Carol Helmstadter
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Conclusion
Transcending the limitations of gender
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The highly politicized government-imposed system of nursing was the hardest to apply; Florence Nightingale faced the greatest challenge of any of the nursing directors and did well under the circumstances. As a whole, the religious nursing sisterhoods consistently provided the best nursing, but it was doctor-directed nursing in Russia that developed the most innovative and efficient system. The Crimean War demonstrated that nursing was becoming a knowledge-based practice. The barely literate British working-class nurses were aware of this and demanded recognition of their expertise and body of knowledge, but a persistent theme in the story of nurses is the way the upper classes looked down on them and what they considered their menial and repulsive domestic service. The most outstanding feature of the war’s nursing experience was the transnational humanitarianism of nurses who came from all classes and such different cultural backgrounds. Despite all the restrictions and obstacles these men and women faced, all managed to relieve some of the sufferings of their patients. However, the nursing services which were most successful, the Russian, French, and Piedmont-Sardinian, were those in which the nurses transcended gendered constructions, and their competencies rather than their sex determined their roles.

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Beyond Nightingale

Nursing on the Crimean War battlefields

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