Blog Post
Famous Nurses Florence Nightingale
Upon seeing the unsanitary state of the military hospitals, she worked hard to lower the mortality rate by induction sanitation methods. At a time when death was more common in the hospitals than even on the battlefields, she helped to provide necessary changes in medical practices to prevent unnecessary deaths.
Upon returning to England after the war, she opened the Nightingale Training School for Nurses.
Nurses who trained here spread their knowledge to hospitals across Great Britain, developing the image of healthcare that we know today, and preventing deaths causing from uncleanliness in hospitals. Many graduates of the Nightingale Training School for Nurses also established other nurse training programs based on Nightingale’s model throughout the country.
Florence Nightingale: The Founder of Modern Nursing
Nightingale didn’t just work towards more sanitary work environments in hospitals, she also tracked how this affected mortality rates with data that is now referred to as the Polar Area Diagram. With such impressive strides in a field that was, at the time, considered a lower-class profession, she changed the way that the world saw nursing.
If you think nursing is a calling in your life and would like to learn more about how nursing education can open doors in your future, contact our admissions department for an interview, or request an admissions packet with information about the Jersey College nursing programs.