Carol Helmstadter
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Nightingale’s team of nurses
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This chapter analyzes Nightingale’s problems in the East: the resistance of many doctors and army officers, directing nurses in hospitals which were hundreds of miles apart in Turkey and Russia, and establishing discipline among the disparate group of women who volunteered as nurses. The myths that Nightingale effected all her improvements with only thirty-eight nurses and that she directed the nursing in all the military hospitals are set straight. The working-class nurses, who had the clinical experience essential for their work, often lacked respectability; by mid-January 1855 Nightingale had dismissed eight of the fourteen in her original party. She believed nursing systems should align with the earlier Victorian class structure. The Victorian ideology of separate spheres for men and women also made her job more difficult. Nightingale was confined to base hospitals, while the War Department’s orders severely constrained her: first, she was always to strictly follow doctors’ orders and military regulations which required, among other things, getting every requisition signed by two doctors; and second, she was to prevent religious sectarian quarrelling.

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Beyond Nightingale

Nursing on the Crimean War battlefields

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