Clement Masakure
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Conclusion
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This chapter draws the main conclusions and reflects upon the significance of studying African nurses to nursing history within former settler colonies and international nursing history. The chapter also points to areas that need further research centred on the following themes: gender, race and the role of professional nursing organisations. In relation to gender, it calls for a need to explore the history of male nurses beyond mining and the war, which have traditionally been dominated by men thus can be considered as male spaces by exploring the experiences of male nurses in ordinary hospitals. An analysis of male nursing outside the ambit of mining and the military in Zimbabwe and Southern Africa will further complicate the discourse around nursing and masculinities within nursing historiography. Related to race, the chapter highlights the need for a further examination of white nurses, coloured nurses and nurses of Asian descent. An inclusion of these racial clusters in nursing history can be used as a point of entry into examining similarities and differences in experiences for nurses based on race across time and space. Lastly, nurses as other workers, organised to fight for their rights and influence policies that affected their daily work within hospitals. The chapter notes that an investigation of the areas mentioned above and other neglected themes in nursing history will add a further layer to the role of nurses in the history of Zimbabwe, the region and the world.

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