Notes on NursingCosimo, Inc., 2007/01/01 - 144 ページ First published in 1860, this short work was developed by nursing pioneer Florence Nightingale for use at her training school in England, but it is meant for anyone entrusted with the well-being of another and offers commonsense suggestions for all caregivers charged with looking after the sick and injured. While some of the information is dated, there remains a wealth of timeless advice, as well as an intimate peek into a moment in medical history. Topics covered include: . ventilation and warming . noise . bed and bedding . light . cleanliness . and the benefit of variety in a patient's surroundings British nurse and teacher FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE (1820-1910) established the Nightingale Training School in 1860 and transformed nursing from a profession for poor women into a noble occupation. She was awarded the Order of Merit by the Queen of England in 1907 for her contributions to medicine. |
目次
12 | |
HEALTH OF HOUSES | 24 |
PETTY MANAGEMENT | 35 |
NOISE | 44 |
VARIETY | 58 |
WHAT FOOD? | 69 |
BED AND BEDDING | 79 |
CLEANLINESS OF ROOMS AND WALLS | 87 |
PERSONAL CLEANLINESS | 93 |
OBSERVATION OF THE SICK | 105 |
CONCLUSION | 126 |
他の版 - すべて表示
多く使われている語句
arrowroot attendants bed-rooms beef tea better body breathing called carbonic acid cause chicory chimney clean cleanliness close cold craving damp death delirium tremens diarrhoea diet disease doctor door dust dysentery effect effluvia English patient fancy fever foul air fresh air friends give hospital ical injury keep kind known leading questions least less light look meals means measles medicine milk minute Mount Blanc musty necessary ness never think night noise nourishment nurse nurse's observation painful patient's room perhaps person in charge physician poison private house reparative process rience room or ward sanitary saturated scarlet fever scorbutic scrofula seen servants sewer shut sick person sick room skin sleep small-pox smell speak suffering sure surgical taking food teach tell things thought tient tion utensil ventilation wall washing weak patients woman women
人気のある引用
4 ページ - Every-day sanitary knowledge, or the knowledge of nursing, or, in other words, of how to put the constitution in such a state as that it will have no disease or that it can recover from disease, takes a higher place. It is recognized as the knowledge which every one ought to have— distinct from medical knowledge, which only a profession can have.