

An edition of Handling the sick (2004)
the women of St. Luke's and the nature of nursing, 1892-1937
By Tom Olson,EILEEN WALSH
Publish Date
2004
Publisher
Ohio State University Press
Language
eng
Pages
249
Description:
"Handling the Sick is the story of 838 women who entered St. Luke's Hospital Training School for Nurses, St. Paul, Minnesota, from 1892-1937. Their story addresses a fundamental question about nursing that has yet to be answered: is nursing a craft or a profession? It also addresses the colliding visions of nursing factions that for more than a century have disagreed on the inherent traits and formal preparation a nurse has needed." "The women of St. Luke's were engaged in the most practical of all occupations open to women, a rare one in which their strength, experience, and skill were prized above all else. They firmly believed that the key to success in nursing was apprenticeship training. Apprenticeship, not schooling, was the cornerstone on which all else rested." "This study unites the opposing visions of those who led nursing toward professional status and those who saw it as a craft. Physicality, strength of will, an abiding emphasis on practicality, and a hierarchy based on a deep pride in craft skills have been essential elements of nursing. Nursing can look to its complex history to develop an integrated model of nursing, one drawing on both academic training and the immediate realities involved in "handling the sick.""--Jacket.
subjects: Sociology, Women's Studies - General, Saint Paul, Minnesota, Social Science, Medical / Nursing, St. Luke's Hospital (Saint Paul, Minn.), St. Luke's Hospital (Saint Pau, Nursing - General, History, Nursing, Histoire, Saint Luke's Hospital, History of Nursing, Nursing Schools, Soins infirmiers, Verpleegkunde, Krankenpflegeschule, Geschichte 1892-1937, Krankenpflege, Ausbildung, St. Luke's Hospital (Saint Paul, Minn.) Training School for Nurses, Saint Paul (Minn.), Nursing, history, Nursing Education