HISTORICAL EVOLUTION OF NURSING

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I. Period of Intuitive Nursing/Medieval Period

· Nursing was “untaught” and instinctive. It was performed of compassion for others, out of the wish to help others.

· Nursing was a function that belonged to women. It was viewed as a natural nurturing job for women. She is expected to take good care of the children, the sick and the aged.

· No caregiving training is evident. It was based on experience and observation.

· Primitive men believed that illness was caused by the invasion of the victim’s body of evil spirits. They believed that the medicine man, Shaman or witch doctor had the power to heal by using white magic, hypnosis, charms, dances, incantation, purgatives, massage, fire, water and herbs as a mean of driving illness from the victim.

· Trephining – drilling a hole in the skull with a rock or stone without anesthesia was a last resort to drive evil spirits from the body of the afflicted.

II. Period of Apprentice Nursing/Middle Ages

· Care was done by crusaders, prisoners, religious orders

· Nursing care was performed without any formal education and by people who were directed by more experienced nurses (on the job training). This kind of nursing was developed by religious orders of the Christian Church.

· Nursing went down to the lowest level

-wrath/anger of Protestantism confiscated properties of hospitals and schools connected with Roman Catholicism.

- Nurses fled their lives; soon there was shortage of people to care for the sick

- Hundreds of Hospitals closed, there was no provision for the sick, no one to care for the sick

- Nursing became the work of the least desirable of women – prostitutes, alcoholics, prisoners

· Pastor Theodore Fliedner and his wife, frederika established the Kaiserswerth Institute for the training of Deaconesses (the 1st formal training school for nurses) in Germany.

- This was where Florence Nightingale received her 3-month course of stude in nursing.

III. Period of Educated Nursing/Nightingale Era 19th-20th century

· The development of nursing during this period was strongly influenced by:

a.) trends resulting from wars – Crimean, civil war

b.) arousal of social consciousness

c.) increased educational opportunities offered to women.

· Florence Nightingale was asked by Sir Sidney Herbert of the British War Department to recruit female nurses to provide care for the sick and injured in the Crimean War.

· In 1860, The Nightingale Training School of Nurses opened at St. Thomas Hospital in London.

- The school served as a model for other training schools. Its graduates traveled to other countries to manage hospitals and institute nurse-training programs.

- Nightingale focus vision of nursing Nightingale system was more on developing the profession within hospitals. Nurses should be taught in hospitals associated with medical schools and that the curriculum should include both theory and practice.

- It was the 1st school of nursing that provided both theory-based knowledge and clinical skill building.

· Nursing evolved as an art and science

· Formal nursing education and nursing service begun

FACTS ABOUT FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE

· Mother of modern nursing. Lady with the Lamp because of her achievements in improving the standards for the care of war casualties in the Crimean war.

· Born may 12, 1800 in Florence, Italy

· Raised in England in an atmosphere of culture and affluence

· Not contended with the social custom imposed upon her as a Victorian Lady, she developed her self-appointed goal: To change the profile of Nursing

· She compiled notes of her visits to hospitals and her observations of the sanitary facilities, social problems of the places she visited.

· Noted the need for preventive medicine and god nursing

· Advocated for care of those afflicted with diseases caused by lack of hygienic practices

· At age 31, she entered the Deaconesses School at Kaiserswerth inspite of her family’s resistance to her ambitions. She became a nurse over the objections of society and her family.

· Worked as a superintendent for Gentlewomen Hospital, a charity hospital for ill governesses.

· Disapproved the restrictions on admission of patients and considered this unchristian and incompatible with health care

· Upgraded the practice of nursing and made nursing an honorable profession for women.

· Led nurses that took care of the wounded during the Crimean war

· Put down her ideas in 2 published books: Notes on Nursing, What It Is ans What It Is Not and Notes on Hospitals.

· She revolutionized the public’s perception of nursing (not the image of a doctor’s handmaiden) and the method for educating nurses.

IV. Period of Contemporary Nursing/20th Century

· Licensure of nurses started

· Specialization of Hospital and diagnosis

· Training of Nurses in diploma program

· Development of baccalaureate and advance degree programs

· Scientific and technological development as well as social changes mark this period.

a. Health is perceived as a fundamental human right

b. Nursing involvement in community health

c. Techological advances – disposable supplies and equipments

d. Expanded roles of nurses was developed

e. WHO was established by the United Nations

f. Aerospace Nursing was developed

g. Use of atomic energies for medical diagnosis, treatment

h. Computers were utilized-data collection, teaching, diagnosis, inventory, payrolls, record keeping, billing.

i. Use of sophisticated equipment for diagnosis and therapy.


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  • Periods in the History of Nursing by: red Intuitive Nursing From Prehistoric times up to the early Christian Era Untaught and Instinctive Nursing performed out of compassion Nursing belonged to women Apprentice Nursing From the founding of the Religious orders in the 11th century up to 1836 with the establishment of the Kaiserwerth Institute for training of Deaconesses Period of “on-the-job training” Nursing performed without any formal education and
  • HISTORY OF NURSING IN THE PHILIPPINES Early Beliefs, Practices and Care of the sick Early Filipinos subscribed to superstitious belief and practices in relation to health and sickness Diseases, their causes and treatment were associated with mysticism and superstitions Cause of disease was caused by another person (an enemy of witch) or evil spirits Persons suffering from diseases without any identified cause were believed
  • Stages of Illness Behavior Stage 1: Symptom Experience The person is aware that something is wrong. A person usually recognizes a physical sensation or a limitation in functioning but does not suspect a specific diagnosis. Stage 2: Assumption of the Sick People If symptom persist and become severe, clients assume the sick role. At this point, the illness becomes a social phenomenon,
  • EVALUATION is assessment the client’s response to nursing interventions and then comparing that response to predetermined standards or outcome criteria. Purpose: To appraise the extent to which goals and outcome criteria of nursing care have been achieved. Activities: Collect data about the client’s response. Compare the client’s response to goals
  • NURSING PROCESS by: one of our best professor in NCM (Mrs. Cubon, RN, MAN) The term NURSING PROCESS was first used/mentioned by Lydia Hall, a nursing theorist, in 1955 wherein she introduced 3 STEPs: observation, administration of care and validation. Since then, nursing process continue to evolve: it used to be a 3-step process, then a 4-step process (APIE),

This entry was posted on Monday, October 8th, 2007 and is filed under Fundamentals of Nursing, Student's Reviewer. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

12 Responses to “HISTORICAL EVOLUTION OF NURSING”

  1. 12
    Anna Liza Says:

    The notes are very helpful. They are presented in a very nice way. Thanks

  2. 11
    jan Says:

    can you send it on my e-mail?thanks a lot

  3. 10
    iniben Says:

    pls send this to my mailbox

  4. 9
    che Says:

    hi.. could you please send this to my email.. tnx so much.

  5. 8
    dota boy Says:

    tnx…

  6. 7
    Nica Andres Says:

    the best. thanks! it helps.

  7. 6
    emi Says:

    can u please send this article to me..

    thnks..

  8. 5
    Maria Elissa R. Hubac Says:

    thank you for the informations

  9. 4
    Choga Makgasane Says:

    hi. i am interested in the material and it has made my understanding better. currently i am teaching student nurses a course called Professional basis in nursing. if there are other materials regarding this course i would be happy to have access to them.

  10. 3
    Admin Says:

    use the email this post feature instead ;) you can find it at the bottom left hand of the article.

  11. 2
    blablabla Says:

    wlng hiya kau….!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    d pwedeng i copy…!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    alisin niu n 2!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  12. 1
    joannes Says:

    i also need this historical evolution of nursing..send it through my email pls? pls? thanks.. i owe u alot!

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