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| Florence Nightingale Biography |
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(C)opyright 1997-2001 RESCIND, Inc.
Florence
Nightingale lived a long and remarkable life. Although she is known as the
founder of modern nursing and one of the most famous women in history, few
people know that she spent the last half of her life confined to her home and
often bedridden, suffering from an illness similar to what we now call ME/CFS
(Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome).
She was born on May 12, 1820
to wealthy British parents travelling in Italy. Named for the city in
which she was born, young Florence never quite fit the mold of a Victorian lady.
She was well educated in literature, music, drawing and the domestic arts.
A women of her social standing was expected to marry and devote her life to her
family, entertaining, and cultural pursuits. However, she felt an early
calling to serve, and refused to marry. When she attempted to go to work
as a nurse, her horrified family repeatedly opposed her. In those days,
hospitals were often dirty and dark and nurses were untrained, sometimes drunken
women. Finally, at age 33 she was able to obtain some minimal training and
begin her career.
In 1854, the British press began reporting that
soldiers wounded in the Crimean War were being poorly cared for in deplorable
conditions. Nightingale recruited and equipped a group of nurses and went
off to Turkey to help. Her arrival was not celebrated by the surgeons
there, who resented the interference of a woman. Undaunted, she worked
tirelessly to improve conditions in the hospital. Her changes
revolutionized British military medical care, increasing standards for
sanitation and nutrition and dramatically lowering mortality rates. While
visiting the front lines, she became ill and never really recovered.
Although an invalid for the rest of her life,
Nightingale continued to have an influence on standards of nursing care and
training. In 1859 she helped to establish the first Visiting Nurse
Association and in 1860, she established a school that became a model for modern
nurses training. She was considered an expert on the scientific care of
the sick and was asked by the United States for her advice on caring for the
wounded soldiers of the Civil War. Through correspondence and reports, she
continued her influence throughout her last years. She was the first women
to receive the British Order of Merit. In 1907 the International
Conference of Red Cross Societies listed her as a pioneer of the Red Cross
Movement. She died in 1910 at the age of ninety.
Florence Nightingale was known by the British soldiers in the Crimea as the “lady with the lamp” because of the late hours that she worked tending to the sick and wounded. Today, she is remembered as a symbol of selfless caring and tireless service.
|
Introduction | The May 12
Event | Contact Government Officials |
| Contact Media Outlets | Poster
| CIND Organizations | A Guide to
CIND |
| Florence Nightingale Biography |
Design & development of this
site by
Chip Davis
Copyright (C) 1997-2003 All Rights Reserved.
Most recent revision
Wednesday, June 02, 2004