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7 Answers to “what is the significance of cremean war to nursing history?”
September 6, 2010
u spelled it wrong it’s the CRIMEAN WAR. and it’s the beginning of the red cross and modern medical care in war time
September 6, 2010
During the Crimean War Florence Nightingale led a group of English Ladies to look after the wounded and dying. this laid the principle of modern nursing and Florence wrote a thesis on methods of nursing which still stands as the format today. However, although Nightingale achieved fame because of her upbringing and education, it was actually Mary Seacole, a West Indian woman servant, who did the practical, hands-on, work.Being uneducated Seacole could neither read nor write well.
Florence nightingale never married and took to her bed shortly after returning to England. She remained there until she died, in her 90′s, and it is reputed that her last words were “I told you I was ill”!
September 6, 2010
In 1854, the Crimean War broke out, England, France and Sardinia came to the aid of Turkey against Russia. Almost at once, the British conscience was dismayed by published graphic reports of the disgraceful conditions suffered by the sick and wounded British soldiers. The most humiliating news was was that their ancient rivals, the French, had not only better hospitals, supplies and doctors, but also the Sisters of Charity to care for the wounded. Women were urged to serve as nurses like the French sisters of charity. Mr Sidney Herbert, now, secretary at war, knew just the women to meet his need. Nightingale herself had a similar idea. Nightingale was stirred by reports of the primitive sanitation methods and grossly inadequate nursing facilities at the large British barracks hospital at Uskudar, volunteering her services in Crimea. Nightingale volunteered at once to leave in three days for Constantinople, taking three nurses with her. Meanwhile, she was officially approached by her old friend, Mr Sidney Herbert to take up a larger party of nurses
The party left England on October 21, 1854 and entered the Barrack Hospital at Scutari on November 5. Nightingale found the conditions in the army hospital in Scutari appalling. They had no decent facilities. The floors and walls of the hospital were covered with filth; exposed foul-smelling sewers ran beneath the hospital; vermin and rats were everywhere. The water allowance was one pint per head per day for all purposes. She had to use the provisions brought with her. The men were kept in rooms without blankets or food. Men starved to death or perished from putrid food and patients were left to die nearly naked or in ragged uniforms soaked with own blood. Diseases such as typhus, cholera and dysentery were the main reasons why the death-rate was so high among the wounded soldiers. The doctors were hostile and hesitant in letting the nurses enter the wards.
After the battle in Inkerman, the hospital was tremendously crowded with the sick and wounded. furniture, clothing and bedding were deficient and in the corridors, men lay on straw palliasses amidst filth caused by inadequate sanitation. nightingale was then asked to help, and one of her first requisitions was for 200 scrubbing brushes. She next arranged for the patients’ filthy clothes to be washed outside the hospital. Military officers and doctors objected to Nightingale’s views on reforming military hospitals. They interpreted her comments as an attack on their and she was made to feel unwelcome. Nightingale received very little help from the military until she used her contacts at The Times to report details of the way the British army treated its wounded soldiers. after great publicity, Nightingale was given the task of organising the barracks hospital after the Battle of Inkerman and by improving the quality of the sanitation she was able to dramatically reduce the death-rate of her patients.
But Nightingale proved a formidable foe, quite unlike the loving lady with the lamp. Her nurses scrubbed, dressed wounds and provided and provided clean bedding and hot food. With her great mathematical ability, she reorganised and documented hospital operations, hired carpenters, she repaired the hospital and the sewage system. She spent many hours a day in the wards, and there was scarcely a man whom she had not personally attended. After 8 pm she would allow no woman in the wards except herself. The night-nursing was done by convalescent orderlies. Each night, she made her rounds, giving comfort and advices. Through her tireless efforts, the mortality rate among the sick and wounded was greatly reduced. http://library.thinkquest.org/C004865/nightingcrimean.htm
You’ve got some good answers here on Florence Nightingale. The key for you is that modern education of nurses began in the Florence Nightingale era. She established a school of nursing at St. Thomas’ Hospital. With well instructed nurses she reduced the the death rate in British soldiers wounded/sick in Crimea from about 50% to 2 and a half %, an impressive demonstration.
September 6, 2010
It was where Florence Nightingale revolutionised nursing as a profession. The previous answers have given you so much information.
September 6, 2010
In the Crimean War Florence Nightingale led a group of English Ladies to look after the wounded and dying. this laid the principle of modern nursing and Florence wrote a thesis on methods of nursing which still stands as the format today. The RED CROSS WAS BORN FROM THIS.
September 6, 2010
Florence Nighingale and the advent of sanitary conditions in hospitals were the main legacies of the Crimean War to Nursing.
It also highlighted the suffering of wounded soldiers to the British public and was instrumental in getting the British leaders to push through all sorts of Army reforms, among them setting up proper Medical Services for the wounded
u spelled it wrong it’s the CRIMEAN WAR. and it’s the beginning of the red cross and modern medical care in war time
During the Crimean War Florence Nightingale led a group of English Ladies to look after the wounded and dying. this laid the principle of modern nursing and Florence wrote a thesis on methods of nursing which still stands as the format today. However, although Nightingale achieved fame because of her upbringing and education, it was actually Mary Seacole, a West Indian woman servant, who did the practical, hands-on, work.Being uneducated Seacole could neither read nor write well.
Florence nightingale never married and took to her bed shortly after returning to England. She remained there until she died, in her 90′s, and it is reputed that her last words were “I told you I was ill”!
In 1854, the Crimean War broke out, England, France and Sardinia came to the aid of Turkey against Russia. Almost at once, the British conscience was dismayed by published graphic reports of the disgraceful conditions suffered by the sick and wounded British soldiers. The most humiliating news was was that their ancient rivals, the French, had not only better hospitals, supplies and doctors, but also the Sisters of Charity to care for the wounded. Women were urged to serve as nurses like the French sisters of charity. Mr Sidney Herbert, now, secretary at war, knew just the women to meet his need. Nightingale herself had a similar idea. Nightingale was stirred by reports of the primitive sanitation methods and grossly inadequate nursing facilities at the large British barracks hospital at Uskudar, volunteering her services in Crimea. Nightingale volunteered at once to leave in three days for Constantinople, taking three nurses with her. Meanwhile, she was officially approached by her old friend, Mr Sidney Herbert to take up a larger party of nurses
The party left England on October 21, 1854 and entered the Barrack Hospital at Scutari on November 5. Nightingale found the conditions in the army hospital in Scutari appalling. They had no decent facilities. The floors and walls of the hospital were covered with filth; exposed foul-smelling sewers ran beneath the hospital; vermin and rats were everywhere. The water allowance was one pint per head per day for all purposes. She had to use the provisions brought with her. The men were kept in rooms without blankets or food. Men starved to death or perished from putrid food and patients were left to die nearly naked or in ragged uniforms soaked with own blood. Diseases such as typhus, cholera and dysentery were the main reasons why the death-rate was so high among the wounded soldiers. The doctors were hostile and hesitant in letting the nurses enter the wards.
After the battle in Inkerman, the hospital was tremendously crowded with the sick and wounded. furniture, clothing and bedding were deficient and in the corridors, men lay on straw palliasses amidst filth caused by inadequate sanitation. nightingale was then asked to help, and one of her first requisitions was for 200 scrubbing brushes. She next arranged for the patients’ filthy clothes to be washed outside the hospital. Military officers and doctors objected to Nightingale’s views on reforming military hospitals. They interpreted her comments as an attack on their and she was made to feel unwelcome. Nightingale received very little help from the military until she used her contacts at The Times to report details of the way the British army treated its wounded soldiers. after great publicity, Nightingale was given the task of organising the barracks hospital after the Battle of Inkerman and by improving the quality of the sanitation she was able to dramatically reduce the death-rate of her patients.
But Nightingale proved a formidable foe, quite unlike the loving lady with the lamp. Her nurses scrubbed, dressed wounds and provided and provided clean bedding and hot food. With her great mathematical ability, she reorganised and documented hospital operations, hired carpenters, she repaired the hospital and the sewage system. She spent many hours a day in the wards, and there was scarcely a man whom she had not personally attended. After 8 pm she would allow no woman in the wards except herself. The night-nursing was done by convalescent orderlies. Each night, she made her rounds, giving comfort and advices. Through her tireless efforts, the mortality rate among the sick and wounded was greatly reduced.
http://library.thinkquest.org/C004865/nightingcrimean.htm
Also Mary Seacole was a pioneering nurse and heroine of the Crimean War.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/seacole_mary.shtml
You’ve got some good answers here on Florence Nightingale. The key for you is that modern education of nurses began in the Florence Nightingale era. She established a school of nursing at St. Thomas’ Hospital. With well instructed nurses she reduced the the death rate in British soldiers wounded/sick in Crimea from about 50% to 2 and a half %, an impressive demonstration.
It was where Florence Nightingale revolutionised nursing as a profession. The previous answers have given you so much information.
In the Crimean War Florence Nightingale led a group of English Ladies to look after the wounded and dying. this laid the principle of modern nursing and Florence wrote a thesis on methods of nursing which still stands as the format today. The RED CROSS WAS BORN FROM THIS.
Florence Nighingale and the advent of sanitary conditions in hospitals were the main legacies of the Crimean War to Nursing.
It also highlighted the suffering of wounded soldiers to the British public and was instrumental in getting the British leaders to push through all sorts of Army reforms, among them setting up proper Medical Services for the wounded