Clement Masakure
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The experiences of the pioneer generation of nurses, c. 1900–49
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The chapter examines the role played by nursing assistants, medical assistants, and nursing orderlies in the provision of medical services to Africans during the first half of the twentieth century. It notes that the history of medical auxiliaries allows us to appreciate the importance of a cohort of women and men who not only took up hospital work to improve themselves, but also played an important role in the provision of biomedical services to their fellow Africans. Initially, these medical and nursing auxiliaries were in-house trained and in most cases, the majority of these auxiliaries consisted of recovered patients or early converts. However, the late 1920s saw a significant shift in the training of nurses at mission stations in Southern Rhodesia. With the government’s support, missionaries began to move towards a more professional training of nurses and orderlies, targeting educated young women and men. At the same time, in the 1930s, the government began training their own medical nursing orderlies and the government expected male nursing orderlies to be the bastion of biomedicine in government clinics in African areas. For urban areas, the government began to think of the possibility of training African State Registered Nurses (SRNs). The 1940s saw debates on the training of SRNs and from these debates authorities reached a consensus on the need for the government to train African female SRNs in the process marginalising the possibility of having male SRNs. These discussions set the foundations for African female domination of the nursing services from 1950 onwards.

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