1 research outputs found
Who Controls the Power over Pain? A Comparative History of Nurse Anaesthesia
- Author
- Agatha C. Hodgins
- Alice Kessler-Harris
- Although Lakeside hospital was the first such institution to assemble and dispatch a surgical team that included nurse anaesthetists for the Allied war effort it was not the only one. In 1917, the medical school at the University of Minnesota organized Base Hospital No. 26, colloquially known as the Mayo Unit.
- Amott
- An early nursing textbook
- Anna Hamilton
- Anna Hamilton
- Anselm Strauss
- Arlene W. Keeling
- Arthur de Prenderville
- Arthur de Prenderville
- Bankert
- Bankert
- Bankert
- Between 1916 and 1934 there were three legal challenges to nurse anaesthesia.
- By 1965 there would be eight such schools. By 2003, their number had grown to 28.
- C.H.M. Woollam
- Cedric Prys-Roberts
- Christine E. Hallett
- Christine E. Hallett
- Clapesattle
- Crile
- Crile
- Darlene Clark Hine
- Darrow
- David Baker
- Dudley W. Buxton
- Duncum
- Edmond I
- Eleanor J. Hamilton
- Emile Forgue
- Ernest Kern suggests that the popularity of the
- F. MacG. Loughnane
- F.B. Parsons
- For a contemporary nurse’s view of the
- Frances Dickinson Berry
- Frances Truckey
- Francis Long Taylor
- George Crile
- H.E. Hoff
- Helen Clapesattle
- Hewitt’s efforts to introduce a General Anaesthetics Act in 1908 failed. For the discussion the issue sparked
- In 1873 a mere 178 hospitals existed in the entire United States. By 1909, the number had risen to 4,359.
- In the 1870s religious women still ran almost all of France’s 1,500 hospitals. By 1911, lay hospital staff, including nurses, had exploded to an astounding 95,000.
- Isabel Hampton Robb
- J. Frederick
- J. Ross Mackenzie
- J.F. O’Connor
- J.I. Murray Lawson
- James Young Simpson
- Jean Lassner
- Jean-Marie Desmonts
- Joel D. Howell
- Johan Sebastian Pöll
- John Elam
- John Snow
- Judith Moore
- Karin Schultheiss
- Kern
- Kern
- Kern
- Knibiehler
- Lassner
- Lucien E. Morris
- Magaw’s
- Marie-Thérèse Cousin
- Mary J. Roche Stevenson
- Medical specialization emerged in the nineteenth century and became international by the 1930s.
- Melosh
- Mignon
- Modern nursing has evolved within an Atlantic context as Evelyne Diebolt and Nicole Fouché persuasively argue, and the same holds true for nurse anaesthesia.
- Moore
- Nicolet
- Nurse S.C.
- Nursing is the quintessential female profession. As late as 1980 96Â percent of all registered nurses in the US were women
- O. Golden
- On the discovery of antisepsis and sepsis
- On the experience of one nurse anaesthetist
- On the importance of the London context for the distinct path of British anaesthesia
- Patricia D’Antonio
- Pernick speculates that British physicians continued to prefer chloroform because of the danger associated with this agent
- Porter
- Porter
- Pöll
- Rachel Meyer
- Ralph M. Waters
- Sandelowski
- Sarnecky
- Sharon Hadenfeldt
- Since its inception anaesthesia history has been written mostly by medical professionals who are amateur historians in search of a celebratory genealogy. As a result, nurses have routinely been excluded. Even scholarly histories tend to disregard the social aspect of providing anaesthetic services and care.
- Snow
- Susan M. Reverby
- Susan M. Reverby
- Thatcher
- The AANA has also sponsored two histories of nurse anaesthesia.
- The Canadian-born nurse subsequently played an important role in teaching. In the absence of suitable materials she herself completed a set of teaching notes
- The idea behind this creation dated back to the 1930s when Robert Macintosh travelled to the US and was alarmed by the lack of trained anaesthetists.
- There is no consensus on the professional status of nursing. While Joan Jacobs Brumberg and Nancy Tomes view nursing as a semi-profession Barbara Melosh flatly denies the possibility of any women’s profession.
- There seem to have been some nurse anaesthetists in the British Empire
- Turner
- Waters
- William W.J. Knox
- Z. Mennell
- Publication venue
- 'University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)'
- Publication date
- Field of study