and
    spent time as a washerwoman and an unofficial
    nurse's assistant

34
Education
  • At the age of 33, she applied to the hospitals
    nursing program and was accepted as a student
  • 16 months later, Mary and four white students
    completed the rigorous course
  • She ended her nursing career as director of an
    orphanage in Long Island, New York

35
Contributions to Nursing
  • Recognized the need for nurses to work together
    to advance the status of black nurses within the
    profession
  • Cofounded the National Association of Colored
    Graduate Nurses (NACGN)

36
Virginia Henderson
37
Background
  • Born in 1897 in Kansas City, Missouri
  • Attended the U.S. Army School of Nursing
  • Continued her career in public health

38
Nurse Educator
  • Attended Columbia Teachers College
  • Joined the faculty
  • In 1953 joined the Yale School of Nursing
    Faculty, where she remained for 40 years

39
Contributions to Nursing
  • She published the four-volume Nursing Studies
    Index
  • She pioneered the work that is considered the
    essence of modern nursing
  • Her most important writing, The Principles and
    Practice of Nursing, is considered the equivalent
    of Nightingales work

40
Contributions
  • Henderson actively participated in nursing
    organizations
  • Sigma Theta Tau International Nurses Honor
    Society named its library in honor of her
    contributions

41
Hendersons Legacy
  • Recognized as the first lady of nursing
  • Many colleagues refer to her as the 21st century
    Florence Nightingale
  • She represents the essence and the spirit of
    nursing to all of us

42
Men in Nursing
43
Early History
  • Early Egyptian priests practiced nursing
  • The first nursing school started in India in 250
    BC, and only men were considered pure enough to
    be nurses
  • Nursing was practiced by men during the Byzantine
    Empire

44
The 19th Century
  • Male and female slaves served as nurses
  • During the Civil War, the Confederate army used
    men as nurses, whereas the Union army used women
  • In 1863 the Alexian Brothers opened the first
    hospital in this country and educated men as
    nurses

45
The 20th Century
  • The ANA first admitted nurses to its membership
    in 1930
  • Men were not allowed to serve as nurses in the
    military until the conclusion of the Korean War
  • Today the number of men in nursing is increasing,
    resuming their historical role as caregivers

46
PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
47
American Nurses Association (ANA)
  • Works for improvement of health standards
  • Availability of health-care services
  • Fosters high standards for nursing

48
ANAs Social Policy Statement
  • The social context of nursing practice
  • The nature and scope of nursing practice
  • Specialization in nursing practice
  • Regulation of nursing practice
  • The ethics of nursing practice reviewed by the
    House of Delegates

49
American Nurses Association (ANA)
  • Stimulates and promotes the professional
    development of nurses
  • Advances nurses economic and general welfare

50
National League for Nursing(NLN)
  • Membership is open to other health professionals
    and interested consumers, not just nurses
  • Participates in test services, research, and
    publication
  • Lobbies actively for nursing issues
  • Currently working with ANA and other nursing
    organizations on health-care reform.

51
National League for Nursing Accreditation
Commission
  • Accredits colleges and schools of nursing

52
National Organization for Associate Degree
Nursing (NOADN)
  • Associate degree nursing programs prepare the
    largest number of new graduates for RN licensure
  • Began in 1986

53
Role of NOADN
  • Strong educational programs
  • Dynamic education of students in a variety of
    settings
  • Emphasis on life-long learning
  • Continued articulation with colleges and
    universities

54
Specialty Organizations
  • Nurses may join specialty organizations
  • Provide nurses with information regarding
    standards of practice and evidence-based practice
    within specialty areas

55
Educating Nurses
  • Practical Nursing programs
  • Diploma programs
  • Associate degree programs
  • Baccalaureate degree programs

56
Educating Nurses
  • Masters degree programs
  • Doctoral programs
  • External degree programs
  • Continuing education

57
Nursing Theory
58
What is Theory?
  • Word theory comes from Greek theoria
  • Means to contemplate
  • Provides an explanation of why something happens
    the way it does

59
Nursing Theory
  • Nurses use theory to help them think critically
    and to make decisions supported by scientific
    principles
  • Nursing theory provides a knowledge base for
    decision-making

60
Reasons for Nursing Theory
  • Throughout history, most nursing care has been
    built on tradition and intuition
  • Many consumers do not understand what nursing is
    and what nurses do
  • Nurses need to conduct research to validate
    nursing actions

61
Common Concepts in Nursing Theory
  • Person
  • Health
  • Nursing
  • Environment

62
Nursing Theory as a Basis for Practice
  • In the middle of the 20th century, nurses
    believed theories from other disciplines could
    enhance nursing practice
  • These theories could not define or describe
    nursing practice

63
Nurse Theorists
  • An interest in defining nursing knowledge
    increased
  • Graduate programs produced nurses with an
    interest in research and theory development

64
Nurse Theorists
  • Started creating philosophies, or systems of
    basic principles, and conceptual models
  • Described ideas and their relationships to one
    another to explain nursing

65
Role of Nurses in Research
  • Practicing nurses play a major role in
    identifying researchable patient problems
  • Help gather data for research

66
Current Trends
  • Aging baby boomers
  • Emphasis on economics

67
Changes
  • Historical perspective
  • Managed care
  • Insurance

68
Effect on Nursing
  • Elimination of positions
  • Changes in the practice environment
  • Quality-of-care issues
  • Nursing shortage

69
Effect on Nursing
  • Preventing patient care errors
  • Emphasis on outcomes
  • Changing competencies

70
Changing Competencies
  • Critical thinking skills
  • Understanding of systems
  • Care management

71
Changing Competencies
  • Team-building and communication skills
  • Negotiating, collaborating, conflict management
    skills
  • Cultural competency

72
Changing Competencies
  • Flexibility
  • Technological competence
  • Business skills

73
Communicating Nursings Role
74
TriCouncil
  • ANA, NLN, AACN, AONE
  • Designed a campaign to communicate the
    contributions of nurses

75
Three Areas
  • Nurses as resource people
  • Nurses as health-care coordinators
  • Nurses as expert practitioners

76
Using Nursing Influence
  • Carry your license
  • Use your special training and experience
  • Become a double agent
  • Network with and empower colleagues

77
Using Nursing Influence
  • Eliminate the enemy within
  • Focus on operations
  • Organize as a supportive group

78
Conclusion
79
Conclusion
  • Nursing has a rich and exciting history
  • Nursing is cyclical
  • Nursing is diverse
  • Nursing deals with individuals, their health, and
    their environments
  • To meet the needs of the future, nurses need to
    become involved in theory development and
    research

80
Conclusion
  • Nurses need to take the lead in movement toward a
    clearer identity and role delineation of the
    profession
  • To achieve nursing goals, the value of nursing
    and acceptance of its professional status must be
    recognized
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