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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #52877 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52877)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Subsidiary Notes as to the Introduction of
-Female Nursing into Military Hospitals in , by Florence Nightingale
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Subsidiary Notes as to the Introduction of Female Nursing into Military Hospitals in Peace and War
-
-Author: Florence Nightingale
-
-Release Date: August 22, 2016 [EBook #52877]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INTRODUCTION OF FEMALE NURSING ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by MWS, Fay Dunn and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note
-
-
-Words in italics are marked with _underscores_. Words in small capitals
-are shown in UPPER CASE.
-
-There are three parts to this book, each starting with page 1. The
-first and last parts are marked “PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL.”, these
-words were underlined in the original.
-
-Footnotes have been moved to the end of each part.
-
-Variant spelling and inconsistent hyphenation are retained, a few
-palpable printing errors have been corrected.
-
-The key for the plan of the Lariboisière Hospital was originally
-handwritten. No changes have been made to this for missing or irregular
-use of accents or cedillas.
-
-The tables of numbers of nurses near the end of the book were
-originally printed in landscape, with some sideways printing. The
-columns and rows have been swapped to make these tables easier to read
-on small screens.
-
-
-
-
- SUBSIDIARY NOTES
-
- AS TO THE
-
- INTRODUCTION OF FEMALE NURSING
-
- INTO
-
- MILITARY HOSPITALS
-
- IN PEACE AND IN WAR.
-
- Presented by request to the Secretary of State for War.
-
- LONDON:
- PRINTED BY HARRISON AND SONS, ST. MARTIN’S LANE, W.C.
- 1858.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGES
-
- DIGEST v–x
-
- Thoughts submitted by Order, concerning--
- I. Hospital Nurses 1–9
- II. Nurses in Civil Hospitals 9–14
- III. Nurses in Her Majesty’s Hospitals 15–19
-
- Systems of Female Nursing in the War Hospitals of the
- different Nations engaged in the Crimean War 19–26
-
- Note in regard to the Russian Nurses employed in the
- War Hospitals of the Crimea 26–28
-
- * * * * *
-
- Subsidiary Notes as to the Introduction of Female
- Nursing into Military Hospitals in Peace and
- in War 1–63
-
- Addenda with regard to Female Nursing in a Military
- Hospital on the Pavilion or Lariboisière Plan 63–90
-
- Addenda as to Mixed Nursing, by Nurses and Orderlies,
- in Military Hospitals, on the Double Pavilion or
- Vincennes Plan 91–117
-
- Additional Hints as to Ventilation, Hospital Floors,
- and Cautions in Ward-building suggested by the
- Lariboisière Hospital 118–127
-
- Note on Contagion and Infection 128–132
-
- Note on Observations by the Principal Medical Officer of
- the Army in the East 132, 133
-
- * * * * *
-
- Thoughts submitted as to an Eventual Nurses’ Provident
- Fund 1–19
-
- Note as to the Number of Women employed as Nurses in
- Great Britain 20, 21
-
- Note as to Teaching Nursing 22, 23
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATION.
-
-
- Plan of the Lariboisière Hospital at Paris p. 63
-
-
-
-
-DIGEST.
-
-
- PAGES
-
- THOUGHTS SUBMITTED BY ORDER 1–28
-
- CONCERNING
-
- I. HOSPITAL NURSES.
- II. NURSES IN CIVIL HOSPITALS.
- III. NURSES IN HER MAJESTY’S HOSPITALS.
-
- I. Hospital Nurses 1–9
- Twenty Observations on how to improve Hospital
- Nursing.
-
- II. Nurses in Civil Hospitals 9–14
- Twenty-three Heads for Regulations as to Nursing in
- Civil Hospitals.
-
- III. Nurses in Her Majesty’s Hospitals 15–19
- Twenty-two suggestions in the event of the
- introduction of Female Nursing into Military
- Hospitals.
-
- Various systems of Female Nursing during the Crimean War
- in the Military Hospitals 19–28
- Of the French and Sardinians 19–22
- Russians 22, 23, 26–28
- English 23
-
- Proposed Duties of Female Nurses in Military General
- Hospitals 23, 24
-
- The Hospital Serjeant, or Ward Master will not be
- superseded--he will still have too much to do for any
- one man properly to perform, and part of his duties must
- be given to another officer 24–26
-
- NOTE IN REGARD TO THE RUSSIAN NURSES EMPLOYED IN
- THE WAR-HOSPITALS OF THE CRIMEA 26–28
-
-
- SUBSIDIARY NOTES AS TO THE INTRODUCTION OF FEMALE NURSING
- INTO MILITARY HOSPITALS IN PEACE AND IN WAR 1–133
-
- I. Five Conditions essential to this service 1–3
-
- II. Our Nurses were of four kinds 3
- Absolute subordination to the Medical Officer as to
- Medical Orders essential and practised by us 4
-
-
- III. 1. Qualified subordination essential of
- Superintendent-General to Director-General and
- Principal Medical Officer 4–6
- 2. Also of Matron and Nurses to Principal Medical
- Officer and Staff-Surgeons 6, 7
- 3. Female service can only be introduced gradually,
- and introduction regulated by Director-General 7–9
-
- IV. 1. Shall Roman Catholic Sisters be introduced? 9, 10
- 2. Or Anglican Sisters? 10
- 3. Power of Police in Civil Hospitals 11
- ″ ″ Military ″ 12–15
- 4. Pay and Rations of Nurses 15–20
- On the whole it would seem best, where practicable,
- to board the Nurses, not to “ration” them, nor
- to let them “find themselves.” Community of
- cooking implies economy of nourishment 17–20
- 5. Washing to be “put out” 20, 21
- 6. Cleaning their own Rooms 21–23
- 7. Nurses to keep keys of closet in Wards 23
- 8. Pay, dress, and duties of Matrons 24–28
- More properly named Superintendents 27
- Lady Volunteers had better begin by being Nurses,
- not Superintendents _ex-officio_ 28
- 9. Sundry Regulations as to Nurses 29–31
- 10. Have the Patients’ Diets sent hot, and ready
- divided, from kitchen 31
- 11. What Ward duties the Nurses should do themselves 31
- And why 32, 33
- Patients should not be made quasi Orderlies 34
- Visitors in Military Hospitals 35
- 12. Regulation-Number of Orderlies--depends on the
- size of wards whether sufficient 35–41
- What is the regulation-attendance in Naval
- Hospitals 37
- What in Civil Hospitals 38
- Comparative Cost of Nursing in larger and smaller
- wards 39–41
- 13. Hospital floors 42–51
- Sanitary necessities 42
- Trial of Hospital floors, oiled and polished with
- “_laque_” as in Berlin Hospitals, recommended on
- sanitary grounds and for ease of cleaning 43–51
- 14. Ventilation of Wards 51–52
- 15. Special Wards, whether desirable or not 53–54
- 16. Opinion as to Superintendent-General paying
- Nurses’ wages, and as to Governor’s jurisdiction
- over Nurses 54–56
- 17. Wages and Pensions of Nurses 56–60
- Three rules in raising Wages 56
- Five general principles as to Wages and Pensions 58
- Six applications of the foregoing principles 58, 59
- Seven heads for Regulations as to Nurses’ Wages
- and Pensions 59, 60
- 18. Proportion of Nurses to Patients 61, 62
- 19. Precautions in sending Nurses on Foreign Service 62
- Hospital Laundries 63
-
- ADDENDA, WITH REGARD TO FEMALE NURSING IN A MILITARY
- HOSPITAL ON THE PAVILION, OR LARIBOISIÈRE PLAN 63–90
-
- I. Four conditions to be considered in adopting the
- Pavilion Plan 63
- 1. Economy of attendance 64
- 2. Facility of supervision 65
- 3. Desirableness of _doubling_ the Pavilion,
- in a Military Hospital, in order to give to each
- Nurse but one floor to serve 65
- 4. Nurse to sleep near her Ward 66
- Importance of lighting by gas 67
-
- II. 1. One Nurse must serve the whole Pavilion, in a
- Military Hospital, if _single_ Pavilions be
- adopted 68
- 2. Nurses’ day in such a Pavilion 68, 69
- 3. What the responsibility of Nurses is for
- discipline of Ward or Pavilion 70, 71
- 4. Importance of Lifts 71
-
- III. 1. “Casualty” Cases should be in a completely
- appointed set of Wards, apart 72
- And why 73
- 2. Restraint or non-restraint in Violent Cases 74
-
- IV. Simplicity of Construction essential to Discipline 75
- Polished impervious Walls.
- Covered Exercising Place.
- Reserve Wards 76
-
- V. Nurses’ Meals to be sent them Cooked 76
-
- VI. Arrangements for a Pavilion and its Wards 77–90
- 2. Where should Wardmaster sleep? 77
- 3. And Orderlies sleep? 77
- 4. And dine? 78
- 7, 8, Scullery to each Ward, and what to be done in it 79
- Poultice-making 79
- 9. Presses in Ward 80, 81
- 10. Nurses’ Room 82
- Lavatory, Water-Closet, Sink 83
- Baths 84
- 11. Summary of arrangements 85
- Scullery Appurtenances 86
- 12. Nurses’ Sleeping Quarters 86
- Ward for Sick Nurses 87
- 13. Classification of Patients 88
- 14. Nurses to be called by their Wards 88
- 15. Foul Linen 88
- 16. Washing Bandages 89
- 17. Splints, &c., where to be kept 89
- Cotton Lint never to be used 89
- 18. Classification of Nurses 90
- Superintendent’s Store Room 90
-
- ADDENDA AS TO MIXED NURSING BY NURSES AND ORDERLIES
- IN MILITARY HOSPITALS ON THE DOUBLE PAVILION
- PLAN 91–117
-
- I. ORDERLIES’ DUTIES 91–108
-
- Proportion of Nurses, Ward Masters, and Orderlies to
- Sick 91–93
- Wine to be always administered by Nurse 93
- Orderlies--their Duties vary according to
- appurtenances of Ward 94
- If Hot and Cold Water are laid on, and there are
- Lifts, one Orderly’s Service saved to each 30 Sick 94, 95
- Night-Duty of Orderlies 95–108
- Scheme of Night-Service for three Orderlies watching
- by turns 96, 97
- Exercise for Orderlies 97
- Night Refreshment for Orderlies 98, 99
- Where are the Night Orderlies to sleep? 100
- Comparative Merits of different Systems of Night
- Nursing in Home and in Foreign Hospitals 101–3
- An Assistant Ward Master should go round the Wards
- at Night 104
- Extraordinary System of Night-Nursing in the Army
- at present 105–8
-
- II. TWELVE SUNDRIES IN ORGANIZING A MILITARY
- HOSPITAL 108–114
-
- 1. Nurses’ Room 108
- 2. Medical Officer’s Room 108
- 3. Water-Closets 109
- 4. Warm and Cold Water Supply 109
- 5. Corridors 109
- 6. Lobby 110
- 7. Material of Ward Utensils 110
- 8. Reserve Wards 111–112
- Necessity of Annual Cleansing of the whole of a
- Hospital
- 9. Occasional Revision of Rules 113
- 10. Defect in German Organization of Nursing 113
- 11. Nurses’ Exercise 113
- 12. Number of Ward Masters 114
-
- III. REGULATIONS 114–117
- 1. Deprivation of Visitors salutary in certain Wards 114–16
- 2. Numbering Patients saves time 117
- 3. Prohibition of Swearing 117
- Conclusion 117
-
- ADDITIONAL HINTS AS TO PAVILION HOSPITALS SUGGESTED BY THE
- CONSTRUCTION OF THE LARIBOISIÈRE HOSPITAL AT PARIS 118–127
-
- I. Ventilation 118–120
- Artificial Ventilation never freshens a Ward
- II. Oiled Boards versus Parquets 120–124
- Cleaning polished and oiled Boards much less
- laborious, and freshens the Ward much more than
- the _frottage_ of _Parquets_.
- Mode of Cleaning them at Berlin 122–124
- III. Ten Cautions in Building Hospital Pavilions 124–127
- Size of Wards. Our own Regimental Hospitals
- extraordinary for their many holes and corners 125
- Casualty Wards 126
-
- “CONTAGION” AND “INFECTION” DEFINED 128–132
-
- Idea of “Contagion” invented by Men to excuse
- themselves for the neglect of all Sanitary
- arrangements 128
- In the ordinary sense of the word, no such thing
- as “Contagion” 129
- Nor as _inevitable_ “Infection” 130
- “Infection” and Incapable Management, or Bad
- Construction, convertible terms 131
- “Epidemics” do not _spread_--they develop
- themselves in Constitutions made ripe for them
- by Sanitary neglects 131
-
- Note on certain “Observations” by Sir John Hall 132, 133
-
- * * * * *
-
- THOUGHTS SUBMITTED AS TO AN EVENTUAL NURSES’
- PROVIDENT FUND 1–19
-
- Actual Wages and Prospects of Nurses 1–3
- Some further Provision desirable 4–6
- Of what Nature? 6–15
- With regard to Kind? 6–8
- With regard to Persons? 8
- With regard to Objects? 9–15
- Material Objects? 9–12
- Children, in the case of Nurses, a Temptation to
- Petty Dishonesty and taking Bribes 11, 12
- Sanitary Objects? 13
- Moral Objects? 13–15
- Hospitals not places for Penitents 14, 15
- Rules to be followed in giving Assistance 15–17
- Prospects of Eventual Support 18, 19
-
- Note as to the Number of Women employed as Nurses
- in Great Britain 20, 21
- Tables of Ages, &c. 21
- Note as to Teaching Nursing--Institution at Madras 22, 23
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-_PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL._
-
-
-
-
-THOUGHTS SUBMITTED BY ORDER CONCERNING
-
- I. HOSPITAL-NURSES.
- II. NURSES IN CIVIL HOSPITALS.
- III. NURSES IN HER MAJESTY’S HOSPITALS.
-
-
-I. HOSPITAL-NURSES.
-
-[Sidenote: Definite Objects: road to them to be found out.]
-
-1. It would appear desirable to consider that definite objects are to
-be attained; and that the road leading to them is to a large extent to
-be found out--therefore to consider all plans and rules, for some time
-to come, as in a great measure tentative and experimental.
-
-[Sidenote: Presumed Main Object.]
-
-2. The main object I conceive to be, to improve hospitals, by improving
-hospital-nursing; and to do this by improving, or contributing towards
-the improvement, of the class of hospital-nurses, whether nurses or
-head-nurses.
-
-[Sidenote: Presumed Intentions.]
-
-3. This I propose doing, not by founding a Religious Order;
-but by training, systematizing, and morally improving as far
-as may be permitted, that section of the large class of women
-supporting themselves by labour, who take to hospital-nursing for
-a livelihood,--by inducing, in the long run, some such women to
-contemplate usefulness, and the service of God in the relief of man,
-as well as maintenance, and by incorporating with both these classes
-a certain proportion of gentlewomen who may think fit to adopt this
-occupation without pay, but under the same rules, and on the same
-strict footing of duty performed under definite superiors. These two
-latter elements, if efficient (if not, they would be mischievous rather
-than useless), I consider would elevate and leaven the mass.
-
-[Sidenote: Religious Orders.]
-
-4. It may or may not be desirable to incorporate into the work, either
-temporarily or permanently, members of Religious Orders, whether
-English or Roman Catholic, or both, who may, with the consent of their
-Superiors, enter hospitals nursed under the above system, upon the
-definite understanding of entire obedience to secular authorities in
-secular matters, and of abstinence from proselytism.
-
-[Sidenote: Their Advantages.]
-
-5. Great and undoubted advantages as to character, decorum, order,
-absence of scandal, protection against calumny, together with,
-generally speaking, security for some amount of religious fear, love,
-and self-sacrifice, are found in the system of female Religious Orders.
-
-[Sidenote: Advantages of Hired Labour.]
-
-6. On the other hand, the majority of women in all European countries
-are, by God’s providence, compelled to work for their bread, and are
-without vocation for Orders.
-
-In England the channels of female labour are few, narrow, and
-over-crowded. In London and in all large towns, there are accordingly a
-large number of women who avowedly live by their shame; a larger number
-who occupy a hideous border-land, working by day and sinning by night;
-and a large number, whether larger or smaller than the latter class is
-a doubtful problem, who preserve their chastity, and struggle through
-their lives as they can, on precarious work and insufficient wages.
-Vicious propensities are in many cases the cause, remediless by the
-efforts of others, of the two first classes: want of work, insufficient
-wages, the absence of protection and restraint, are the cause in many
-more.
-
-Perhaps the work most needed now is rather to aim at alleviating the
-misery, and lessening the opportunities and the temptations to gross
-sin, of the many; than at promoting the spiritual elevation of the few,
-always supposing that this latter object is best effected in an Order.
-
-At any rate, to promote the honest employment, the decent maintenance
-and provision, to protect and to restrain, to elevate in purifying, so
-far as may be permitted, a number, more or less, of poor and virtuous
-women, is a definite and large object of useful aim, whether success be
-granted to it or not.
-
-The Orders remain for the reception of those women who either are or
-believe themselves drawn to enter them, or who experience their need of
-them.
-
-[Sidenote: Main Object of Hospitals: Distinct Functions of Hospital
-Clergy and Hospital Nurses.]
-
-7. The care of the sick is the main object of hospitals. The care of
-their souls is the great province of the clergy of hospitals. The care
-of their bodies is the duty of the nurses. Possibly this duty might
-be better fulfilled by religious nurses than by Sisters of any Order;
-because the careful, skilful, and frequent performance of certain
-coarse, servile, personal offices is of momentous consequence in many
-forms of severe illness and severe injury, and prudery, a thing which
-appears incidental, though not necessarily so, to Female Orders, is
-adverse to or incompatible with this.
-
-[Sidenote: Objections to Amalgamating Members of Orders with Secular
-Nurses.]
-
-8. Grave and peculiar difficulties attend the incorporation of members
-of Orders, especially of Roman Catholic Orders, into the work. And,
-both with reference to the Queen’s hospitals, and still more to
-the civil hospitals, I humbly submit that much thought, and some
-consultation with a few impartial and judicious men, should precede
-the experiment of their introduction. This appears to me one of the
-most important questions for decision. Should it be decided in favor
-of their introduction, I trust it may be resolved to do so only
-tentatively and experimentally.
-
-I confess that, subject to correction or modification from further
-experience or information, my belief, the result of much anxious
-thought and actual experience, is, that their introduction is certain
-to effect far more harm in some ways than it can effect good in
-others; that a great part of the advantages of the system of Orders
-is lost when their members are partially incorporated in a secular,
-and therefore, as they consider, an inferior system; and that their
-incorporation, especially as regards the Roman Catholic Sisters, will
-be a constant source of confusion, of weakness, of disunion, and of
-mischief.
-
-Saint Vincent de Paule well knew mankind, when he imposed, amongst
-other things, the rule on the Sisters of his Order never to join in
-any work of charity with the Sisters of any other Order. This rule was
-mentioned to me on an occasion which gave it weight, by the Superior
-of the Sisters of Charity of one of the two Sardinian Hospitals on the
-Heights of Balaklava, in the spring of 1856, and by the _Mère Générale_
-at Paris, October 1854, when she was solicited by me, with the assent
-and sanction, both of the English and of the French Governments, to
-grant some of her Sisters to us at Scutari.
-
-[Sidenote: Ladies]
-
-9. As regards ladies, not members of Orders, peculiar difficulties
-attend their admission: yet their eventual admixture to a certain
-extent in the work is an important feature of it. Obedience,
-discipline, self-control, work understood as work, hospital service
-as implying masters, civil and medical, and a mistress, what service
-means, and abnegation of self, are things not always easy to be learnt,
-understood, and faithfully acted upon, by ladies. Yet they cannot fail
-in efficiency of service or propriety of conduct--propriety is a large
-word--without damaging the work, and degrading their element. Their
-dismissal (like that of Sisters) must always be more troublesome, if
-not more difficult than that of the other nurses.
-
-It might be better not to invite this element; to let it come if it
-will learn, understand, and do what has to be learnt, understood, and
-done: if not, it is better away.
-
-It appears to me, but I may be quite mistaken, that, in the beginning,
-many such persons will offer themselves, but few persevere; that in
-time a sufficient number will form an important element of the work;
-more is not desirable.
-
-It seems to me important that ladies, as such, should have no separate
-status; but should be merged among the head-nurses, by whatever name
-these are called. Thus efficiency would be promoted, sundry things
-would be checked, and the leaven would circulate.
-
-There are many women, daughters and widows of the middle classes, who
-would become valuable acquisitions to the work, but whose circumstances
-would compel them to find their maintenance in it. These persons would
-be far more useful, less troublesome, would blend better and more
-truly with women of the higher orders, who were in the work, and would
-influence better and more easily the other nurses, as head-nurses, than
-as ladies. Whether or not the better judgment of others agrees with
-mine, my meaning will be understood.
-
-In truth the only lady in a hospital should be the chief of the women,
-whether called Matron or Superintendent. The efficiency of her
-office requires that she should rank as a lady and an officer of the
-hospital. At the same time, I think it important that every Matron and
-Superintendent, (unless during war-service, when the rough-and-ready
-life and work required will probably be best undergone by women of a
-higher class) should be a person of the middle classes, and if she
-requires and receives a salary, so much the better. She will thus
-disarm one source of opposition and jealousy, and enough will remain,
-inseparable from her office.
-
-The quasi-spiritual dignity of Sisters of Mercy is a thing _sui
-generis_. But the real and faithful discharge of the duties of the
-wards of a General Hospital, whether with reference to superiors,
-companions, or patients, is incompatible with the status, as such,
-of ladies. The real dignity of a gentlewoman is a very high and
-unassailable thing, which silently encompasses her from her birth to
-her grave. Therefore, I can conceive no woman who knows, either from
-information or from experience, what hospital duties are, not feeling
-as strongly as I do, that either the assertion or the reception of the
-status as such of a lady, is against every rule and feeling of common
-sense, of the propriety of things, and of her own dignity.
-
-[Sidenote: Religion.]
-
-10. The question of the mode of Religion is an all-important one, and
-the choice of a mode bears far more directly upon this work than may,
-at first sight, appear. To give up the common ground of membership of
-the National Church is to give up a great source of strength.
-
-[Sidenote: St. John’s House.]
-
-St. John’s House, if it steers clear of the rock of prudery,
-undoubtedly possesses great advantages over a system of hospital
-nursing by promiscuous instruments. Not because it includes a
-Sisterhood, a system, in which I, for one, humbly but entirely
-disbelieve; but because the laborious, servile, anxious, trying
-drudgery of real hospital work (and to be anything but a nuisance it
-must ever remain a very humble and very laborious drudgery), requires,
-like every duty, if it is to be done aright, the fear and love of God.
-And in practice, apart from theory, no real union can ever be formed
-between sects. The work now proposed, however, must essentially forbear
-to avail itself of the bond of union of the National Church.
-
-[Sidenote: Only Women of Unblemished Character should be employed.]
-
-11. None but women of unblemished character should be suffered to
-enter the work, and any departure from chastity should be visited with
-instant final dismission. All applications on behalf of late inmates of
-penitentiaries, reformatories, of all kinds and descriptions, should be
-refused. The first offence of dishonesty, and, at the very furthest,
-the third offence of drunkenness, should ensure irreversible dismissal.
-No nurse dismissed, from whatever cause, should be suffered to return.
-
-[Sidenote: Provision for Old Age.]
-
-12. It is very important, if possible, to make provision for the
-disabled age of deserving nurses. It does not seem to me, I speak
-very diffidently, desirable to concentrate them in one or more large
-buildings. I believe half the inmates of half the alms-houses, &c.,
-are not on speaking terms with each other. John Bull is of a peculiar
-idiosyncrasy: nowhere are there such homes as in England, but life in
-community does not seem congenial here. A pension and the option of
-ending their days in solitary quiet, or with some friend or relation,
-would probably be the most comfortable arrangement for nurses.
-
-[Sidenote: Progressive Increase of Wages.]
-
-13. Many women are valuable as nurses, who are yet unfit for promotion
-to head-nurses. It appears to me that it would be very desirable to
-have an intermediate recompense: say, after ten years’ good service, to
-raise nurses’ wages; after a second ten years, to raise them further.
-
-[Sidenote: Fixed Age for Admission and Retirement.]
-
-14. There should be an age for the reception and for the retirement
-both of nurses and head-nurses. I think no head-nurse should be under
-thirty.
-
-[Sidenote: Simplicity of Rules, Definition of Authorities.]
-
-15. Simplicity of rules, placing the nurses, in some respects,
-absolutely under the Medical man, and, in others, absolutely under the
-Female Superintendent, is very important; also, at the outset, to have
-a clear and recorded definition of these respective limits.
-
-[Sidenote: Economy.]
-
-16. Economy is very important, with regard to the eventual extension of
-the work.
-
-[Sidenote: Commencement: Training.]
-
-17. In the event of the nurses not being trained in Her Majesty’s
-service, advantage, it seems to me, would attend their beginning in a
-great established hospital; unless indeed it should be judged best to
-select and train a staff of nurses first in a smaller and quieter one.
-Yet much that would be unpleasant in the larger place would probably
-be beneficial. The restraint, control, contact with the masters, work,
-and order of things of a great and settled place, would materially help
-with reference to the nurses.
-
-[Sidenote: Limits.]
-
-18. Common sense will assuredly make the fixed resolve; both to fulfil
-one’s duty, and to keep within it. It is as essential to do the latter
-as the former, and often more difficult, especially for women; most
-especially for hospital-nurses.
-
-[Sidenote: Encumbrance of Public Support or Patronage.]
-
-19. It appears to me most important to be free, once and for ever, from
-the injurious, untrue, and derogatory appendage of public patronage:
-what is called support in these days always ends in patronage. This
-work, truly understood, never has been, never will be, never can be, a
-popular work; for many reasons, one of which is that the public, of all
-orders, never can know anything of the real nature of hospital-work.
-With the best intentions, it will therefore make perpetual and impeding
-mistakes in “supporting” or patronizing it. Its support and patronage
-are equally injurious in different ways as regards our masters the
-medical men, ourselves the nurses, and people who are neither medical
-men nor nurses.
-
-[Sidenote: Caution, Non-expectation, and Trust.]
-
-20. I end as I began. Let nothing be done rashly. Let us not be
-fettered with many rules at first. Let us take time to see how things
-work; what is found to answer best; how the work proceeds; how far it
-pleases God to accept and bless it. Let us be prepared, as I know well
-we must be, for disappointments of every sort and kind. What can any of
-us do in anything, what are any of us meant to do in anything, but our
-duty, leaving the event to God? His Will be done in earth, as it is in
-Heaven.
-
-
-II. NURSES IN CIVIL HOSPITALS.
-
-[Sidenote: Isolation of each Head Nurse and her Nurses.]
-
-1. The isolation of each head-nurse and her nurses appears to me very
-important. The head-nurse should be within reach and view of her
-ward both day and night. Associating the nurses in large dormitories
-tends to corrupt the good, and make the bad worse. Small airy rooms
-contiguous to the ward are best. The ward should have but one entrance,
-and the head-nurse’s room should be close to it, so that neither
-nurse nor patient can leave, nor any one enter the ward, without her
-knowledge.
-
-[Sidenote: All to Rank and be Paid alike, with Progressive Increase of
-Wages.]
-
-2. All the nurses should rank and be paid alike, with progressive
-increase of wages after each ten years’ good service, or a slow annual
-rise, which is better.
-
-[Sidenote: Night Nurses.]
-
-3. The night-nurses should be on duty 12 hours, with instant dismissal
-if found asleep; 8 hours should be allowed for sleep, and 4 hours for
-daily exercise, private occupation, or recreation. If they have no time
-to themselves for their mending, making, &c., they do it at night,
-sometimes innocently, sometimes to the injury of the patients. I would
-not however prohibit occupation at night; as sometimes the ward-duty is
-slight; and doing something is far better and more awakening than doing
-nothing. This is one of the matters the head-nurse should constantly
-look to. I do not fancy, but at present am not positive about, cleaning
-or scrubbing at night. The night-nurse should have a reversible lamp,
-or something that without disturbing the patient, gives her light,
-brighter than the dim fire or gas-light properly maintained in the
-wards at night. She should have a room to herself.
-
-[Sidenote: Day Nurses.]
-
-4. The day-nurses should have eight hours’ sleep, and if it be
-possible, 4 hours daily for exercise, private occupation or recreation.
-They may have one room.
-
-[Sidenote: Nurses to fetch nothing.]
-
-5. All provisions, &c., &c., should be as much as possible brought into
-the wards, or to the ward-doors, by lifts. Nothing should be fetched
-by the nurses. This would save much time; would enable the nurses to
-do more work, and yet have more leisure; and above all, would obviate
-the great demoralization consequent on the nurses, patients, and
-men-servants congregating in numbers several times daily.
-
-[Sidenote: Patients to fetch nothing.]
-
-6. The patients should be made as useful as possible, consistently with
-their capacities, inside the ward; but should be permitted to fetch
-nothing to it.
-
-[Sidenote: Scrubbing.]
-
-7. I strongly incline to have the scrubbing done in each ward, by a
-nurse assigned for that purpose, and for general attendance when the
-scrubbing is done. There should be hours for the scrubbing, before and
-after which it should not be done. This whole matter is one on which I
-am not positive at present.
-
-[Sidenote: Distribution of Ward Work.]
-
-8. At present, I incline to something of the following scale. Two
-wards, single are best, but it might be one double ward, with 40 beds,
-served by 1 head-nurse and 3 nurses. The head-nurse to superintend all
-things, and to do the dressings not done by the surgeons and dressers,
-assisted mainly by one nurse, whom she thus instructs in nursing.
-Another nurse to do the scrubbing, and mainly the cleaning, and when
-these are over to mind the ward during the remaining hours in turn or
-in conjunction with the first nurse. The third to be night-nurse. In
-the morning, before dressing begins, and before the night-nurse goes
-off duty, all three nurses to clean the ward, make the beds, wash the
-helpless patients, &c.
-
-[Sidenote: Hours of Dressing and Poulticing,]
-
-9. Hours of morning and evening poulticing and dressing to be fixed.
-
-[Sidenote: and of Medicine.]
-
-10. Hours of administration of medicine, always except at night given
-by head-nurse, to be fixed.
-
-[Sidenote: Hours of Exercise, and Holidays.]
-
-11. Hours of exercise of head-nurse and nurses to be fixed, and
-arranged with reference to the ward-duties. A fixed occasional holiday
-given in turn to the nurses is good. An annual longer holiday for them
-and for the head-nurses is good; a fortnight is, I think, a good limit.
-The holidays cause inconvenience, no doubt, but on the whole do, I
-think, far more good than harm. The holidays should be distributed in
-rotation during a fixed time of year, and comprehended in two or three
-months, or four at the very outside; and no woman declining her holiday
-at the proper time should be allowed it at any other.
-
-[Sidenote: Permission of Matron for extra time out.]
-
-12. No head-nurse or nurse should be out of the hospital before or
-after the limit of her daily exercise time, two hours, without written
-permission of the Matron. The Matron, I think, should put the cause
-and amount of the extension in writing, and report the same to the
-Treasurer or Chief Officer, at the next general meeting, whenever it
-is called, of the Officers of the Hospital. She will find this a great
-protection against petitions. There is not a doubt that the fewer
-extraordinary absences, the better.
-
-[Sidenote: Place of Exercise.]
-
-13. Were it possible to have a small garden (in college gardens much
-effect and much refreshment is produced by a green sward, a few
-trees, some shrubs, a fountain, and some seats), in this, at strictly
-separated hours, the men-patients, the women patients, the head-nurses
-and nurses, the men-servants, if they choose, which perhaps is not
-likely, could walk or sit down. This arrangement would little interfere
-with its enjoyment by the dignitaries and their children, who require
-it quite as much, and would be found in its results practically and
-not poetically useful. Hospitals are, and perhaps must be, in or near
-crowded thoroughfares. Streets are miserable places to walk in during
-great part of the year. Nurses want and unconsciously crave for fresh
-air, and often half-an-hour is better than more, given them close
-to their work--and away from the streets, it would be often a great
-preservative.
-
-[Sidenote: Caution.]
-
-14. I should, however, be very cautious as to introducing music or
-anything of that sort. Hospitals are not tea-gardens, nor homes, nor
-meant to be either. Great quiet and some severity of discipline are
-necessary, and ought to be exacted.
-
-[Sidenote: Dress.]
-
-15. I think the head-nurses should wear a regulation dress, and the
-nurses another; if we adopt the honest word livery, in use in the
-hospitals, it will perhaps do no harm. Caps, dresses, aprons, should
-be prescribed: whether or not out-of-door dress should be prescribed
-is to be considered apart. Each should have three dresses yearly.
-Better, I think, avoid washing stuffs; they require endless change to
-look decent. Head-nurses and nurses might wear the same dress, and some
-difference in the cap would be quite distinction enough.
-
-[Sidenote: Wages.]
-
-16. I incline towards giving the head-nurses £50 a-year, one or two
-rooms (one room with an alcove and curtain would be best), fuel and
-light. The nurses lodging; the night-nurse a room to herself, the
-others together; entire board, fuel, light, and good wages to be
-decided upon.
-
-[Sidenote: Furniture.]
-
-17. The nurses’ rooms should be supplied with plain comfortable
-furniture. In the large Hospitals the head-nurse furnishes her own
-room or rooms, which doubtless promotes her comfort and her care of
-the furniture, both desirable things; yet the tendency of many to
-accumulate decorations, which take time to clean, &c., is a drawback.
-I should be inclined, as an experiment, to try the furnishing plan, or
-at least to have some scale as to furniture allowed. A bed, arm-chair,
-and sofa; a chest of drawers, wash-hand table or shelf; book-case
-or shelves; a little table, and a larger one, a couple of chairs, a
-footstool, and a cupboard with broad shelves, are the utmost that can
-be required.
-
-[Sidenote: Visitors.]
-
-18. A difficult and important point to settle is the amount of liberty
-allowed as to receiving visits. It is desirable on all accounts to make
-head-nurses and nurses feel comfortable, and, as it were, at home:
-it is also better they should not be unnecessarily out; also London
-distances are great, and even omnibus-fare is a consideration; also
-it is important to remember that these women are apt to feel and say:
-“We are not in a nunnery,” nor should they be. Still upon the whole,
-considering the nuisance of ordinary visitors, and the greater nuisance
-of extraordinary (_e. g._, visitors to some head-nurses, kind friends
-come to see how we are getting on, &c., &c., &c.), I think if it were
-possible to make the rule that no visitors are allowed, it would be
-a great gain. I am not sure, at present, whether it is possible or
-not--still less whether it is possible to keep such a rule, if made.
-But, at all events, nurses and head-nurses should only be permitted
-to receive visitors on certain days and hours of the week; and those
-hours and days should be strictly kept to. In Military Hospitals a
-still more rigid rule will be necessary.
-
-[Sidenote: Discharged Patients.]
-
-19. No discharged patients, however previously well-conducted, should
-be allowed to visit the wards.
-
-[Sidenote: Graduated scale of Pensions.]
-
-20. Apart from raising the wages of good nurses after every ten years’
-service, I think it would well answer to establish a graduated scale
-of pensions, for both head-nurses and nurses; beginning with a small
-pension after ten years’ good service, increasing every five years
-afterwards. Many women are quickly worn out in this life; and it is
-equally undesirable to turn faithful worn-out servants adrift without
-any provision, or to retain them in duties for which they are become
-unfit. It is a question whether there should not be a compulsory
-stoppage from wages, in order to entitle the nurses to pension under
-conditions.
-
-[Sidenote: No occasional Wards.]
-
-21. Have no occasional wards, or wards for accidental and peculiar
-patients.
-
-[Sidenote: Head-Nurse to each Ward.]
-
-22. Every ward, or set of wards, should be under a head-nurse.
-Discipline is always defective under other arrangements.
-
-[Sidenote: Religious Influence.]
-
-23. This turns greatly upon a previous question. Every endeavour should
-be used to bring the women under the influence of religion, God’s
-instrument for saving, strengthening, and comforting souls. So far as
-this work depends on rule, system, and superintendence, great things
-may be done at any rate--so far as moral influence is concerned, it
-can only be hoped for in the channels appointed by Him who turneth all
-hearts whithersoever He will.
-
-
-III. NURSES IN HER MAJESTY’S HOSPITALS.
-
-[Sidenote: Two kinds of Hospital Service for Females.]
-
-1. If their introduction is eventually commanded by the Queen’s
-Government, it will be advisable to consider that their service admits
-of two distinct kinds.
-
-[Sidenote: The one: its Advantages;]
-
-2. “Their chief duties” may be “taking charge of the linen and
-superintending the issue of extras.”
-
-They will thus contribute materially to the comfort and well-being
-of the sick; the real difficulties which undoubtedly beset the
-introduction of women into ward service will be avoided; and, an
-important consideration, not lightly to be discarded, their exclusion
-from the ward service will materially diminish the opposition of
-adverse masters, some of whom are also unscrupulous masters.
-
-[Sidenote: The other: its Advantages.]
-
-3. On the other hand, I suppose, the experience of every woman,
-admitted to ward service in hospitals where women were not before,
-is that many lives are actually saved by such admission, which would
-otherwise, humanly speaking, be lost. In time of war some ciphers may
-be safely added to the many. Any other great emergency, I suppose, but
-do not speak from experience, would give the same result.
-
-That the experience of many surgeons is identical, their conduct has
-proved; no other testimony, under present circumstances, can rationally
-be expected from them.
-
-[Sidenote: Both to be Weighed.]
-
-4. It is often right to begin with the smaller and less-opposed good,
-and to introduce gradually, and, as it pleases God, the remainder. It
-may be our duty to do this, as to this matter.
-
-[Sidenote: Practical Superiority of the Second.]
-
-5. Practically, it is of little avail to superintend, ever so
-carefully, the issue of extras to the sick, unless there is permission
-and opportunity to pour the nourishment, perhaps in continual drops,
-down the throat of reluctant agony, or delirium, or stupor. And it is
-of little avail to have this permission, unless there be also that of
-raising the decent covering under which cholera, erysipelas, or the
-oppression of long recumbency, or the discharging wound, or the recent
-operation lie, and seeing to matters within. It is a further question,
-whether the painful cleansing of painful wounds, and the important
-minor dressings, as poulticing, which things, generally speaking, never
-have been done, and never will be done by surgeons, are best left to
-nurses, orderlies, or the patients themselves.
-
-[Sidenote: Its real and great Difficulties.]
-
-6. At the same time, nothing is more pernicious than to under-rate the
-objections of opponents. There is no doubt that the admission of women
-to ward service is beset with difficulties. These Naval and Military
-Hospitals are, and must ever be, peculiar Hospitals, essentially
-different in important details from the Civil Hospitals.
-
-Sisters of Mercy, as regards the ward service, are decorous and kind,
-and sometimes inefficient and prudish. Nurses are careful, efficient,
-often decorous, and always kind, sometimes drunken, sometimes unchaste.
-
-Misconduct of women is far more pernicious in a Military or Naval
-Hospital than in any other, as regards the result of things--the crime
-is, of course, equally crime everywhere.
-
-[Sidenote: Condense numbers as much as possible.]
-
-7. It appears to me desirable to simplify and condense, as much as
-possible, female service in these Hospitals. Let there be as few women,
-and these few as efficient and as respectable as can be. Let all that
-can really be done by men be so done.
-
-[Sidenote: Only Head Nurses.]
-
-8. Head-nurses are alone, I think, desirable to be employed; I
-mean persons of the character, responsibility, and efficiency, of
-head-nurses in other Hospitals.
-
-[Sidenote: Classify the Patients.]
-
-9. The patients should be distinctly classed, though, of course, this
-is not the Female Superintendent’s business.
-
-There are many pros and cons to the formation of convalescent wards.
-
-It is a question whether convalescent or chronic patients require
-female nurses at all.
-
-Of such chronic cases, probably 100 would be efficiently served by one
-nurse, having orderlies under her. Of acute cases, probably, one nurse
-should take charge of not more than fifty, possibly not more than forty.
-
-[Sidenote: Qualification of Nurses.]
-
-10. The nurses should be strong, active women, of not less than
-thirty, nor, I think, more than sixty years of age, of unblemished
-character, and should be irreversibly dismissed for the first offence
-of unchastity, drunkenness, or dishonesty, or proved impropriety of any
-kind.
-
-[Sidenote: Wages.]
-
-11. Their wages, I think, the same as those of head-nurses in Civil
-Hospitals--certainly, not more.
-
-[Sidenote: Pensions.]
-
-12. Their pension on the same graduated scale.
-
-[Sidenote: Rules.]
-
-13. Their rules should be simple, very definite, should leave them at
-the absolute disposal of the surgeon as to ward matters, and at the
-absolute disposal of the Female Superintendent in all other matters.
-Their dress should be uniform.
-
-[Sidenote: Duties.]
-
-14. Their duties should be strictly defined, and be consistent with
-the Code of Army Hospital Regulations, the revision of which has been
-announced.
-
-[Sidenote: Means of Steadying them.]
-
-15. Give them plenty to do, and great responsibility--two effectual
-means of steadying women.
-
-[Sidenote: Lodging.]
-
-16. The nurse’s lodging in view of her ward renders her far more
-efficient; but this requires some special arrangement. It would not do
-to have the chance of the nurse’s being suddenly taken ill, with only
-patients and orderlies within immediate reach. Were the nurses’ rooms
-so arranged that two or more were on one floor (as is the case in all
-Hospitals), and so arranged as to be entirely separate, and yet, when
-so desired, easily accessible to each other, which might easily be
-contrived, this would probably answer all purposes.
-
-[Sidenote: Food.]
-
-17. Their food should be sent them cooked with some slight variety.
-With the plainest intentions nature often revolts from the perpetual
-joint of excellent meat in Hospital air and life. The occasional
-“potage,” fish, &c., of other systems, are in fact, a refreshing and
-palatable change. If, however, avoiding names that shock and frighten,
-some slight change of diet could be contrived, the effect would be
-good. This is practical and not at all romantic, though it may look the
-latter.
-
-[Sidenote: Opinion of honest Military Authority desirable.]
-
-18. Could the honest opinions be had of a few good Military and
-Surgical Authorities before beginning, it would be good.
-
-[Sidenote: Female Superintendent-General.]
-
-19. The Female Superintendent-General’s own powers and responsibilities
-must be absolutely fixed, and so as not to clash with those of the
-Officer (should such an Officer be appointed, as has been elsewhere
-recommended), who shall superintend the Hospital attendants.
-
-[Sidenote: Confidential Reports.]
-
-20. Confidential reports must be so modified, as far as women are
-concerned, that the humble boon granted to pickpockets, of being
-informed of accusations laid to their charge, must be extended to Her
-Majesty’s nurses.
-
-[Sidenote: Permanency of the System.]
-
-21. In framing the system and the Superintendent’s own office, let it
-be attempted to secure the permanent efficient working, please God, in
-ordinary hands. To aim at the best conceivable may lead to failure.
-Genius works with ordinary materials, but never constructs an edifice
-which it alone can inhabit.
-
-[Sidenote: Quietness.]
-
-22. “In quietness and in confidence shall be your strength.” Quietness
-has been from the beginning of its publicity the one thing wanting in
-this work. I know the fuss, which from its beginning surrounded it, was
-abhorrent to us and was the act of others: but the work, which is all
-we care for, has throughout suffered from it. It is equally injurious
-and impeding as regards surgeons, nurses, and people, who are neither.
-External help in this coarse, repulsive, servile, noble work, for it
-is all these things, is truly the reed which pierced the hand that
-leant upon it. One hospital, naval, military, or civil, nursed well,
-and gradually training a few nurses, would do more good to the cause
-than an endless amount of meetings, testimonials, pounds, and speeches,
-to say nothing of newspaper puffings, which to-morrow might turn into
-revilings. This never will, never can be a popular work. Few good
-ones are, for few are without the stern fructifying element of moral
-restraint and influence; and though the streams of this are many, its
-source is one. Hearts are not touched without Religion. Religion was
-not given us from above in impressions and generalities, but in habits
-of thought and action, in love of God and of mankind, carried into
-action.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: Various Systems of Female Nursing compared.]
-
-A very short comparison will here be made between the methods of Female
-Nursing in the Military Hospitals of
- Russia,
- England,
- France, and
- Sardinia,
-as exemplified in the last War.
-
-[Sidenote: French and Sardinian Hospital Service.]
-
-To do this, a sketch must be partly repeated, which has been already
-given, of the organic difference between the Hospital Service of each
-nation.
-
-The essential characteristic of the French is, the importance given in
-the field to the Divisional Hospital Service over the Regimental.
-
-The Regimental Medical Service treats only those ephemeral cases which
-are to be exempted from duty for a day or two. Cases of wounds or
-disease likely to last for a term of weeks are sent to the Divisional
-Ambulance in the field; those, where disease may possibly last for
-months, to the General Hospitals at the base of operations.
-
-The Medical Service of the Sardinians closely resembles the above
-in its formation. In the late War, their General Ambulances were at
-Balaklava; their General Hospitals at Jeni Koi on the Bosphorus. They
-had no Divisional or Regimental Hospitals.
-
-[Sidenote: English.]
-
-In our Army, as is well known, the Regiment establishes its Regimental
-Hospital wherever it goes. Theoretically, it is exclusively a
-Regimental system of Hospitals; however much, practically, it breaks
-down.
-
-[Sidenote: Russian.]
-
-The Russian system can scarcely bear a comparison with ours;
-because their Regiments are Divisions. They had a regular system of
-transporting the sick and wounded upon the North side of Sebastopol,
-then upon Mackenzie’s Heights, then upon Bakschi-Serai, and lastly upon
-Simpheropol.
-
-[Sidenote: Female Nurses.]
-
-The adaptation of Female Nursing to the different systems in the
- French,
- Sardinian,
- Russian, and
- English Armies
-has now to be noticed.
-
-[Sidenote: Sardinian and French Female Nurses.]
-
-The Sardinians had Sisters of Charity, both in the General Ambulances
-in the Crimea, and in the General Hospitals on the Bosphorus.
-
-The principal duties of these admirable women appear to have been the
-care of the linen and small stores, and the cooking, much of which they
-did with their own hands, for sick officers and men. These duties were
-admirably performed. They appeared, besides, to have a certain charge
-in the wards, the power of giving “_douceurs_,” the administration
-of extras, the seeing to the cleanliness of beds and patients, and
-something more precise with regard to sick Officers; but their duties
-seemed to be somewhat undefined in their relation to the Infirmiers.
-Whether the Sœur or the Infirmier Major were in charge, to see the
-duties about the patient properly executed, was rather a problem.
-
-This was still more the case in the French Hospitals, where the “Sœur”
-in the wards appeared more of a “consolatrice” and an administratrix of
-extras: although, out of the wards, her admirable housekeeping, both in
-the kitchen and the linen-store, was predominant.
-
-The French “Sœurs” were not admitted to the Divisional Ambulances
-in the front: it was whispered, because of the corruption of
-the French Intendance, upon whom they tacitly exercised a very
-inconvenient “surveillance.” They served in all the General Hospitals
-at Constantinople; and to their admirable services, M. Baudens,
-Inspecteur-Général en Crimée, has rendered an “_éclatant témoignage_”
-in his “Mission Médicale en Orient,” published in the numbers of the
-“Revue des Deux Mondes,” of February 15, April 1, and June 1, 1857.
-
-In these French Hospitals of Constantinople, the “Sœurs” appeared to do
-all the cooking for the sick Officers and that of the extras for the
-men.
-
-I do not think that, in either French or Sardinian Hospitals, the
-care of bed-sores and such like, which can only be done by women, was
-sufficiently given to the “Sœurs.”
-
-I have heard complaints made of this kind both by Officers and men; and
-“Sœurs,” both French and Sardinian, have been to me to look at the way
-in which we treated bed-sores, and to borrow air-pillows and water-beds.
-
-There is such a difference however in different Hospitals, in time of
-war and of peace, &c., that I would not be understood to mean that any
-of these remarks apply absolutely or generally, but only to Hospitals I
-have seen.
-
-It may be as well to mention that, talking of “French” and “Sardinian”
-Sisters, they all come from one “Maison Mère,” that of the “Filles
-de la Charité de S. Vincent de Paule,” at Paris. There is a “Maison
-Succursale,” at Turin. But all are of the same Order, and under the
-same head.
-
-Let me mention Sœur Cordero, the excellent Superioress of all the
-Sisters employed in the Sardinian Hospitals of the war, with the
-warmest affection and respect. She was a woman of high rank, of the
-most captivating manners, but of the utmost simplicity of character,
-and of unfailing devotion to right and to God.
-
-[Sidenote: Russian.]
-
-It remains to mention the Russian system, which, as regards the
-organization of the duties of the “Sisters,” appeared to me by far the
-best I have known. I am at a loss to conceive what is meant by the
-following sentence in the Report by two of our Army Medical Officers on
-the “Russian Medical Department,” presented to the House of Commons.
-Speaking of the Sisters of Mercy, who are generally widows of officers,
-it is said “their chief duties appeared to be in taking charge of the
-linen and superintending the issue of extras.” This is founded on error
-of observation--as the Russian system seems to be the only perfectly
-organized system of female attendance in Military Hospitals, which was
-developed in the Crimean War. In it, the Sister has charge of all that
-relates to the bed-side of the patient; she receives the orders from
-the Medical Officer, attends him in his rounds; he confers with her
-afterwards; she even reports the “felchers” or dressers, as also the
-orderlies, as far as regards their discharge of duties at the bed-side
-of the patient. The orderlies are, of course, under the control of a
-Non-commissioned Officer, in all that pertains to discipline, clothing,
-meals, &c. The “felchers” are under a superior “felcher,” and under the
-Medical Officers.
-
-There are female nurses, wives and widows of soldiers, under the
-“Sisters,” who are generally, as has been stated, widows of Officers.
-
-This appears the nearest approach to good organization I have met with.
-
-But again I say there may be much difference among the Russian Military
-Hospitals. I would not be considered as laying down an absolute
-experience.
-
-[Sidenote: English.]
-
-It has been said elsewhere what was the system or no system pursued
-in the English Military Hospitals, as to Female Nursing. It was a
-new thing, and no General Order or Warrant was ever issued as to the
-duties of the nurses. Many duties clearly devolved upon the Female
-Superintendent-General, as she was afterwards called in “General
-Orders,” which never should devolve upon her again.
-
-[Sidenote: Proposed Duties of Female Nurses in Military Hospitals.]
-
-But it may be now clearly enunciated what the duties of Female Nurses
-should be, and many reasons will subsequently be given why there never
-will be discipline in Military Hospitals till they are as follow:
-
-Women only of the character, efficiency, and responsibility of Head
-Nurses in other Hospitals should be admitted into Military ones. They
-should have charge and be responsible for all that pertains to the
-bed-side of the patient; for his cleanliness, and that of his linen,
-bed, and utensils; for all the minor dressings, not performed by
-Surgeons or Dressers; for the administration of medicines, and of the
-meals; for the obedience of the patient and orderlies to the orders of
-the Medical Officer. They should receive the orders of the latter, and
-always attend him in his visits.
-
-Till the above is done by women, the same want of discipline, now to
-be observed in Military Hospitals, and often already noticed, will
-continue,--such is my firm belief, the result of much experience.
-
-[Sidenote: Duties which should be left to men.]
-
-There will be abundance left for the Ward Master or Serjeant to do
-in taking Military charge of the Hospital and its inhabitants, in
-being Office Clerk, &c., _i. e._, keeping the Admission books, making
-States, Returns, Accounts, and other documents, without his being
-Head-Nurse, without his superintending the Orderlies at the bed-side,
-his administering medicines, &c., which can only be satisfactorily done
-by a woman. And, when done by her, there will still be ample work for
-two men, where one does now the work of three.
-
-The first should do the Military part, the second should compound,
-take charge of Medical and Surgical stores, of Returns and Accounts
-connected with these; and, where there is no Purveyor, of Purveyor’s
-and Barrack stores, provisions, cooking, washing, diets, and extras,
-including Returns and Accounts connected with these.
-
-As it is, there is one Hospital Serjeant, who is Ward-Master, Serjeant,
-Steward, Clerk, Dispenser, Purveyor’s Clerk, and Head-Nurse--a kind of
-“Maître Jacques,” as in Molière’s “Avare.”
-
-One man cannot do all these things.
-
-A Female should be the Head-Nurse--a Serjeant should be the Serjeant
-and Clerk--a Ward-Master the Steward, Dispenser, Ward-Master, and
-Purveyor’s Clerk.
-
-And here I must deplore the confusion unavoidable in these definitions
-of proposed duties, while we have no separate system for Regimental and
-General Hospitals.
-
-What Dr. Menzies declared, in his evidence as to the General Hospitals
-at Scutari, is strictly true, and one great cause of our failure at
-Scutari:--“I have followed the general rules for Regimental Hospitals,
-so far as I could.”
-
-While Regimental Hospitals are what they are, females never can be
-admitted there. On the other hand, if General Hospitals be established,
-one happy consequence will be that the cooking and washing will
-be taken out of the hands of the Hospital Serjeant, and regularly
-organized, it is hoped under a Captain-Superintendent of Orderlies. All
-Purveyor’s and Barrack stores, that is, Hospital stores and furniture
-will, it is hoped, fall under the charge of a Steward; Medical and
-Surgical stores under that of an Apothecary.
-
-It will only remain to place a female Head-Nurse in charge of all that
-concerns the bed-side of a patient, and the duties of the Orderlies
-about the bed-side, and a Ward-Master in charge of everything else
-belonging to the Orderlies and Patients.
-
-But, if it should be determined to retain everywhere the old Regimental
-system, it is only just to add this very strong testimony and appeal in
-favour of the old Hospital Sergeant, who indeed deserves it:--
-
- “I may take this opportunity of stating my conviction that, from
- the very arduous, constant, and responsible duties of the Hospital
- Sergeant, and his influence for good or ill among the non-commissioned
- officers and men of the regiment, it is particularly required for the
- good of the service that he should be put at least on the same footing
- in rank and pay as a first-class staff sergeant. He ought to pass
- an examination by a Board of Medical Officers as to his fitness for
- compounding medicines on the same footing as a druggist in England. My
- Hospital Sergeant, who has been eight years a sergeant, three of which
- as Hospital Sergeant, receives at present 1_s._ 10_d._ pay per diem,
- and an allowance of 4_d._ per diem as Hospital Orderly; at the same
- time that there are sergeants in the ranks of the regiment four years
- junior to him as a non-commissioned officer who are receiving 2_s._
- 10_d._ pay per diem.
-
- “My experience leads me to consider that the regimental bandsmen are
- not, as a body, likely to be sufficiently strong or able men for the
- duty of carrying the wounded to be consigned to them.
- “(Signed)
- THOMAS LONGMORE,
- “_Surgeon 19th Regiment_.”
-
-
-
-
-NOTE IN REGARD TO THE RUSSIAN NURSES EMPLOYED IN THE WAR-HOSPITALS OF
-THE CRIMEA.
-
-
-The Russian nurses, in the opinion of their Master, the famous
-surgeon, Pirogoff, did other things besides what the Army Medical
-Director-General told the House of Commons they did. But it is to be
-observed--
-
-In the first place, that much allowance is to be made for the confusion
-incident to Scotch and Russian surgeons talking French together, and
-going over many subjects in a very short time.
-
-And in the second, that very likely some extra confusion arose in
-the minds of our Army Medical Officers from the fact of two entirely
-different sets of women having served in the Russian War Hospitals,
-viz.:
-
-(1.) The Sisters of the Elevation of the Cross.
-
-(2.) The “Frauen des Barmherzigen Wittwen Instituts,” (mentioned
-in a very cold manner in pages 4, 26, and implicitly, 27, of
-Professor Pirogoff’s pamphlet, “Die Gemeinschaft der Schwestern zur
-Kreuz-erhöhung. Berlin: 1856”); who are those spoken of at pp. 22, 23,
-above.
-
-The Widows were so instituted, about forty years or more ago, by Mary
-of Wirtemberg, during so many years the venerated Empress-Mother. It is
-quite possible that in the war-pressure their services proved rather
-nondescript, they being neither sisters nor nurses, strictly speaking;
-or perhaps the sole reason why Professor Pirogoff has not one good word
-for them is, that they were not under his orders.
-
-The Sisters of the Elevation of the Cross were a body of secular women,
-with a few Sisters of Mercy, formed by the Grand Duchess Helena, and
-placed by her under the orders of the famous civilian Surgeon Pirogoff,
-to whom the supreme surgical command in Sevastopol was virtually
-given. Several things are incidentally mentioned concerning them in
-his pamphlet, quite inconsistent with the constitution of an ordinary
-religious order.
-
-One or two things in the pamphlet are incongruous enough to English
-ideas:--the narrative given, however simply and succinctly, of the
-performances of the sisters by name, the publication of the Professor’s
-evident disagreement with the first “Oberin,” or Superior, who served
-ten months, (the second, whom he so highly praises, had only served
-two when he wrote); the improvement, by which the Sisters’ concerns
-were “sat upon” by the Comité of Oberin, Chaplain, Doctor, and elder
-Sisters, &c., &c.
-
-But the division of Professor Pirogoff’s war-nurses into three
-categories is a pregnant hint for future service, please God we yield
-it. These three categories consisted of (1) the “Verband-Schwestern,”
-or those who assisted the Surgeon in the dressings, and the
-“Feld-scherer” (Dresser) in preparing them. (2) The “Apothekerinnen,”
-or those who were in charge of all medical appliances for immediate
-use, and who superintended the “Feld-scherer” (Dresser) in the
-administration of medicines. (3) The “Wirthinnen,” who looked after
-the diets, clean linen, &c., of the patients, and the order of the
-hospital. Each “category” was responsible for carrying out the orders
-of the medical officers. To every Hospital-_Baracke_ (hut) was attached
-one sister of each of the above descriptions.
-
-In ordinary service the less nurses know of each other’s wards the
-better--in war service it is essential that as few women should serve
-as many sick as possible; and it is impossible to attempt assigning to
-each nurse the entire supervision of a ward. I think the categories,
-modified, of course, and adapted to the Queen’s service, might be most
-useful.
-
-Another point usefully proved by Professor Pirogoff’s pamphlet is the
-extreme importance, if it be possible, of placing the nurses clearly
-under the orders of the Principal Medical Officer, though a further
-point is, if possible, to be secured, viz., that of the Principal
-Medical Officer being favourable to their service. As women they
-should be entirely under the control of their female superior, yet the
-Principal Medical Officer should have a certain clear amount of power
-in ordering that Superior as to their employment at particular stations
-and on particular services.
-
-The _Transport Abtheilung_ of the Russian sisters seems to have been
-an admirable, though very unpretending service. We might take a useful
-hint from it. Three Sisters accompanied the more numerous[1] convoys of
-Sick Transport from Simpheropol to Perekop, and provided the sick with
-tea, sugar, clean linen, medical and surgical appliances, &c., on the
-way.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] According to Professor Pirogoff sick were almost daily sent
-from Simpheropol to Perekop. They could not, therefore, be always
-accompanied by Sisters.
-
-
-
-
-SUBSIDIARY NOTES AS TO THE INTRODUCTION OF FEMALE NURSING INTO MILITARY
- HOSPITALS IN PEACE AND IN WAR.
-
-
-It is, perhaps, advisable first to speak of some of those difficulties
-met with in the War Hospitals of the East, in order that such may be
-prevented for others who may in future be Superintendents-General of
-Nurses in Military Hospitals whether in peace or in war.
-
-
-I.
-
-No one ought to undertake a matter of duty of this kind without first
-obtaining the consent of the War Office to five conditions.
-
-1. That every month, each of her sub-Superintendents shall furnish
-her with an abstract of the requisitions made by her on the Purveyor,
-whether for Nurses’ consumption, or for that of Patients, and that she
-furnish the War Office with an abstract of these. It is then the part
-of the Purveyor to disprove her accounts, instead of its being, as
-before, her part to disprove his.
-
-2. That it be made a point of honour, not of grace, with the War
-Department, to submit to her any Report, confidential[2] or otherwise,
-made concerning the Female Nursing Staff; a condition, without which it
-would be impossible to have respectable women in the Military Service.
-
-3. That the powers of the Superintendent-General shall be strictly
-defined, and put in “General Orders” in the first place, and not in
-the last, in order that there may not be the useless and endless
-correspondence which there was in the first Superintendent-General’s
-case (and for what?).
-
-4. That the Superintendent-General have the power of communicating
-directly with the War Department; and that her Money-Accounts be sent
-in by her directly to that Department.
-
-5. That it be made a point of honour that the Medical Officers
-communicate to the Superintendent-General, or Local Superintendent, any
-complaint they may have against the Nurses for disobedience.
-
-In March 1856 the following appeared in “General Orders.” Had it but
-been seventeen months earlier how much it might have saved![3] The
-definition of the Superintendent-General’s powers and duties, therein
-contained, is all that is wanted to prevent irregularities disastrous
-to the Service.
-
-GENERAL ORDERS.
-
- _March 1856._
-
-“It is notified, by order of the Secretary of State for War, that Miss
-Nightingale is recognized by Her Majesty’s Government as the General
-Superintendent of the Female Nursing Establishment of the Military
-Hospitals of the Army. No lady, sister, or nurse is to be transmitted
-from one Hospital to another, or into any Hospital, without previous
-consultation with her. Her instructions, however, require her to have
-the approval of the Principal Medical Officer, in her exercise of the
-responsibility thus vested in her.
-
-“The Principal Medical Officer will communicate with Miss Nightingale
-upon all subjects connected with the Female Nursing Establishment, and
-will give his directions through that lady.”
-
-
-II.
-
-_Nurses._
-
-1. Our Nurses were of four sorts.
-
- Nuns.
- Sisters (Anglican).
- Ladies.
- Nurses.
-
-The Nuns were received not as Nuns, but as Nurses.
-
-Their (so called) training told sometimes against us; sometimes for us.
-The same with the “Sisters” (Anglican).
-
-The Ladies were useful, exactly in proportion as they approached the
-professional, and not the dilettante, mode of thought.
-
-A larger proportion of paid Nurses than of Ladies did well, and this
-under circumstances of peculiar temptation. Paid Nurses are always the
-most useful.
-
-2. There should always be a proportion of Nurses in Army Hospitals
-
- To preside in Extra Diet Kitchens,[4]
- ″ in Linen Stores.
- To teach the Orderlies to nurse in the Wards.
-
-The proportion of Roman Catholic “Sœurs,” in French Military Hospitals,
-is as small as this would be; they undertake even less duty than this:
-in Military Hospitals they do much less than in Civil Hospitals.
-
-Women in Military Hospitals should all be contracted servants, whether
-Nuns, Ladies, or professional Nurses.
-
-There should be a retiring pension to each woman.
-
-3. Miss Nightingale took service on the ground of being under the
-Principal Medical Officer, and, consequently, of not interfering with
-him.
-
-There was no _imperium in imperio_ in her case.
-
-This exists in the case of the French “Sœurs de Charité,” and existed
-in individual instances among the “Sisters” under Miss Nightingale;
-_i. e._, they gave articles of diet, &c., as from Sisters, not in
-obedience to Medical orders. This was immediately put a stop to by
-her. That the Medical Officer is sole master of diets, is an axiom of
-medicine, and of common sense.
-
-This involved our only _answering_ the Extra Diet Rolls in our
-kitchens; not originating either in quantity or quality.
-
-Afterwards, although frequent were the insinuations that we
-transgressed the above maxim, no evidence of the fact was ever
-obtained, except the following, which is given _verbatim_ and
-_literatim_, as “put into Court” by a First Class Staff-Surgeon, in
-charge of one of the divisions of the Barrack Hospital, Scutari. He
-alleged “that the Nurses were in the habit of giving diets without
-leave;” and when pressed for the facts, produced the annexed statement
-in “W. J. Northcott’s” handwriting.
-
- “2447. Pte. John M‘Cormick, L. T. Corps, age twenty, 11 Company,
- admitted into 6 Ward, F. Corridor. Admitted with Febris C. C.,
- April 30th, 1856. On or about the 10th of May I was confined in the
- Garrison Cells, Scutari, for allowing food and drink to be brought to
- this Patient, by one of Miss Nightingale’s Nurses; and at the time
- it was brought I were on duty at the Victoria Barracks, Scutari,
- three-quarters of a mile from the Hospital, and never saw the Nurse,
- food, or drink that was administerd to the above-named Patient, and
- I never saw the docter that ordered me to be confind. I was confind
- by order of 1st Class Staff-Surgeon Prendergast. About two and a half
- hours after I were aquanted with the case.
-
- “(Signed)
- 173. W. J. NORTHCOTT,
- “A.W.M., M S.C.”
-
-
-III.
-
-[Sidenote: 1. Lay down distinctly the communication which is to take
-place between Director-General and Superintendent-General, and (in war
-and abroad) Principal Medical Officer and Superintendent-General, and
-the qualified subordination of the latter.]
-
-1. In defining the office and duties of the Superintendent-General of
-Nurses, her direct communication with, and qualified subordination to,
-the Director-General of the Army Medical Department, and, abroad and
-in war, with and to the Principal Medical Officer of the district,
-or equivalent, must be very exactly defined. If the formation and
-government of a body of women to serve in the Hospitals of the Army
-Medical Department, and in these alone, is contemplated, the less
-the Director-General and the Superintendent-General have to do with
-each other, in matters of detail, the better, and the less chance of
-collision. For very weighty moral and practical reasons, the sole
-government of the women must belong to the Superintendent-General, and
-to the Matrons, whom she delegates, and who are themselves responsible
-and amenable to her. But it will never _work_ to introduce female
-service into the Army Hospitals, and to leave the Director-General
-of the Army Medical Department, which, like everything else in the
-Army, is and must be a hierarchy, no other power in connection with
-it, than to write and encourage confidential reports against it. There
-ought to be a definition of the Superintendent-General’s position as
-regards him, and also, as regards the Principal Medical Officer of the
-district, abroad and in war. It is useless, and would be dangerous to
-evade this; it ought to be deliberately settled, and distinctly stated.
-In the “General Orders” of March 1856, the Superintendent-General’s
-complete power over the women, and qualified subordination to the
-Principal Medical Officer, are well and definitively expressed.
-
-It is impossible to appoint the work of the Nurses without the
-concurrence of the Director-General. It does not do to put a woman
-into a great ward, or several smaller wards, of men, with several
-orderlies, without clearly defining her position there. To put her
-under the orderlies would be to make her being there at all much worse
-than useless; but she cannot have assigned to her the responsibility of
-the ward or wards, and consequently, authority over both orderlies and
-patients, herself being responsible to the Surgeon and Matron, without
-the concurrence of the Chief of the Army Medical Department.
-
-Nor, without such concurrence, can the duties of the Nurses be
-assigned. At this moment there are extant two sets of Regulations--the
-old Army Hospital Regulations, and those of 1855 made for the late
-Medical Staff Corps. In these Regulations, both the former and the
-latter, every duty a Nurse can discharge is assigned to different
-men. The responsibility of the ward, the administration of diets
-and medicines, the application of poultices, fomentations, leeches,
-enemas, and minor dressings, are all in so many words assigned as the
-duties of Assistant-Surgeons, of Hospital-Serjeants, and Orderlies; and
-of Assistant-Surgeons, of Ward-Masters and Orderlies of the Medical
-Staff Corps. The Regulations in general are being revised;--so much
-the better. But the new body of Orderlies, announced in the “Gazette”
-as the Hospital Corps, will, of course, receive rules from the
-Director-General; and if these things are not settled with him, there
-will be contradictory rules in operation, which will most materially
-thwart the working of the Female Service.
-
-We have ourselves experienced this, as to the administration of
-medicines, which one Principal Medical Officer took away from the
-Nurses, saying that it was the duty of the Assistant-Surgeons, in which
-he was borne out by an existing Regulation. And it would really seem as
-if this were the intention of the said Regulation, for it is there laid
-down that the medicines are to be administered twice-a-day, as if this
-were a property of medicine.
-
-The existence of these Regulations proved also a great stumbling-block
-in the Castle Hospital, after the war-pressure was over.
-
-Unless the Director-General, and in war and abroad, the Principal
-Medical Officer, are brought into regular communication with the
-Superintendent-General of Nurses, by the Rules, they will, at every
-inspection of Hospitals, revert to the procedure of giving orders
-and making alterations, which in fact amount to reprimands on the
-Superintendent-General, and on her Matrons, through the medium of some
-Clerk or Orderly. There should be, therefore, a distinct channel of
-communication laid down between the Director-General, and in war and
-abroad, the Principal Medical Officer and the Superintendent-General of
-Nurses.
-
-[Sidenote: 2. Also between Principal Medical Officer and Matron,
-Staff-Surgeons and Matron, Staff-Surgeons and Nurses, and the qualified
-subordination of the Matron and Nurses.]
-
-2. Also, and in the same way, there should be distinct rules for direct
-communication between the Principal Medical Officer of each Hospital,
-and the Matron, and between the Staff (or equivalent) Surgeons of the
-Hospital, and the Matron; if not also between these latter and the
-Nurses.
-
-The constitution of a General Hospital is about to be organized in
-England. In the large War Hospitals there was the Principal Medical
-Officer, a Staff-Surgeon in charge of each Division, then the
-Assistant-Surgeon, who answered to what, as is now proposed, is called
-the Prescribing Medical Officer of the Wards. As regards the Matrons
-and Nurses, it must not be proposed to ignore all but these Prescribing
-Medical Officers. Certainly, it would never do to give the Superior
-Surgeons of the Hospital no _say_ as to the nursing. In 999 cases out
-of 1,000, the Superior and older Surgeon is the one who understands and
-cares much the most about the men, and who, therefore, in the long run,
-would more appreciate and be fairer to Matrons and Nurses who did their
-duty by them. The Superior and older Surgeons too, in general, have
-far more correct ideas of the importance of discipline in a ward, and
-of the ways of maintaining it, than the Assistant-Surgeons. Moreover,
-as far as one can judge on a mysterious subject, generally speaking,
-the older and Superior Surgeon is the honester man. He must be brought
-into direct communication with the Matron; this will effect good, and
-prevent mischief. So also let the Staff-Surgeon of the Division, or
-equivalent, be placed in direct communication with the Nurses of the
-wards of his Division; this will effect good and prevent mischief. If
-the Nurse is to trust to receiving the orders of the Staff-Surgeon,
-through the medium of the Assistant-Surgeon, she will often find
-herself in a false position.
-
-[Sidenote: 3. All the General Hospitals cannot be undertaken at once.
-(The material of Head-nurses to be created.) Secretary of State
-should be made aware that the Female Service can only be introduced
-gradually. Director-General must have a voice in the introduction.
-Director-General and Superintendent-General differing, Secretary of
-State to decide.]
-
-3. Now, as to the introduction of Nurses into all General
-Hospitals--this gets rid of many difficulties, but at a fearful cost.
-
-For years to come, the difficulty will be not to extend the work,
-but to serve such Hospitals as must be undertaken, with respectable
-and efficient women. The material has, in a great degree, to be
-created; abundance of applications will be received--the prospect
-of a pension alone will do that--but the real choice will be very
-limited. In these Military Hospitals each Nurse must be a Head Nurse,
-and a trustworthy woman. Many a woman who will make a respectable and
-efficient Assistant-Nurse under the eye of a vigilant Head-Nurse,
-will not do at all when put in a military ward or wards, herself the
-only woman, and Head-Nurse over the Orderlies. As a body, the mass
-of Assistant-Nurses are too low in moral principle, and too flighty
-in manner, to make any use of here. Supposing all the Head-Nurses of
-the great Civil Hospitals[5] offered themselves, there are perhaps
-not many who could be recommended for a _Military_ Hospital. Some,
-who are very highly to be thought of, would never bear transplanting
-into the _res dura et_ servitii _novitas_ of the Army Hospitals.
-The class from which the Head-Nurses are mainly drawn, tradesmen’s
-and servants’ widows, &c., will volunteer in numbers, but, in the
-majority of cases, intending only to lead the idle life of many a
-London Head-Nurse--“mental, not manual labour”--“Superintendence”--
-_i. e._, standing by while the Orderlies do her work and their own.
-The material has to be created. The rarest powers can do nothing
-effective in this, in 3, 6, or 12 months. To lay a solid foundation
-will take the patient, anxious labour of years. To begin with one
-Hospital would have great advantages. Netley, if it is proceeded with,
-might be the one, though, in most respects, a Hospital in an ordinary
-vulgar seaport would be far preferable. Then let the work gradually be
-extended. It is much more to be feared that the line will be taken of
-forcing prematurely than of opposing its extension. If it is attempted
-to occupy all the General Hospitals at once, how is the gratuitous
-repetition to be avoided of the inevitable misfortune of Scutari,
-viz., that of beginning on a large scale, with a number of strangers?
-It certainly should be left to the Director-General to regulate the
-introduction of Nurses into the General Hospitals--and there is far
-more reason to fear that he, if unfavourable to the change, will
-hurry, than obstruct such introduction; indeed it might be better to
-settle that matter beforehand with the Secretary of State, letting
-the Director-General be apprised of it, viz., that time is required to
-effect the gradual introduction of the Female Service with which the
-Superintendent-General has been charged.
-
-To sum up. A rule must be introduced by which the Director-General
-is brought into communication with the Superintendent-General, and
-her qualified subordination to him distinctly expressed. Let the
-Principal Medical Officer in war also communicate directly with the
-Superintendent-General or the person performing her functions in the
-War-Hospitals, and her qualified subordination to him be distinctly
-expressed. The same with each Principal Medical Officer of a Hospital,
-and the Matron of that Hospital. No alteration in these Regulations
-can, of course, be made without the consent of the Secretary of State.
-In case the Director-General and Superintendent-General finally differ
-as to any new arrangements, the matter should be referred to the
-Secretary of State.
-
-The Superintendent-General should issue special regulations for nurses,
-after conference with the Director-General, and under the sanction
-of the Secretary of State; also, local regulations for the Matrons
-with the consent of the Principal Medical Officer and sanction of the
-Governor of any General Hospital.
-
-If the Matron differ with the Principal Medical Officer, the decision
-should rest with the Governor of the Hospital.
-
-
-IV.
-
-As to some miscellaneous considerations, of no small importance--
-
-[Sidenote: 1. Roman-Catholic Sisters?]
-
-1. It is necessary for a Superintendent-General to have counted the
-cost, and to be prepared or not prepared to include Roman Catholic
-Sisters among the Nurses. This will deprive her of some valuable women;
-of one (speaking for the present time,) who is invaluable; of many
-decorous, not very useful women. The question is perhaps settled by
-the fact, that where you have the Roman Catholic Sister, you cannot be
-secure from the Roman Catholic Direction, with all its many strings,
-and machinery of opposition. Abroad the cause of the Roman Catholic
-Church is often the cause of religion; and the Romish Priest serves
-both zealously at the same time, and with a pure heart. In England,
-and in matters of England, the first aim of the Direction is too
-often to damage what is not Roman, and the second to promote what is
-Christian. Upon the whole I must think Roman-Catholic Sisters are
-better out of, than in, the Army Hospitals. It would be right to think
-well over how far they could be entirely dispensed with, in the event
-of having soon to undertake a War Service.
-
-In the event of a decision being made to dispense altogether with
-Roman Sisters, it would be as well to be prepared (though we never can
-speculate on the tactics of the Roman faction, and after what occurred
-during the Crimean war, it may think it better to take things quietly)
-for a battle, (_not_ confined to the Army Medical Department,) for
-the production of an Inspector-General’s letter assigning “reasons”
-for preferring Nuns to secular Nurses, and for the delivery of sundry
-opinions of similar purport, ranging from that line to the one taken
-in the paper emanating from the Army Medical Department, extolling the
-Russian Nurses, “who were all Sisters of Mercy, and mostly widows of
-officers.”
-
-[Sidenote: 2. Anglican Sisters?]
-
-2. The nature of the Service and Rules would, unless in war service,
-perhaps exclude English “Sisters” from the Nurses. They supplied us
-with some valuable women in the last war, and their Lady-Superior
-behaved ever generously, loyally, and well towards us.
-
-The principle and detail of most sisterhoods render them unsuited
-for admixture with the secular element; and the comfortable belief
-into which the good women (of both branches) practically, if not
-theoretically, settle, that secular women are too bad to be mended or
-influenced, unfortunately makes their usefulness among Nurses nearly
-null. It would never do to unsettle any of the Sisters; but if it so
-happened that any voluntarily offered to serve as bonâ fide Nurses,
-some valuable individuals might thus be acquired; but this should not
-at all be pressed.
-
-It would certainly remove a difficulty in declining Roman Catholic
-Sisters, if the rule should be to decline also English Catholic
-Sisters, forming the Staff entirely of secular women.
-
-[Sidenote: 3. Whom is the Nurse to summon in case of disorderliness in
-the Ward?]
-
-3. In Civil Hospitals there are three distinct elements of government.
-First, the Civil Authority; the chief being the Treasurer, or the
-equivalent civilian, whose subordinate is called diversely Steward,
-Superintendent, House Governor; second, the Physicians and Surgeons
-(duly represented, in case of holidays or illness, by the Assistant
-Physicians or Surgeons), Apothecary and House Surgeon; and third, the
-chief of the Nurses--the Matron.
-
-It requires of course temper, discretion, forbearance, and fortunate
-circumstances which do not always happen, for these authorities not to
-spend a portion of their time in quarrelling with each other; but the
-ruts are old and deep, and the wheels move on, though they often stick.
-The Civil Authority is a very important element, especially when the
-chief is a man of judgment and firmness, who keeps himself paramount
-over all, and does not delegate all to his subordinate the Steward. The
-Steward and the Matron generally find their duties disposed to clash.
-
-In some Hospitals the rules are inexplicit in assigning power to the
-Matron over all the women. But this apart. The Steward represents and
-wields the police of the Hospital. He progresses through the wards, he
-perceives, or the Head Nurse reports to him, something disorderly. He
-rectifies it (or not, as the case and the man may be). She thus, over
-and above her relation to the Matron, has to appeal to, and to account
-to, the Steward.
-
-This power of police and discipline, wielded by the Civil Authority
-of the Hospital, is of immense moment in regulating the good order
-of the Hospital; it acts in sundry important ways which need not be
-particularized.
-
-Now, in the case of Military Hospitals, there is one important
-simplification of the business, which need not be enlarged upon. All
-the patients are men. But there are two things which do not simplify
-the machinery of the Military Hospital. The attendants, in the plan
-proposed, are not (and cannot be) all Nurses, under the Matron; nor
-all Orderlies, under an Officer; there are Nurses under a Matron,
-and Orderlies under some Officer; and there is no Civil element.
-The Doctors both prescribe, and hitherto have governed. An Officer
-orders flogging, &c.; but the Doctors practically both prescribe, and
-hitherto have governed. And a Military Hospital must, and should ever
-remain, essentially different from a Civil Hospital; both different
-in discipline and detail, and altogether a rougher and ruder place.
-It should never for a moment be forgotten that the soldier is a very
-peculiar individual, old and stern as is his trade. A regiment, if one
-thinks _into_ it, is a curious thing. The Hospital which receives these
-men when ill and wounded, whether regimental or general, is, and ought
-to be, a place essentially different in many things from the great
-Civil Hospital. The moral standard of the patients of the Military
-Hospital, their readiness to obey, their good feeling to each other,
-are strikingly higher than in the Civil Hospital; but the soldier is
-what, amidst all his faults, he has been made by the habit and spirit
-of discipline, which has become an instinct and a second nature, and
-which ennobles his own. Relax discipline, and in proportion as you do
-so, there remains of the soldier a being with as much or more of the
-brute than the man.
-
-Discipline then being the pivot upon which the good order of all
-military things, Military Hospitals included, turns, it follows, that
-if you set down a few women (they should not be many) in a great
-Military Hospital, unless they can become effectually incorporated into
-the general spirit of discipline of the place, they will only injure
-themselves and the whole.
-
-As women, the more entirely they are under the government of the
-Matron, herself under the government of the Superintendent-General, the
-better. As Ward Nurses, the more entirely they are under the orders
-of their Surgeons, the better; but they have not only to obey the
-Surgeons, they have to enforce the Surgeons’ orders among the patients,
-and both for so doing, and for the cleanliness, &c., of the ward, they
-have to give orders to the Orderlies.
-
-In the case where a rule will work, by which, if the Nurse has to
-complain of an Orderly, she reports the same to the Matron, who lays
-the complaint before the chief of the Orderlies (whatever may be fixed
-upon as his name); well and good; but a more direct procedure will also
-be found necessary.
-
-Every firm and discreet woman (none other is fit for a male ward,
-least of all for a military ward), will avoid collisions, reports,
-and violent outbreaks in the ward as much as possible. But still,
-every now and then these things will happen, and though by all
-means to be avoided if possible, when they do come, they clear the
-ward-atmosphere like a storm, provided the discipline be strict. Every
-now and then--and every experienced Head Nurse will tell the same
-story--some disobedience, slovenliness, truculence, or sly impudence,
-will arise in the ward, and she will find she cannot put it down
-alone. If she remain helplessly deprecating or scolding the men, her
-position becomes at once an unseemly and a dangerous one, as that of
-all contemned authority is. In such a case, in the Civil Hospital, the
-Head Nurse goes straight, according to the nature of the case, to the
-House Surgeon or to the Steward, unless the visiting hour be at hand,
-and she judges it best to refer to the Surgeon. Discretion is again
-here required, as in everything in Hospitals; but between the Surgeon
-and the Steward, a firm, discreet Head Nurse will generally get the
-ringleader expelled, and two or three others, named or unnamed, warned
-of a similar fate. After this sort of explosion, the ward is quiet and
-orderly for months. The thing is seldom done, but the patients know it
-can be done at any time, and that it will be done, in such or such a
-contingency.
-
-Now the soldier cannot be turned out of Hospital, and he knows
-he cannot. It becomes the more important not to suffer an hour’s
-relaxation of discipline there. If, therefore, such an outbreak, either
-on the part of patients or orderlies, should happen in a Military
-Hospital, the Nurse ought to be able to summon at once the proper
-authority and afterwards to report the whole to the Matron, but first
-to bring direct the proper authority into the ward. Whether it be the
-Captain of Orderlies or the Orderly Medical Officer, or, as in case
-of emergencies, is generally preferable, the Staff-Surgeon himself,
-she ought to have power at once to bring the proper authority into the
-ward, to put down confusion and restore discipline at once, and then
-afterwards to report to the Matron what has passed.
-
-It must never be forgotten, that in every Regiment we must calculate
-upon there being two or three thorough scoundrels, five or six men
-who are not far off from being so, and an indeterminate number whom
-discipline saves from ranking after them. One year with another,
-characters no doubt as vile as the worst that disgrace our gaols pass
-through the General Hospitals.
-
-Another thing to be remembered is, that whatever classification may
-be carried out, we may be certain beforehand that numbers of patients
-from a vile cause will be in the ordinary surgical wards of every
-General Hospital in time of peace. Very severe cases of this sort give
-heavy work, and little trouble. They suffer much generally, alike
-from disease and treatment; are frightened, if not ashamed, about
-themselves; and are generally extra-submissive and quiet. These cases,
-however, generally would belong to the separated wards; which latter
-contain usually a large admixture of patients who suffer comparatively
-little, and who require to be dealt with with unswerving firmness. For
-reasons somewhat too technical to write, it is to be hoped, upon the
-whole, that female service will not be, _at first, at all events_,
-extended to these wards. The disgusting and comparatively painless
-secondary condition will, I fear, find its way into the ordinary
-surgical wards, as it does into the equivalent wards of every Civil
-Hospital.
-
-All these things would increase the mistake of laying any bar between
-the Staff Surgeon and the Nurse. In all matters of discipline,
-generally speaking, the Staff Surgeon will give much more support than
-the Assistant Surgeon.
-
-A short definite rule should therefore be made, saying whom the Nurse
-is to summon in the event of disorderliness in the ward.
-
-One thing more. There is nothing more dangerous than to undervalue the
-objections of opponents. Let us give them their full weight, and while
-firmly holding our course, and trusting to God to guide it, draw useful
-cautions from the objections which we quietly and steadily confront.
-
-In the great Military Hospitals, of Roman-Catholic countries,
-intelligent, well-behaved, Army Surgeons, while explaining everything
-with thorough business-like precision, if spoken to of the Paris Army
-Hospitals, before the recently introduced Sœurs de St. Vincent served
-there, and asked what they think upon the whole of the service of women
-in Army Hospitals--after a little hesitation, and being urged to speak
-plainly, will generally say that they prefer in Civil Hospitals the
-service of Sœurs to those of hired nurses--but they deprecate either
-Sisters or any women in Military Hospitals. 1. Because the presence of
-women, however virtuous and guarded, would excite passions and produce
-unfavourable results in many cases. 2. Because they were unnecessary,
-the Orderlies being efficient, faithful, kind, and sufficient.
-
-Of the second reason one can judge nothing by a walk through a
-hospital, as it does not always follow that what the master says is
-enough is so--though this is one of the mysteries it is good to know
-and not good to reveal. Of the first there is no doubt. The question
-remains, striking the balance of good and evil--Do chaste, guarded,
-and efficient nurses on the whole contribute more to the economy of
-human life, the order, cleanliness, and decency of a Military Hospital
-than they do harm? Possibly the former effects are usual and general;
-the latter exceptional and rare: after all, most soldiers are men and
-not beasts. But it is well and necessary to bear in mind both the
-existence of this danger, and the exaggerated fears many Army Surgeons
-conscientiously as well as unconscientiously have of it.
-
-I therefore very earnestly hope that the work will not be encumbered,
-at first at all events, with the charge of the venereal wards. And
-it is most important, for the favourable result of the anxious and
-difficult experiment about to be made, of permanently introducing
-female service into Army Hospitals, that we should be quite clear of
-the convalescent patients, and should only attend patients severely ill
-or severely injured.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 4. Pay and Rations.]
-
-4. PAY AND RATIONS.--In the great Civil Hospitals the Head-Nurses
-have, on an average, 50_l._ a-year, no board, an allowance of fuel and
-light, and the use of one or two, generally unfurnished, rooms. The
-Assistant-Nurses, on an average, receive about 12_s._ a-week, [£31 per
-annum] no board, lodging, with the use of some furniture, sometimes an
-allowance of fuel and light, apart from the use of both in the wards.
-
-Both Guy’s and St. Bartholomew’s Hospitals now give partial board to
-the Assistant-Nurses, and St. Thomas’s is about to adopt the same plan.
-
-St. Mary’s Hospital gives board to both Head and Assistant-Nurses.
-
-In the last war Her Majesty’s Nurses received, on an average, 18_s._
-a-week, lodging and board, fuel, light, and partial clothing--18_s._
-a-week is 46_l._ 16_s._ yearly. Incorporated into a permanent Service,
-and with a pension, they ought not to receive the latter amount until
-after approved years of Service.
-
-It is certainly a different thing to undertake service in a Hospital
-in Smithfield or the Borough, and to undertake to go, at a moment’s
-notice, to any part of the world. But the Army Service involves this;
-and the pension it involves makes a reasonable equivalent for the
-additional wear and tear of climate, travel, &c. Going abroad is a
-regular part of the Service undertaken.
-
-Any artificial inducements should be avoided; at the same time their
-condition should be made a comfortable one. Wages, say 20_l._, rising
-to 50_l._ a-year, rations, an allowance of fuel and light, and a small
-furnished room, would be enough, and not too much. To this should
-be added a fixed annual gift of a few strong articles of regulation
-dress;[6] avoiding multiplicity, and securing the things being all
-good of their kind. In the last war they had too many things, and
-some were rubbish. They ought to be well able to supply themselves
-with linen, shoes, &c., whether at home or when ordered abroad. The
-articles to be given annually should be three strong dark gowns, six
-strong aprons, six caps, six collars, one bonnet--and let the things
-be good--biennially or triennially, one summer and one winter cloak.
-In India, &c., this might be modified. Their room should be furnished,
-because, in removing to and fro, it is better to release them from the
-cares and the pretences of furniture; also, because, instead of many
-gimcracks, you can thus furnish their rooms with a few comfortable,
-strong, plain things, presenting a certain military simplicity, which
-ought to pervade a Military Hospital.
-
-Their wages abroad should not be increased. Whether they serve at home
-or abroad concerns the Superintendent-General alone, and is no merit or
-title for additional advantages on their part.
-
-[Sidenote: Shall Rations be commutable for Mess-money in the United
-Kingdom?]
-
-If the principle of rations is considered preferable by the War
-Department, it is important to give no extra trouble that can be
-helped. If not, it is to be considered whether or not it would be well
-to get rid of the rations, in the three kingdoms at all events, for
-these reasons:
-
-[Sidenote: (1.) Because such commutation allows greater variety.]
-
-(1.) These women are Head-Nurses. They will think themselves more
-comfortable “finding themselves” than managing on the substantial and
-somewhat unvarying provisions of the rations. Some take coffee rather
-than tea; some tea rather than coffee; many would rather pay for white
-sugar than not pay for brown. Considering the nature of nursing-work,
-when faithfully done, it is better they should enjoy and be refreshed
-by simple meals to their taste than by unpalatable larger portions;
-especially if _the former can be done at no additional cost or trouble
-to the Queen_.
-
-[Sidenote: (2.) Because it averts complaints.]
-
-(2.) You thus relieve the Superintendent and Matrons of all
-communication with the department of the Purveyor-General; of all the
-mistakes, accidental or otherwise, which might occur; of all complaints
-of quantity or quality of provisions; of amenities such as those
-experienced at Balaclava General Hospital, &c., &c., &c.
-
-Of five London Hospitals, the three endowed Hospitals pay all their
-Head-Nurses in money, and give no board. (This is strictly correct,
-although, to avoid a long unimportant detail, I have simplified things
-in this paragraph, and in the two concerning the pay of Head-Nurses and
-Nurses.) The London Hospital gives its Head-Nurses wages, and a fixed
-quarterly payment _vice_ the rations of bread, meat, and vegetables,
-to which they are by the rules entitled. This change was made not very
-long ago, to end the frequent complaints of quantity, quality, and
-price, made, perhaps with foundation, by the Nurses. The Westminster
-Hospital paid its Head-Nurses partly in money, partly in rations of
-cooked provisions, and there were repeated and general complaints of
-the quality, quantity, and cooking of the provisions issued to them.
-
-It is therefore to be considered whether the simpler and better plan
-be not to give the Nurses a fixed money payment, and let them “find
-themselves,” unless the War Department object to rations not being
-issued in part payment.
-
-Abroad in many cases, in war in all cases, rations would be desirable.
-A fixed calculation as to expense should be made.
-
-Experience and consideration will probably give rise to the following
-conclusion--except in war and in retired stations abroad, not to
-have Rations; still less to let the Nurses “find themselves,” for
-the following reasons:--(1.) It is important that the Nurses should
-not have this excuse for being absent from their duties--“that they
-have been to get provisions.” (When absent, it should be in pursuit
-of health and exercise.) (2.) If the Nurse is to cook for herself,
-greater accommodation will be required than the _one_ room recommended,
-otherwise the necessary cleanliness cannot be observed. To commute
-the Rations for mess-money, to put this mess-money in charge of the
-Matron, wherever there is a market; wherever there is none, to let her
-“_draw_” for such provisions on her own indent, as she thinks best,
-upon the Purveyor, appears to me the safest course. For with regard to
-this question of dieting the Nurses it should never be forgotten that,
-in all cases (how much more in those where great physical fatigue and
-mental anxiety are involved) that principle is the best, if such can be
-established, which settles diet with a view to producing the highest
-physical efficiency. Variety and mode of cooking are two essential
-elements in this. And there can be no doubt that, if a Matron will
-take the trouble to consult the tastes of her Nurses, together with
-the above conditions, a better diet might be laid down than could
-be secured by leaving them solely to their unassisted vagaries and
-ignorance of what is really the best diet. Community of cooking also
-implies economy. Also the Nurse ought not to be permitted to starve
-herself, to save money. Her time is too valuable to allow of her
-cooking her own dinner; but she should always prepare her own breakfast
-and tea, when and of what she prefers herself, if she feels inclined to
-do so.
-
-[Sidenote: If not commutable,]
-
-Where, however, the system of rations must be adopted, three ways
-remain of working it:--
-
-[Sidenote: (1.) Shall the Nurse cook her own Rations?]
-
-(1.) Let each Nurse receive, and cook her own rations.
-
-[Sidenote: (2.) Shall the Matron cook and send them?]
-
-(2.) Let the rations be delivered _en masse_ to the Matron, who has
-them cooked, sending her proportion to each Nurse.
-
-[Sidenote: (3.) Shall the Matron have each Nurse’s Dinner cooked for
-her, as she likes best?]
-
-(3.) Let the Matron, requiring a small payment to cover expenses,
-arrange that each Nurse can receive her dinner cooked as she wishes
-it. There is something of this sort at the London Hospital; where the
-Nurses (and Assistant Nurses) have the right of sending their joint to
-be boiled or baked in one of the kitchen stoves.
-
-Of these different ways, the first would be liked best by the women--a
-thing to be considered, in subordination, and as a help to their
-respectability and their efficiency--still it is, for some reasons
-stated above, objectionable. However, in this, as in far more important
-things, it is essential to consider everything as tentative and
-experimental for some years to come. Do not be fettered by too many
-rules at first: try different things, and see which answers best.
-
-With regard to rations, it is as well to explain that there were two
-ways of drawing them for the nurses during the war. In some of the
-Crimean Hospitals, it was arranged that the same ration should be
-drawn for a Nurse as that appointed by Regulation for a Medical Staff
-Orderly. This answered, as may be supposed, exceedingly ill. There
-was considerably more of some articles, such as bread and meat, than
-the women could eat; and the surplus had to be wasted or returned to
-the Purveyor--a serious complication. Of some articles, such as tea
-and sugar, there was as much too little; and these had to be drawn as
-extras, except such as the Superintendent-General found it easier and
-more simple, as she generally did, to provide herself.
-
-The other method was for the Local Superintendent to draw daily on the
-Purveyor for such articles as she judged necessary; and by thus drawing
-_en masse_, a considerable saving was, of course, effected for the
-Queen, the tastes and health of women were consulted, and there was no
-complication of accounts.
-
-Where rations are to be drawn at all the latter method should be always
-followed; and as the former might be understood by the word “rations,”
-it would be better to call them by some other name, as it must be
-obvious that such a method could never answer for women.
-
-The experiment which I should wish to try, by which greater variety
-could be secured, but which could only be practised where there was
-a market at hand, would be for a commutation to be made of rations
-for money. Each nurse to supply her quota of “mess money,” the “mess
-money” to be all expended on the “mess,” and the Matron to manage the
-“mess” day by day, and arrange for the cooking to be done in common. If
-each nurse’s dinner is to be cooked separately, it necessarily entails
-great waste of nourishment. The Nurses would not like this so well as
-“finding themselves,” but it would ensure them a far better diet.[7]
-
-[Sidenote: Wages and Mess-money must be distinct.]
-
-It would be a question whether the Queen should pay the
-Superintendent-General so much for each Nurse’s wages, and so much
-for board, the latter to be retained by the Superintendent-General,
-or whether the Superintendent-General or each Matron, with the
-Superintendent-General’s consent, should arrange with the Nurses.
-This is important, as which ever way it is settled, there must not be
-disputes between Matron, Nurses, or still less Superintendent-General,
-as to what amount of wages is to be allotted to the board, or what
-savings can be effected in the coals, &c.
-
-On the whole it would seem best for the Nurse’s pay to be so much
-in money for herself, and so much in money for food into the
-Superintendent-General’s hands. But the question of how much is a
-serious business.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 5. Washing, how to be done? Rule to compel the Nurses to
-_put it out_.]
-
-5. WASHING.--Except in war-emergencies, this must not be suffered to
-be done by the Nurses, they must be compelled to put it out. I would
-not trouble the Authorities about this; the Nurses can afford it, and
-the more things are simplified the better. In out-of-the-way districts,
-the Matron might arrange with a laundress, the Nurses making a fair
-payment. In war-emergencies, if possible, provide a strong washerwoman,
-but this would have to be settled each case on its merits. Except in
-emergencies they must not wash; it takes up far too much time; it takes
-up strength which is wanted for other things; and washing and drying
-either in wards or nurses’ rooms is unhealthy and objectionable. There
-must be a rule as to this: some worthy souls would scrub at every rag,
-rather than pay a few pence weekly. The Nurse ought, however, to be
-compelled to have certain changes of linen weekly, which some will not,
-if they pay for it themselves.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 6. Cleaning their own Rooms. No Orderly, on any pretence,
-must enter a Nurse’s Room. Scrubbing the only thing the Matron may
-arrange for a Soldier’s Wife to do. Nurse must do nothing of her own in
-Ward, or Ward-kitchen, or Orderlies’ Kitchen.]
-
-6. CLEANING THEIR OWN ROOMS.--I well foresee sundry difficulties in
-the little rooms at the entrance of their wards, where I hope it will
-be managed to quarter the Nurses. But there is no other way of fairly
-and really working a ward; and I trust this plan will receive a fair
-trial. For efficiency, also for comfort, it is most objectionable to
-make the Nurse sleep at a distance from the patients. This is one of
-the points on which theories, and the practical working of things,
-are very divergent. It is an excellent thing when the Head-Nurse’s
-room opens into the ward and when part of the upper part is of glass,
-with a thick curtain, so that she can see into the ward, without being
-seen. Let each Head-Nurse have a small room, with a window opening
-into external air, with a curtain making an alcove, behind which there
-should be a small iron bedstead, with good bedding, and a washing
-table; and in the foreground a table, a small one for meals, a chest
-of drawers, and a comfortable arm-chair, two chairs, and I should add
-a sofa. Each room should have a few shelves on the wall, and a large
-cupboard or small closet with broad shelves, and space at the bottom
-to stow away the Nurse’s box. Simplification and avoiding all trouble
-which can be spared to the Departments are very important. I would not
-therefore insist upon a little kitchen for the Nurses, nor upon a very
-capital arrangement in some of the Sisters’ rooms in Guy’s Hospital,
-where, behind a decent little door _in_ the sitting-room, there is a
-sink, with water laid on, a little safe for meat, &c., at top, and
-a complete little apparatus of the very few utensils required for
-cooking one woman’s meals; so that a Nurse can cook and wash-up, in
-her own room, without carrying things out of it. This is much better
-than a kitchen, if the Nurse is to cook her own meals; but, as above
-stated, I would rather she did not. One room, with a curtain making an
-alcove, is much better than two. The Queen is saved fuel; the Nurse
-is saved cleaning two rooms; and if fuel is only issued for one, she
-sleeps in a warm room, instead of one where there never is a fire,
-and where her things get damp and spoiled. Often, where Head-nurses
-have two rooms, one is built without a fire-place. Condense and
-simplify all things--one great object is to form a body of useful
-hard-working women, of simple self-helping habits. Two Nurses’ rooms
-should be together, but separate. Sudden illness might occur, and the
-two women should be at each other’s summons. The Quartermaster-General
-_must_ grant a _cabinet_ between the two: this is _must_, not _may_.
-The Superintendent-General must see to this herself, at first at all
-events: there _is_ a singular obtuseness in the small officials, by
-whom these things are managed: if not overlooked, they will be sure to
-put the construction in a particularly awkward, exposed place. These
-things do enter into an Englishwoman’s daily comfort or misery--it is
-worth arranging them decently in the first instance.
-
-Now as to the cleaning of these rooms. Head Nurses generally are far
-too much disposed to make servants of their nurses; put orderlies for
-nurses, and this objectionable tendency would be a hundred-fold more
-objectionable. The Matron must make it an absolute rule, that the
-only thing an orderly does for a nurse is to carry her box in and out
-on the two grand occasions of her entering and leaving the Hospital.
-The one thing which in a Civil Hospital, an Assistant Nurse should
-be allowed to do for the Head Nurse, is the cleaning her fire-place,
-a thing done in a few minutes, and with satisfaction, by women who
-have done it all their lives; but a dirty tedious messing business to
-those who have not. But never mind: the orderly must never enter the
-Nurse’s room: she must do it, and learn to do it. The prosaic little
-business of black-lead, ashes, and mess lying on the threshold of the
-work will do good rather than harm. And even black-lead is unnecessary,
-as a varnish now obtainable looks better. The orderly must never
-enter the Nurse’s room--a _sine quâ non_. The Nurses should have, at
-their choice, a carpet, not nailed down, or none. In either case the
-room will require scrubbing, once a week if no carpet, (which is best
-and cleanest in Hospital life), seldomer, if carpet. Now the Nurses
-should not be required to scrub their own rooms--it is useless waste
-of strength--it makes their hands coarse and hard, and less able to
-attend to the delicate manipulation which they may be called upon to
-execute--and with all the _nursing proper_ which ought to fall upon
-them, and not upon the orderlies, their time can be better occupied
-than in cleaning their own rooms. Also, while trying to keep clear, on
-the one hand, of the tribe of “fine ladies,” it will be possible, on
-the other, if such menial offices are to be performed, to fall into the
-opposite mistake and to fail in obtaining the class of women desirable
-to fill such important trusts. Let the Matron consent to a charwoman,
-soldier’s wife, or some one person named and defined, and found, to be
-paid by the Head Nurse, to come for the two hours, which, at furthest,
-this business will take. It would be well worth while for the Matron
-to look out and provide two or three strong women to do this, by fixed
-rotation--each Nurse making a fair payment--and to ascertain that they
-are in and out of the Hospital by a particular hour, so as to prevent
-these external persons doing other things than scrubbing. But do not
-trouble the Departments as to this--the more things are simplified, and
-the fewer expenses are in connection with the Nurses, by far the better.
-
-Take the trouble to see that a tidy useful fire-place is in each
-Nurse’s one room. Some fire-places will consume thrice the fuel of one
-which can do ten times more work. A compact useful little fire-place,
-to burn as little fuel, and do as much business (in a very small way)
-as possible, is a thing of daily use, economy, and comfort.
-
-The nurse should not do anything of her own in the ward, or the ward
-or orderlies’ scullery, if there is such a place. This is a matter
-requiring some decision.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 7. In each Ward to be Closet, with Shelves, Table with
-Drawers, Nurse with Keys. Nothing to be kept in Nurse’s Room. Linen,
-Dressings, Stimulants to be kept in Ward Closets.]
-
-7. Let there be in each ward a closet, or, better still, a dresser,[8]
-with broad shelves, and a large table with large drawers, of which
-closet or dresser, and drawers, the nurse has the sole keys. Let
-the articles of linen which are kept in the ward be there; also the
-bandages, lint, old linen, oilsilk, ointments, &c., &c., which should
-always be, some at hand, some in reserve; also the wine and brandy
-ordered for the men. Let the nurse never be allowed to deposit Hospital
-property in her room, which, if there is no place for it, she _must_
-do, and it is much better she should not.
-
-[Sidenote: 8. Matrons 200_l._ per annum, Quarters, and a Maid. A woman
-for the Linen, ranking and paid as a Nurse, but never entering the
-wards.]
-
-8. With regard to the Matrons, though as Locke says of tutors, there
-are all kinds of persons to be found, it is certain the right persons
-are not always found; and these officers will take time to find, at the
-outset especially. Let them be (if it be possible) of the middle class;
-if it be possible, middle aged, active women, widows of officers or
-army surgeons. A vast deal of struggle is ever going on in professional
-life; a vast deal of silent, decorous misery ever follows on the
-premature deaths, the compelled early retirements, the sundry chances
-and changes which ever abound in the army of England. So far as it
-goes, and _cæteris paribus_, it would be right, just, and expedient
-to give a preference for these matronships to widows of officers and
-army surgeons. Try to secure thorough principle, sense, activity, and
-steady discreet ways; never mind a little vulgarity of manner; that the
-different orders should have their indefinable perpetual distinctions
-of manner as of other things, is perhaps for a long time to come in
-the essence of things. Two or three women of the stamp of the Matrons
-of a few of our Civil Hospitals would be very valuable. If the Matron
-do not get tired of what, unless one keeps one’s secret thoughts
-fixed on the meaning and the end of all things, is coarse, thankless,
-up-hill work enough--she will in the course of years accomplish great
-good. But she must have principle, sense, heart, and a firm cheerful
-mind. She must be not under thirty and, if possible, not over forty,
-on appointment. Should her being without children be made a _sine quâ
-non_? Children--poor little things--are wanted nowhere in the way of
-business, but do not be too strict about this: they are sometimes
-pledges to other things than fortune--thoughts, anxieties, and labours
-for them, concentrate and steady a mother’s heart--there will be fewer
-adventurers. Maternal _nurses_ must upon the whole be discouraged,
-because upon the whole the disadvantages seem to overweigh the
-advantages.[9] But the Matron’s office and duties are different; she is
-not fixed to a great ward of patients; and her having children should
-not be a bar, especially if they did not live with her. Young and
-grown-up daughters are much in a Matron’s way; sons matter much less.
-
-The greatest Civil Hospital gives its Matron 200_l._ and a _house_,
-the other great Hospitals, 150_l._, and a _house_. The London Hospital
-gives 150_l._, and a couple of good well-furnished rooms, and a
-servant. A _house_ is an impediment to a Matron’s duty. She is seen
-arriving in the wards, and she is more or less hindered in entering
-them. From her rooms she issues and re-issues, unexpectedly, and much
-more efficiently. 200_l._ and quarters is not at all too much.
-
-The Matron must be responsible for the storing, mending, and
-distribution of the linen, and for returning to the laundry any linen
-not properly washed or dried. Linen ought never to be dried in the
-wards, a process both inconvenient and unwholesome. The Matron ought
-to have a steady, respectable woman, certainly not below the rank and
-pay of a nurse, to be responsible to, and under her, for the linen,
-otherwise the proper care of the linen will take up far too much of
-her time. This is important. If, however, a Nurse should be thus set
-aside for the Laundry, she must not be allowed to enter the wards;
-otherwise she will unconsciously become a gossip and mischief-maker.
-I would term her “Linen Nurse,” not Assistant. The Matron should also
-have a steady, properly paid servant. A Matron of the proper sort has
-quite other things to do at a leisure moment, than to keep her wardrobe
-in order. She must have a servant; but it seems to be advisable to
-simplify things, and condense payments as much as possible; and I would
-rather consider this in the salary, and let the Matron find and pay
-her own servant. Try to have the servant’s room near the Matron’s.
-These minutiæ, once provided for, enter much into the daily working and
-comfort of things.
-
-The dress of the Matrons is a difficult thing to settle. Sometimes
-a Matron is afflicted with a taste for either gorgeous or elegant
-apparel, which the Nurses are invariably proud of, admire and humbly
-emulate. This sort of thing would be really out of place in a Military
-Hospital, and would moreover sadly discompose the Nurses with their
-plain caps and gowns. How would it be to allow the Matrons the choice
-between a Regulation dress and a plain black or brown silk gown?
-
-It will take much thought to decide whether the Matrons should all be
-paid alike, or whether climate and size of Hospital enter into this.
-On the one hand they undertake a service, of which almost the first
-regulation very properly is, that they undertake to go to all parts of
-the world as soon as sent; on the other hand, certainly some climates
-wear health and life much quicker than at home.
-
-The Matrons out of the three kingdoms have increased responsibility,
-and can do more mischief, if incompetent or untrustworthy.
-
-If the Matron has increased pay abroad, it would not do not to augment
-that of the Nurses. This is an important matter; and as it is on all
-accounts necessary that Matrons and Nurses should on their engagement
-thoroughly understand the nature of the service they undertake and, of
-course, a serious part of the service is that it involves sudden and
-long removals, it would be necessary to define upon what terms they
-go abroad. Yet it never would do, for reasons which will readily be
-perceived, to make the foreign stations objects of desire to Matrons
-and Nurses. These stations will always be so far the most anxious, that
-they will always be the most removed from the Superintendent-General’s
-inspection and immediate rectification of anything that goes wrong.
-They will also be, in various ways, the most trying to Nurses. The
-rules once settled, every Matron and Nurse refusing to go abroad
-when ordered, ought at once to be discharged, and to forfeit all
-re-admittance into the service and all pensions. On the whole, I
-think the Matrons should all be paid alike. But inasmuch as foreign
-service necessitates more wear and tear to the constitution, one year
-should count as equal to two years of service for pension, in case of
-disability. The same should be made applicable to the Nurses. As the
-advantage is distant, it would, in a great measure, do away with any
-desire for foreign service.
-
-Volunteering for foreign or war-service must be the exception--careful
-selection the rule. The “adventurers” will be generally ready to
-volunteer, and it would be too much to hope that we shall always,
-perhaps ever, be entirely free from that tribe; the most we can hope is
-soon to discover and get rid of them. Foreign stations will never do
-for an untried Matron or Nurse. At the same time it is most desirable
-not to change the Executive officers of any Hospital more than can be
-avoided.
-
-But let there not be too many rules at first; see how things work, and
-take one step at a time.
-
-The selection of exclusively middle-class Matrons seems to be
-important.[10] Their order will disarm one source of opposition and
-jealousy; plenty more will remain, inseparable from the work; but it is
-good to get this out of the way.
-
-The name of Matron is the same as in Civil Hospitals. In many respects
-the office and duties are different: _e. g._, the Matron in Military
-Hospitals must exercise a far more constant supervision in the wards.
-But this will require great discretion on her part. It is the practice
-of most Civil Hospitals for the Matron never to enter the wards till
-the Nurse’s dressings are over. It would be advantageous to modify
-this. But, at the same time, the Matron must understand Hospital
-Nursing, or she may make very serious mistakes in either reprimanding
-or directing the Nurse as to technical matters. She must be a person
-who knows herself what she has to see that others know; or she will
-get herself, with or without the Nurse, into very injurious errors.
-There is much in a name; and, in some respects, that of Superintendent
-would better denote her office, as regards the Nurses, would add to her
-authority, which is desirable, and would point her out as acting under
-the Superintendent-General.
-
-Incorporate among the Nurses whatever women of the higher orders may
-be admitted into the Service at first. If inefficient and unfit they
-are far better altogether eliminated. If thoroughly efficient as Ward
-Nurses, if thoroughly obedient and respectful to the Matron, if they
-have sense and heart to gradually leaven, not coldly withdraw from
-occasional companionship with the other Nurses, they will, in the
-course of time, effect quietly a great deal of good.
-
-There should be some Rule of this kind--
-
-Any Matron or Nurse who may receive permission to serve Her Majesty
-without pay shall be, in all respects, bound by and amenable to the
-Regulations on pain of dismissal from the service, without permission
-of re-entering it.
-
-If this cannot be done, money can easily be returned in one shape or
-other; but it would have a good moral effect on the Nurses to allow of
-the admixture of unpaid Nurses, provided they are strictly bound by the
-same Regulations, and distinguished by no sort of peculiar designation.
-
-The Surgeons will dislike these unpaid Nurses; but, in the long run
-a firm, discreet woman, _who is an efficient Nurse_, can get on with
-any Surgeon _who has his sick at heart_. The Matron also will not
-at all like them, at first, but will find that she can rely upon
-them and that they quietly and effectually help her with the other
-Nurses: and, if she has her heart in her work, she will end by being
-just, though, perhaps, always a little extra strict with and jealous
-of them. The other Nurses will have, at the first, a strong little
-touch of republicanism towards them, which will gradually wear off,
-and, with God’s help, a higher and truer moral tone, and a simpler
-and more useful kind of habits among them will prevail, than would
-otherwise be the case. As for the patients, with all their faults,
-trust them--trust the English soldier, and the peasantry from which he
-springs. What these poor fellows are we know, and need not discuss.
-They are worth suffering a good deal for; please God in the long run
-good will be done. If only we can keep clear of the false, pernicious,
-and derogatory system of puffery and fuss which others, for their own
-purposes, and from vague, silly good-feeling have wound around this
-work--a work essentially unpopular the moment we come to details! We
-have learnt what reality is and what its presence or absence in this
-business imports. As for the many and great other difficulties of the
-work, they must be appreciated, they need not be dreaded. The purpose
-is a good and noble one, and God grant it success! All we have to do
-is, to do our utmost, and leave the event to Him.
-
-[Sidenote: 9. Nurses--begin with few at first.]
-
-9. As for the Nurses the material must be formed. If a few respectable
-soldiers’ widows, including, and all the better, non-commissioned
-officers’ widows, could be found, _cæteris paribus_, a preference
-should be given to widows of the Service.
-
-Except in emergencies Nurses should not be taken under thirty, or above
-forty[11] years of age. These women are Head Nurses. Most of the Civil
-Hospitals take no Head Nurse after forty.
-
-One caution in engaging Nurses is perhaps not sufficiently attended
-to. Certificates, without personal inquiry and answers to distinct
-questions, are not worth the paper on which they are written.
-
-As to engaging any Nurses out of the great Hospitals, for sundry
-reasons, this should be done as little as may be.
-
-Let us begin, for the sake of God and this His work, with few women.
-Extension is easy--to occupy too much ground at first would be, I do in
-my conscience believe, an irretrievable mistake.
-
-No unnecessary Nurses should be suffered in Hospital; and no Nurse in
-charge of wards should be required to do needlework for the Hospital.
-There should be no superfluous hands; and the less a Nurse enters
-another’s ward the better.
-
-In case of suspension of a Nurse for misconduct, temporary assistance
-must, however, be obtained; and this might be either appointing another
-Nurse, to do, for the time, such duty in the suspended ward as she
-could do in addition to her own, or putting in a temporary substitute.
-
-All such dislocation of the Service, necessary and useful for
-emergencies and holidays, should, nevertheless, be made to take place
-as seldom as may be.
-
-No Nurse, during her suspension, should be allowed to enter any ward of
-the hospital.
-
-Any Nurse asking or accepting a present, whether in money or in kind,
-from any patient, or friend of any patient, whether during his illness
-or after his death, recovery, or departure, must be at once suspended
-from duty, her pay immediately cease, and the Superintendent-General be
-apprised of it, who, if satisfied of the truth of the charge, should
-immediately dismiss her.
-
-Two hours daily for exercise or recreation should be allotted to the
-Nurses, during which two hours they are to be considered relieved of
-the responsibility of their wards. But I would not be too absolute in
-requiring them to go out: sometimes to lie down or sit still for an
-hour or two will do more good than a walk. Give them two hours for
-optional exercise. Head-Nurses cannot have more of fixed leisure. They
-must get time for private occupation as they can: very often not at
-all; and no Nurse fit for her place will, of course, in emergent states
-of her ward, leave it. Also the Matron must not worry herself or them,
-if an anxious Nurse sits up part of a night or a whole night with bad
-cases.
-
-To a certain degree the Matron will find it better to allow a little
-liberty and choice, in the matter of times and hours, (always excepting
-after proper hours, _i. e._, after dark) to the Nurses, who are
-Head-Nurses, than to attempt making them mere machines. An uniform
-system, as far as possible, and a little range to each, will answer
-best. But do not hurry the uniform system too much; take time: this is
-very important.
-
-The Nurse should, every morning, at an hour to be fixed by the Chaplain
-or Matron, read aloud in the ward, the Confession, the Lord’s Prayer,
-the Collect for the Week, the Collect for Grace, and the Benediction;
-and every evening, at an hour to be fixed by the Chaplain or Matron,
-she should read aloud in the ward the Confession, the Lord’s Prayer,
-the Thanksgiving, the Collect for Aid, and the Benediction.[12] This
-would Christianize things, instead of heathenizing them; and I believe
-not a soldier would dream that his conscience was injured by it. The
-Roman Catholics and Presbyterians might be allowed quite to refrain,
-if they chose, which they would not. It would be necessary for the
-Chaplain-General to approve of and direct in this, and best to wait a
-year or two before beginning it.
-
-The prayers should be very short, the whole not more than five or six
-minutes each time, and the Nurse should read them, the men joining at
-the proper times.
-
-In some Civil Hospitals the prayers are far too long and are gabbled
-over by some patient, perhaps the worst character and the best scholar
-in the ward, or are stumbled through by some little boy, upon whom the
-others cast the distasteful office, with circumstances of irreverence,
-partly unintentional and partly shocking. At St. Bartholomew’s Hospital
-the very short morning and the very short evening prayers are printed
-clearly on each side of a card, which is affixed to each bed; and each
-morning and evening the Head-Nurse reads them aloud: the difference is
-very great.
-
-[Sidenote: 10. Have the Diets sent hot and ready-divided from the
-Kitchen.]
-
-10. The Colney-Hatch Lunatic Asylum has a diet system worth inquiring
-into; nothing is fetched by the Nurse, the Medical Officer writes the
-diets on a large slate which is ready for him outside the ward.
-
-The great advantage of this seems to be, that the Nurse’s time is
-set free from a good deal of arithmetic and some writing; also that
-each man’s portion is served him _hot_ from the kitchen, not cut up
-laboriously by the Nurse. In most Hospitals the Nurse cuts and divides
-the diets; in the London Hospital she moreover weighs them. All this
-takes a great deal of time. If the patients can get the divided
-portions _hot_ from the kitchen, it is far preferable.
-
-At St. George’s Hospital the portions are sent hot and divided from the
-kitchen.
-
-[Sidenote: 11. The less any Patient is made into an Orderly by the
-Surgeon the better. The Nurse should have Regulations to invoke to
-allow her to do her duty.]
-
-11. It should be distinctly settled by whom poulticing, fomenting,
-and all minor dressings, applying leeches and blisters, and giving
-enemas,[13] are to be done.
-
-It would be advisable to consider whether the Nurse ought not to
-instruct the Orderlies in some things. This, if it did not clash with
-Orderlies’ Rules, would make these men, especially those ordered for
-foreign service, much more useful than they are now, without such
-teaching.
-
-It will, however, be essential that there should be no clashing
-between the Nurses’ Regulations and those already or to be issued to
-the Orderlies. And for this, among other reasons, it is essential
-to establish a direct channel of communication between the
-Director-General and Superintendent-General of Nurses.
-
-[Sidenote: Ward Medical Officer to give Directions to Nurse.]
-
-I think, upon the whole and with reference to preventing, as far as
-rules can do it, the obstruction of the Nurse’s duty, by adverse or
-inexperienced Medical Officers giving orders to Ward or Assistant
-Ward-Master, Orderlies, or patients, instead of to her, that it is
-better to charge him to give the Nurse his orders as to the sick.
-
-All the above-mentioned things should be done by the Nurse, _i. e._, by
-her habitually and as a rule; occasionally letting an orderly do them,
-under her own eye, in order that he may learn, as well by doing them
-sometimes himself as by often seeing her.
-
-The reasons why all these things must be clearly settled beforehand are
-these:--
-
-I. Adverse Medical Officers will make all use of counter-regulations.
-
-II. Medical Officers who give fair play will find it impossible to
-settle the matter, if, on ordering, _e. g._, leeches, the Orderly
-shows Rule so and so by which he does it, and the Nurse Rule so and
-so by which she does it. The existence of the old regulations and the
-arrival of the new ones, about the Medical Staff Orderlies, were made
-great use of against our work, by some of the Medical Officers, after
-the heavy pressure of the war was over. So, at Scutari, a Principal
-Medical Officer took away and would not restore the practice of the
-nurses giving medicines, in which he was borne out by an existing rule.
-Contradictory rules are miserable things.
-
-Unless the Matron’s authority is supported by the Principal Medical
-Officer the Patients always suffer. The Nurse is the only proper person
-to be responsible for the directions of the Medical Officers being
-carried out in a General Hospital.
-
-III. It will enable the Matron to stop all nonsensical prudery, on
-the part of the nurses, and to require that they should do what they
-undertake to do, and not pass off to an Orderly, still less to a
-patient, the duties they should discharge themselves.
-
-As a general rule there is a good deal of this false modesty on the
-part of Nurses, especially of Head Nurses. In individual cases it is
-a serious thing to shake even false ideas of decorum: in laying down
-general Rules it is the more important to lay down as duties what
-are such. Suppose an application of what the French call “la petite
-chirurgie” ordered. The Head Nurse “never dreams of doing such things.”
-The Nurse, following her superior’s false shame of duty, transfers the
-business to an ignorant patient. In some cases great harm has arisen
-thereby to the Patient. In other cases, but not the majority, after
-such an order given, the Head Nurse goes quietly to the bed, draws the
-curtain round it, and makes the application herself--saying “she always
-did that herself, as it was a business requiring care, as the patient
-was often disposed to resist, and as she was thus certain that it was
-properly and effectively done.” I have always admired and respected
-such women; but they are not the majority. Very often patients are
-allowed or left to do things for themselves, which they cannot do
-properly, or when they ought not to be trusted to inflict the pain on
-themselves which doing things properly often causes.
-
-The practice of allowing some particular patient to become a sort of
-half orderly in the ward, letting him always attend some particular
-case, or give general help in severe cases, is most reprehensible. It
-is never allowed, whether in Civil or in Military Hospitals, without
-very bad consequences to the discipline of the ward. Where extra
-help, in lifting, &c., is required, let the Nurse require the most
-convalescent of the patients to help, but let her carefully refrain
-from selecting any patient or allowing any patient to put himself
-forward, as a regular help or quasi-Orderly. As an almost invariable
-rule it will be found that the less patients do for each other the
-better for themselves, and for the discipline and the good feeling of
-the ward. Let them be made useful in the wards, as far as possible,
-in such lighter cleaning, &c., as a patient can properly do (here,
-again, discretion is required, or a lazy Orderly will lay undue
-burdens on a willing patient); but the less they do for each other
-undoubtedly the better for all parties. I would not, however, expressly
-exempt the patients from being made useful in nursing the sick. A
-lazy or ill-conditioned patient might make it a handle to refuse to
-do or grumble at doing things which he ought to do, such as (a thing
-frequently required) giving and emptying a bed-pan to an ordinary
-patient who cannot leave his bed, while the Nurse and Orderlies
-are doing other things in the ward; assisting to move a helpless
-patient, if all the Orderlies are not at hand; sometimes watching or
-attending for an hour or so a critical case, &c., &c., &c. What the
-Superintendent-General and all Superintendents must be especially
-vigilant against is selecting any particular patient or allowing a
-willing patient constantly or often to do these things, and to become a
-quasi-Orderly to the ward or to any patient in it.
-
-Assistant-Surgeons, partly from inexperience and partly from spite,
-sometimes make this sort of quasi-Orderly of a patient. The Nurse
-should have the power of respectfully saying, in such a case, “The
-Regulations order me to do so and so, sir: I beg you to let me do my
-duty.”
-
-It is an important and should be, if possible, an invariable rule that
-no discharged patient is ever to enter any ward. Soldiers are, in
-many respects, on a different footing, as to each other, from Civil
-patients. The above provision is perhaps rendered thereby (not the
-less, but) the more important for the good order of the ward. Still
-this, desirable in (and the rule in several) Civil Hospitals, might
-be considered by Military as well as Medical Officers to interfere
-too much with the feeling of comradeship which, in its measure, is
-so essential a part of the soldier’s very peculiar condition. The
-following rules however might, at all events, be carried out. Some of
-them are actually in the “Hospital Regulations.”
-
-As quietness is indispensable in Hospitals, every duty should be
-performed with the least possible noise, more especially at night.
-Every patient must be in bed by 8 o’clock in winter, and 9 in summer;
-and no conversation must be permitted after that time. Patients should
-be made useful in the wards, as far as possible; but should fetch
-nothing into them. And no discharged patient should be permitted to
-enter any ward, except in the fixed visiting hours. The Governor, where
-there is a Governor, or the Principal Medical Officer, will fix the
-visiting hours; which shall not be more than two hours during each of
-three days of the week. [Take proper advice as to whether this maximum
-is too short. It is fully enough for Civil Hospitals, but Military
-Hospitals are in sundry respects essentially different.]
-
-In the discipline of all Military Hospitals, besides the prohibition
-of all swearing and foul language included in the Articles of War, is
-included the non-admission, or if by oversight admitted among visitors,
-the immediate expulsion of all disorderly persons. (Query--whether not
-to specify prostitutes.)
-
-I very much wish that Hospital Sentries in General Hospitals might keep
-out all visitors, except in the fixed visiting hours. And I very much
-wish that a stringent rule were made as to female visitors, both in
-Regimental and in General Hospitals. Proper Military as well as Medical
-advice should be taken on this point. It might not do to exclude them
-altogether; and, if soldiers’ wives come, it might be better to admit
-also all respectable-looking women, for it would be useless attempting
-defining as to sisters, aunts, friends, &c., &c.; though, except in
-the case of dying patients, all women, except their wives and mothers,
-are better away. I do not know what amount of strictness in practice
-is shown in enforcing the Regulations in English Army Hospitals; but
-if, at present, equivocal women, as well as ascertained prostitutes,
-are not excluded (which very possibly they are) they should be. At
-the same time, a sentry may often be honestly puzzled as to equivocal
-or non-equivocal appearance, in these days of over-dressing. And some
-mistake, made by a stupid or brutal sentry, might lead to endangering
-the rule. This whole matter must be referred to men.
-
-[Sidenote: 12. Orderlies’ Attendance.]
-
-12. With regard to the question of the “Regulation” number of
-Orderlies, viz., 1 to every 10 patients, it is to be observed,--
-
-[Sidenote: (1.) 40-Bed Ward Minimum Size for Regulation Number of 1
-Attendant to 10 Patients.]
-
-(1.) A ward of 40 patients might be efficiently served (but it would be
-hard work) with
-
- 1 Head Nurse--Female.
- 3 Orderlies.
-
-With no number under 40 of patients to a ward, can the Regulation
-proportion of 1 attendant to 10 patients be adhered to.
-
-[Sidenote: (2.) 20-Bed Ward requires 3½ Attendants.]
-
-(2.) With a ward of 20 patients (cut, scheme, and arrange the hours and
-duties as you will), you cannot efficiently serve it with less than
-
- ½ Head-Nurse--Female.
- 3 Orderlies.
-
-And the other ward of this Head Nurse ought to be on the same floor.
-
-N. B.--The same number would quite as efficiently serve a ward of 25 or
-even 30 patients.
-
-[Sidenote: (3.) 10-Bed Ward cannot be served by 1 Orderly + ⅕ Nurse.]
-
-(3.) The Army system of 1 Orderly to 10 patients, with a number not
-exceeding 10 patients to a ward, is upset as immediately by one bad
-case among the 10, as by 9 to the 10.
-
-For, is the same Orderly to be on duty for the 24 hours?
-
-The difficulty is practically got over by the Army, with a permission
-that any “bad case” may select any one he likes of his comrades (out of
-the Depôt) to be “told off,” to attend upon him.
-
-This extraordinary regulation is equivalent to (and affords little
-other practical result, than) granting opportunity for any quantity
-of spirits, and illicit food, to be smuggled into Hospital, and it is
-clear that it would be totally inadmissible in a General Hospital,
-where the whole system of nursing would be under the most stringent
-discipline and supervision.
-
-[Sidenote: (4.) Female Nurses not to be Substitutes for Orderlies.]
-
-(4.) The introduction of Female Nurses into Military Hospitals is not
-intended to supply the place of Orderlies, but to perform a class of
-duties which never has been performed at all in the Army. Few other
-Hospital duties of those generally called such have been hitherto
-fulfilled, in Military Hospitals, except
- diet-carrying,
- sweeping,
- and writing.
-
-[Sidenote: (5.) Naval Hospitals Regulation Number of Attendants 1 to 7
-Patients.]
-
-(5.) In all Naval Hospitals, the Regulation number of attendants is
-1 to every 7 patients, or 2 attendants for each ward containing more
-than 7 patients and up to 14. These Attendants or Nurses, in sailor’s
-language, have charge of the linen, bedding, and ward furniture, under
-the Ward Matron, and they are responsible for the proper care of the
-sick, and the due administration of the medicine, wine, and other
-medical comforts. They are on duty all day and watch at night in their
-turn, which is regulated by the Medical Officer in charge of the ward,
-in this or similar fashion:--a group of three contiguous wards is
-allotted during the night to two nurses, one begins her duty at 9 and
-ends at 1 o’clock, when she is relieved by another, who watches till
-6. She patrols the three wards, resting in that one where there may be
-a case requiring more than ordinary attention. If there should be a
-case of fever, delirium, or other sharp seizure, extra Nurses, both men
-and women, are assigned to the charge of that special case, according
-to the urgency of its wants. The great majority of Naval patients are
-either convalescent, or suffering from trivial complaints, which do not
-impair their activity. They can therefore take care of themselves, and
-assist the Nurse during the day in cleaning the wards, &c.--and we know
-what good housemaids seamen make. The Nurses are paid one shilling a
-night for night watching. They have under the most severe circumstances
-two-and-a-half nights in bed for half a night out of bed.
-
-At Haslar Naval Hospital the system of Orderlies, as understood from
-the Principal Medical Officer, is as follows:--12 Orderlies are on a
-floor, to look after, say, 90 patients. These are divided for night
-duty into three divisions of 4 each; of these 4--
- 2 are on from 9 to 2, A. M.
- 2 ″ ″ 2 to 8.
-
-The Head-Quarter room or ward is the one which has the most severe
-cases; this ward, then, the Watcher at night sits in, and makes the
-rounds of the others every now and then to see if anything is required.
-This system will of course be modified, according to the nature of the
-cases in Hospital. The other attendants do not sleep in the wards. The
-Nurses are male or female according to the discretion of the Principal
-Medical Officer.
-
-[Sidenote: Civil Hospitals have even 9 Attendants to 44 Patients.]
-
-In Civil Hospitals the number is as great of attendants to patients,
-and is mainly determined by the size of the ward:
-
-_E.g._, in one Hospital, where there are quadruple wards of 44
-patients, 11 in each compartment, though the average number of patients
-is 48, the number of attendants is 7.
-
-In exceptional cases extra Night-Nurses, sometimes extra Day-Nurses
-serve particular patients. The labour, both of cleaning and of
-night-nursing, is much increased by the wards being four, separated by
-a large lobby.
-
-In another of the large London Hospitals, where there are to each ward,
-
- PATIENTS. ATTENDANTS.
-
- 22 } there are { 1 Sister.
- 24 } { 2 Nurses.
-
- { 1 Sister.
- 30 ″ { 2 Nurses.
- { 1 Scrubber.
-
- { 1 Sister.
- 34 ″ { 3 Nurses.
-
- { 1 Sister.
- 40 ″ { 3 Nurses.
- { 1 Helper.
-
-In the Lariboisière Hospital at Paris, where the wards hold 32 beds, 1
-Sister, 1 Nurse, and 2 Orderlies on the Men’s side, 1 Sister, 2 Nurses,
-and 1 Orderly on the Female side, serve the ward efficiently.
-
-[Sidenote: (6.) Same Number of Men will not do same amount of Work as
-an equal Number of Women would.]
-
-(6.) One woman does the work of more than a man in a Hospital, speaking
-of the duties discharged by Under Nurses in Civil Hospitals; for men
-are not accustomed to these duties in England, as women are from their
-childhood.
-
-From this it is by no means to be inferred that women of the class
-of Under Nurses in Civil Hospitals should be employed in Military
-Hospitals, which unquestionably they should not. But it is to be
-inferred that the work will not be done efficiently, with a smaller
-number of men than would be employed of women.
-
-[Sidenote: (7.) Hospital Attendance an entirely new subject in the
-Army.]
-
-(7.) The question of attendance has scarcely been intelligently
-considered in the Army at all. And hardly any practical answer has yet
-been given to such questions as the above.
-
-I conceive it to be practically impossible to serve 4 wards, as
-proposed at Netley, viz., of 9 beds each, with
-
- 1 Head Nurse,
- 4 Orderlies.
-
-For, as has been said, one bad case in each ward, makes this economy as
-unmanageable as nine.
-
-[Sidenote: (8.) Hospital Wards in the Army little else than
-Barrack-Rooms at present.]
-
-(8.) A ward in a Military Hospital now may often be little else than a
-barrack-room, with an Inspection by a Medical Officer twice a day. It
-is designed to make it by the new Regulations into a place where the
-sick must be and always will be suitably attended. But this cannot be
-done by such a scheme as--
-
- 1 Female Head Nurse } to { 50 Patients, in (say)
- 6 Orderlies } { 6 Netley Wards;
-
-though this attendance would be more than sufficient for 50 cases in
-one ward; but such a ward is considered in a sanitary sense too large.
-Two wards of 30 beds each on the same floor would be efficiently served
-by such a Staff, however; and there would be no sanitary objection.
-
-[Sidenote: (9.) Regulation as to 1 Orderly to 10 Patients requires
-modifying.]
-
-(9.) The Regulation number of one Orderly to ten patients therefore
-requires modifying. Practically it is broken every day and in the
-extraordinary manner above mentioned, which gives the most critical
-cases to be attended by the rawest hands.
-
-[Sidenote: (10.) One Orderly should be the _Frotteur_.]
-
-(10.) The question of Hospital floors will be fully discussed farther
-on. An Orderly should be trained to be the _frotteur_ to each ward. He
-should also be the porter to fetch and carry every thing to and from
-the ward.
-
-[Sidenote: (11.) Comparison of Cost of Nursing with larger and smaller
-Wards.]
-
-(11.) The plan of Netley, with its wards for 9 sick, is by far the
-costliest for administration, as the following facts will prove:
-
- I. It is proposed to provide the Hospital with Orderlies and Nurses
- to conduct the nursing in wards of 9 sick, as mentioned.
-
- II. On sanitary grounds wards may safely be large enough to
- accommodate 25 to 30 sick.
-
-We may therefore choose the larger wards, being guided only by the cost
-of the nursing.
-
- III. A ward of 9 sick would require 1 day and 1 night Orderly, and
- a-third of a Nurse (that is, a Nurse could superintend three
- such wards.)
-
- A ward of 30 sick would require 2 day and 1 night Orderlies and
- 1 Nurse = 4 persons in all.
-
-Or if two such wards were on one floor, 1 Nurse could serve both.
-
- IV. We cannot count the cost of Orderlies and Nurses, including
- lodging, rations, wages, at less than £50 a year, which when
- capitalized at 3 per cent. (33 years’ purchase), would amount to
- £1,650 for each.
-
- V. A ward of 9 sick would cost in nursing £1,650 × 2⅓ = £3,850,
- or £427 15_s._ 6_d._ per bed.
-
- VI. A ward of 30 sick would cost for nursing, in perpetuity, £1,650
- × 4 = £6,600 = £220 per bed.
- [One Nurse to each ward is here allowed.]
-
- VII. The cost of the two plans relatively for a Hospital of 1,000
- sick would stand thus:
-
- Wards with 9 beds = £427,775
- Wards with 30 beds = 220,000
- ---------
- Capitalized difference of cost in } £207,775
- favour of large wards }
-
- Netley has cost already Land = £30,000
- Works 89,000
- ---------
- £119,000
-
-It hence appears that, if works and site were both sacrificed, and
-fresh land purchased, and wards for 30 sick built on it, the country
-would actually save the difference between the two sums of = £88,775.
-
- Suppose the sanitary requirement of 25 sick to a ward, which is
- the best number, be combined with the greatest economy of
- administration, the cost would stand thus:
-
- For each ward of 25 sick, 3 Orderlies, at £1,650 = £4,950
- If two such are built in line, close to each
- other, with the Nurse’s room between them,
- one Nurse could superintend both wards, or
- half a Nurse to a ward. The cost would be
- for the ward 825
- -------
- 5,775
-
- 5775
- Or cost for each bed ---- = £231
- 25
-
-
- The comparative cost of wards with 9 beds and
- 25 beds, would stand thus for 1000 sick:
-
- Wards with 9 beds £427,775
- Wards with 25 beds 231,000
- ---------
- Saving £196,775
- Deduct cost of Netley, already incurred 119,000
- ---------
- Saving from abandoning Netley = £77,775
-
- The cost of the administration per 1000 beds at Netley
- and Aldershot would stand as follows:
- Netley £427,775
- Aldershot, pavilions, with 3 superimposed wards
- and 25 sick in each, would require 3 Orderlies
- and 1 Nurse[14] to each ward, and would cost
- £264 per bed in perpetuity, or per 1000 sick 264,000
- ---------
- Difference of cost in favour of Aldershot £163,775
-
-Some abatement would have to be made, as regards the cost of Netley, as
-there are a few wards with 16 or 18 sick.
-
-If we take money at 4 per cent., the calculation will be as follows:
-
- Small wards, 2 Orderlies and a third of a Nurse,
- at £50 per annum; money at 4 per cent.,
- per 1000 sick £324,000
- Wards of 30. 3 Orderlies and a Nurse, money
- at 4 per cent., per 1000 sick 166,000
- ---------
- Extra cost of small wards 158,000
- Cost of Netley 119,000
- ---------
- Saving in giving it up £39,000
-
-[Sidenote: 13. Hospital Floors.]
-
-13. FLOORS.--In building a new Hospital or laying a new floor we shall
-hope to see, by degrees, everywhere introduced the only safe Hospital
-floor. In the expense the difference between oak and the best white
-deal ought never to be considered. The staircases and passages should
-always be of stone. When once an oak floor is well done with bees’-wax
-it is no longer an absorbing surface. There cannot be a doubt that the
-frequent washing of the floors, in London Hospitals, is one main cause
-of Erysipelas and Hospital Gangrene.
-
-But, with regard to deal flooring,--
-
-(1.) The best way with a pine floor already laid is to close the
-joints, plane the surface quite smooth, and then saturate the wood with
-beeswax and turpentine, either at once, or after the wood has been
-saturated with “drying” linseed oil well rubbed in.
-
-(2.) Enough beeswax should be used to fill up the grain of the wood,
-and rubbing with a brush will then smooth the surface. It will be
-polished somewhat, but not slippery. The amount of polish depends on
-the brushing.
-
-(3.) The surface should be kept clean by using a brush with a cloth
-tied over it, and if offensive liquids are spilt, they should be
-immediately removed, the surface washed with soap and water, and
-immediately dried.
-
-(4.) List slippers, which ought to be part of Hospital furniture,
-effectually obviate risk of slipping. It would hardly be possible,
-however, to make deal floors as slippery as oak _parquet_, because
-the surface (except of very fine deal, such as is used for musical
-instruments) never takes so high a polish.
-
-(5.) Dry rubbing, which is done with sand, or with sandstone, is not
-well adapted for ordinary sick wards, on account of the dust; unless
-it be very carefully done. The rationale of it is to remove a certain
-amount of the surface of the floor. It answers very well on board ship.
-A certain amount of surface cleaning may be done by rubbing with a
-hard short brush; it is, however, defective. The wood becomes in time
-saturated with organic matter, and only wants moisture to give off
-noxious effluvia.
-
-(6.) Scrubbing is absolutely objectionable, for this reason. In any
-schoolroom, reading-room, institute, which is much inhabited, a smell,
-while the floor is being scrubbed, is very perceptible, quite different
-from that of soap and water. It is the exhalation from the organic
-matter which has entered the floor from the feet and breath of the
-inhabitants. How much more dangerous this in Hospital Wards need hardly
-be said.
-
-There is at Bethanien Hospital, at Berlin, a very admirable flooring,
-which would be worth trying in England. The floors throughout are
-wood, prepared in the following manner:--The floor is first oiled with
-linseed oil, and then rubbed over with a peculiar “laque” varnish, the
-technical process of which will be found in the note,[15] and polished,
-so as to resemble French polish. Every three years or so the rooms and
-wards are successively emptied for a fortnight, when a new flooring is
-laid, re-oiled, varnished with the laque varnish, and thoroughly dried.
-Every day the floors are wet-rubbed by means of a piece of sacking or
-coarse webbing at the end of a long, hard broom, the performer stands
-for the performance, also while immediately afterwards, having wrung
-the sacking completely dry, she goes over the ground again with the
-dry sacking. One, or, in case of the weekly extra wet-rubbing, two dry
-rubbings, dry the floor completely in a few minutes from the cessation
-of the wet-rubbing, never more than ten minutes. Three or four times a
-year the ward floors are thoroughly wetted with water thrown on, and
-the floors scrubbed with a long brush. Neither soap, soda, &c., is
-used.
-
-The great advantages of this are:--
-
-(1.) That it purifies the air exceedingly and freshens the wards.
-
-(2.) That it reduces the daily accumulation of dust to a minimum.
-
-(3.) That it dries completely within ten minutes from being wet-rubbed.
-
-(4.) That a woman, standing, can thoroughly clean a ward with some
-hours less time, and greatly less fatigue, than scrubbing.
-
-(5.) That wet scrubbing is sometimes and ought to be always forbidden
-and dry rubbing substituted, on the score of the unhealthiness of
-scrubbing.
-
-(6.) That it would relieve us of all external scrubbers in the Nurses’
-own rooms. Each Nurse would sweep, wet-brush and dry-brush her bed-room
-and day-room herself, daily, would once-a-week give a little extra
-wash, and would wash the wooden skirting which runs along the bottom
-of the walls. As the bed-room must be tiny and the day-room small
-(it would be better if we could keep to one room, which would take a
-quarter of an hour daily, and the grand weekly purification not more
-than one hour, even to a slow performer) a short time daily and a
-moderate time weekly will do it.
-
-One disadvantage of this very simple, very efficient, and excellent
-flooring is, that it shows scratches. Furniture must always be lifted,
-not dragged. In a Military Hospital where men are always at hand, this
-would matter less as to the wards, and the Nurses could help each other
-once a week in their bed-rooms, and manage alone in their day-rooms.
-
-There are four other examples of this flooring in Berlin Hospitals.
-
-(1.) Bethesda Siechenhaus, a small old house, about to be rebuilt and
-enlarged, in a suburb of Berlin, where three Deaconesses, with a man
-and woman servant, take excellent care of about forty infirm old women
-and imbecile children. These patients, of the class to be found in the
-infirmary wards of our workhouses, move about little, and have few
-visitors, so that the flooring, which is the same as at Bethanien, is
-less used.
-
-(2.) St. Hedwig’s Hospital, where 250 male and female medical and
-surgical patients are nursed by Roman Catholic Sisters of St. Charles
-Borromæus (head quarters at Nancy), with female servants and male
-nurses. The house is new; the flooring the same as at Bethanien.
-The Superior, an intelligent German, speaks much of its excellence
-for hospital purposes; it is being introduced, though as yet very
-partially, into France.
-
-(3.) The great Charité Hospital, the town-hospital for 1,200 patients,
-spite its French name. It consists of two buildings; the old one,
-used in winter; and a splendid new one, into which all the patients,
-except the lunatics and the small-pox and the venereal cases, are moved
-for the six summer months. The flooring throughout is of the same
-wood (deal) as at Bethanien, but has much more laque. The more laque
-is used, the brighter the floor shines, but the sooner it requires
-re-oiling and laque varnishing. The Charité floors are re-oiled with
-laque every year; they are cleaned in the same way as at Bethanien,
-only with more dry rubbing. On bad days, when the numerous students
-have passed through, the ward floors occasionally require to be
-cleaned; but, in general, even on these occasions, it is enough to
-sweep them, and to clean the next morning as usual.
-
-(4.) The principal Military Hospital, the Garnison Lazareth in the
-Hirsch Allée, for 800 patients, usually not filled. The flooring is
-the same as at Bethanien, except that no laque is used. It is oiled
-generally, not always, yearly.
-
-The Ober Inspector, a Landwehr civilian, who is supreme over the
-Hospital, and an Ober-Stabs-Arzt, both speak very strongly as to the
-superiority of this flooring over all others for Hospital use, and
-in particular over flooring which requires scrubbing. It has only
-been introduced of late years. They consider it equal to any amount
-of hospital wear and tear. The military patients, like those of the
-Charité, Bethanien, and St. Hedwig’s, wear hospital slippers, with
-soles thick enough to admit of their walking in the garden, when fine;
-when not fine, they are not allowed to go out. This flooring would not
-stand the constant tread of nailed shoes. But often, on bad days as on
-fine ones, great numbers of soldiers come to visit their sick comrades,
-and leave the floor very dirty; generally it is enough to sweep the
-floor after the visitors are gone, and to clean it as usual next
-morning; sometimes it is necessary to clean it the same afternoon.
-
-The flooring is cheap. Somewhat more expense attends laying it down
-than the ordinary boards, and a certain expense attends the re-oiling,
-but the constant outlay for soap and soda is entirely saved, except
-a little soda in the grand annual purification, with hot water, in
-addition to the daily one with cold; the time and labour attending
-scrubbing is saved, and above all the great gain to the sick arising
-from its use is secured.
-
-The strong, decided way in which the old grey-headed Army Surgeon, and
-the middle-aged business-looking Civilian, spoke of the merits of this
-flooring, and of its capacities, was exceedingly satisfactory.
-
-(5.) Two years ago the greater part of the boards in the Kaiserswerth
-Institution, which are of deal, were oiled, both on sanitary grounds,
-and to rid the Sisters of the drain on time and strength in scrubbing.
-They are considered far preferable to the old ones, and to answer in
-every respect. Yet the Kaiserswerth floorings would not answer the
-English requirement of extreme cleanliness. They are substantially
-clean, but, like those of the Military Hospital of Berlin, it
-takes examination to ascertain that they are so, and from the same
-cause--there is no “laque.” Also the colour is not at all so agreeable
-as the Bethanien colour. These oiled boards last a year only. A
-moderate amount of laque is required to add to their durability.
-
-The sum of the information, condensed as much as possible, on this
-subject is;--
-
-I. The boards, which are always of deal, can be prepared in three ways:
-
-(I.) Laquering, only suitable for reception rooms, or when by some
-chance a ward is wanted to be got ready in a hurry; it takes less time;
-after two or three days, the room or ward can be used, and it shines
-brighter, but it lasts a much shorter time than the other procedures,
-as it stands less the incessant treading incident to all ward floors;
-it is also more expensive. Let us consider it wholly unsuitable for
-wards.
-
-(II.) Oiled boards, with more or less laque.
-
-The Charité boards have a great deal of laque.
-
-The Bethanien and St. Hedwig’s boards much less.
-
-(III.) Oiled boards without any laque--
-
-As in the Military Hospital.
-
-II. Much laque makes the floors shine brighter; requires more time to
-clean them; and earlier re-preparation than where less laque is used.
-
-The Charité boards would be unmeaningly splendid for an English
-Hospital, and quite out of place in a Military one; besides entailing
-some unnecessary annual expense, and some daily finicking care.
-
-III. A small quantity of laque, as at Bethanien, gives an amount of
-polish to the floors, which enables the eye at once to ascertain
-whether they are clean or not; considerably improves the appearance
-of the floor; and, according to all high authority, adds both to the
-durability of the floor, and the healthiness of the Hospital. It
-renders the whole flooring less subject to cracks, to dirt and dust
-getting into holes and corners; and, above all, by filling up the grain
-of the floor, it prevents the saturation, by organic matter, which
-otherwise takes place and which scrubbing only makes more mischievous.
-
-IV. Where no laque is used, the absence of all polish on the dark-brown
-floors makes examination necessary, to see whether they are thoroughly
-clean or not. This flooring would never satisfy the eye or the mind of
-an English Inspector-General or Surgeon. But the main objection to the
-absence of laque certainly consists in the sanitary one above stated.
-
-V. All the various authorities agree in estimating very highly the
-superiority of this flooring to flooring requiring scrubbing. They all
-agree in their reasons for this preference, viz.:--
-
-(I.) The dampness which remains in a ward more or less time after it
-has been scrubbed, is completely avoided.
-
-(II.) The tendency to miasma is greatly counteracted, both by getting
-rid of the damp, which encourages and spreads the exhalation of the
-organic saturations; and by making the floor impervious, preventing
-dirt, and with dirt miasma, finding its way into holes, chinks, and
-corners of the floor.
-
-(III.) The mode of cleaning this flooring, while it avoids damp, daily
-purifies the ward air.
-
-(IV.) The floor, and its mode of cleaning, get rid more than by any
-other way of dust, and of the miasma dust often conveys.
-
-(V.) The time, labour, and expense of scrubbing are saved.
-
-(VI.) The Berlin authorities consider that these oiled boards, with
-a small quantity of laque, are, on the whole, decidedly cheaper than
-the common boards; that the boards last rather longer; and that the
-avoidance of scrubbing saves more than the extra preparation and its
-renewal cost, apart from the sanitary gain.
-
-VI. Against these advantages, the following disadvantages are to be
-placed:
-
-(I.) This flooring shows where most used, instead of the uniform
-appearance of the white scrubbed boards.
-
-(II.) Scratches show, and remain upon it; so all furniture must be
-lifted, not dragged over it.
-
-(III.) The tread sounds a little more, little, but more, than on white
-boards.
-
-(IV.) It would not stand the constant tread of nailed shoes; and
-patients of a ward so floored, ought to wear slippers with moderately
-thick soles. (The German Doctors consider the use of slippers
-preferable to that of shoes, by the patients, as keeping a ward much
-quieter, cleaner, and disturbing the severe cases less.)
-
-(V.) Carpets could not be nailed on it, as the floor should be daily
-cleaned. Several Hospital authorities whose rooms are thus floored,
-have large pieces of carpet round the furniture most used, bed,
-tables, sofas, &c.; these are daily taken up and dusted while the
-floor is being cleaned. To many English minds, the sight and feel of
-a carpet is essential to the idea or feeling of comfort; and it might
-be sound policy, in the event of a trial being made of this flooring,
-to leave the Officers, Military and Medical (I do not mean patients),
-in possession of scrubbed rooms and carpets. The Superintendent might
-have one or two pieces of carpet for her rooms; and the Nurses should
-dispense with carpet.
-
-Both in the new part of the Charité and at Bethanien, long broad
-corridors run along the back of the wards which open into them. The
-corridors are floored like the wards. In those of the Charité a piece
-of long carpet is laid in the midst of the corridors, where patients
-walk not a little. At Bethanien, a long piece of matting is laid in
-the midst of the corridors, where the patients walk freely. Carpet of
-either kind is not considered to benefit the floors, but to diminish
-the noise. In the wards of Guy’s Hospital, for the same reason, a long
-piece of matting is laid along the middle of the floors.
-
-VII. This flooring is unsuited for stairs, though so used in some
-Hospitals, as, in case of fire, oiled wood would burn rather quicker
-than common wood. Hospital stairs should be of stone.
-
-VIII. It is also unsuitable for kitchens, wash-houses, water-closets,
-and sinks. The floor round a stove or fire-place in a ward or room
-should be protected by a strong plate of lead or tin.
-
-It might also be as well to floor operation-rooms with flooring,
-admitting of scrubbing, because these oiled boards do not well stand
-sand or bran, and our Surgeons might be discomposed at missing one or
-other of these things. Sand or bran mixed with blood would make a mess,
-the traces of which would show a little on this flooring. For the rest,
-it is particularly easy to wipe blood off it. After each operation, one
-or two minutes, a wet cloth of the kind here mentioned, and a broom,
-remove the blood that has fallen, and leave a clean floor; or if there
-has been a very great mess, five minutes, a wet cloth to lap up the
-blood, &c., another wet cloth, a pail, and a broom, do all: after the
-operations are over, a few minutes’ whole or partial cleaning, as the
-case may be, make all tidy again. Still, many English Surgeons expect
-to have sand or bran thrown on the floor before, or just after the
-first blood has fallen, and might object to standing some minutes on
-the bloody floor, which spoils boots, &c. Red floorcloth, of sufficient
-size, round the operating-table, might answer every purpose.
-
-IX. On laying down the oiled boards for the first time, six weeks
-should pass after the oiling and laquering before the ward is inhabited.
-
-X. After subsequent re-preparation of the floors, the longer the wards
-are left vacant the more the floor both hardens and shines; but for
-practical purposes the interval of a fortnight is enough.
-
-XI. The flooring, so prepared, or re-prepared, ought, on an average,
-to last about three years. In case of any extra miasma, it is often
-desirable to hasten the re-preparation, and to have it done after two
-years’ use. To do it annually is, unless in some emergency, quite
-unnecessary.
-
-Although the process cannot be said to be by any means perfect, on
-account of the deficient durability of the surface, it would be well
-worth while to try it in England, and, if it answers and if it were
-improved, the sick would gain much, and the Hospital staff would gain
-much--the latter much more even in Civil, than in Military Hospitals.
-
-But it would be incurring a great responsibility to have the whole of a
-large new Hospital floored in this way, because,
-
-I. An English climate has made, and makes, so many things which are
-good and suitable abroad, unsuitable and sometimes pernicious for
-England.
-
-II. Our coal-fires, whether assisting or assisted by our atmosphere,
-certainly give us an amount of soot and dirt unknown abroad. At Berlin,
-all fire-places are stoves, where sometimes coal, sometimes coal and
-wood are burnt.
-
-This flooring might not stand well either the damp climate, or the
-smoky atmosphere and amount of flying soot of England: but it would be
-well worth trying; as also trying to improve it.
-
-By all accounts, a great deal depends upon the manner in which these
-boards are prepared; a little more or a little less, whether of oil or
-laque, makes a great and lasting difference. It would never answer to
-make an English carpenter or painter do this from written or printed
-directions.
-
-If we obtain a trial of this floor--the best course would be, to let
-an English carpenter prepare a number of boards and skirtings, of due
-size, suitable for the new flooring of some few wards in one of Her
-Majesty’s hospitals, which requires new flooring; then to desire either
-the proper tradesman, or the Queen’s Minister at Berlin, to order the
-house-painter, Schonby, No. 5, Michael Kirchplatz, Berlin, to send an
-experienced, trustworthy foreman, with the proper tools and materials,
-and for this man, with a complement of English workmen, to prepare the
-boards.
-
-The mode of cleaning is extremely simple, though of course there
-is a knack to be learnt; and, like everything else, it can be done
-well, indifferently, or ill. Any English man or woman accustomed to
-cleaning would understand the thing in one morning, and would, if he
-or she opened instead of shutting the mind to the outlandish thing, be
-proficient in it in a week. All these things sound abstruse on paper,
-and are far more simple and more easily learnt by seeing done than by
-reading. The foreman ought to give one or two lessons to one or two
-Orderlies, or Nurses, as the case may be.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 14. Ventilation of Wards.]
-
-14. VENTILATION.--The amount of fresh air required for ventilation has
-been hitherto very much underrated, because it has been assumed that
-the quantity of carbonic acid produced during respiration was the chief
-noxious gas to be carried off. The total amount of this gas produced by
-an adult in 24 hours is about 40,000 cubic inches, which in a Barrack
-room of 16 men would give 370 cubic feet per diem. Allowing 8 hours
-for the night occupation of such a room, when the doors and windows
-may be supposed to be shut, the product of carbonic acid would be 123
-cubic feet, or about 15½ cubic feet per hour. This large quantity if
-not speedily carried away would undoubtedly be injurious to health; but
-there are other gaseous poisons produced with the carbonic acid which
-have still greater power to injure. Every adult exhales by the lungs
-and skin 48 ounces or 3 pints of water in 24 hours. Sixteen men in a
-Barrack-room would therefore exhale in 8 hours 16 pints of water and
-15½ cubic feet of carbonic acid in the atmosphere of the room. With the
-watery vapour there is also exhaled a large quantity of organic matter
-ready to enter into the putrefactive condition. This is especially the
-case during the hours of sleep. And as it is a law that all excretions
-are injurious to health if reintroduced into the system it is easy to
-understand how the breathing of damp foul air of this kind, and the
-consequent reintroduction of excrementitious matter into the blood
-through the functions of respiration will tend to produce disease.
-
-This will be still more the case in sick wards overcrowded with sick,
-the exhalations from whom are always highly morbid and dangerous, as
-they are nature’s method of eliminating noxious matter from the body,
-in order that it may recover health.
-
-A much larger mass of air is required to dilute and carry away these
-emanations than is generally supposed. And the whole art of ventilation
-resolves itself into applying in any specific case the best method
-of renewing the air sufficiently, without producing draughts or
-occasioning great varieties in temperature.
-
-When the question of ventilation first assumed a practical shape in
-this country, it was supposed that 600 cubic feet of air per hour
-were sufficient for a healthy adult, in a room where a number of
-people are congregated together. Subsequent experience however has
-shown that this is by no means enough. As much as 1,000 cubic feet
-have been found insufficient to keep the air free from closeness and
-smell; and it is highly probable that the actual quantity required
-will ultimately be found to be at least 1,500 cubic feet per hour per
-man. In sick wards we have more positive experience as to the quantity
-of air required to keep them sweet and healthy. It has been found in
-certain Parisian Hospitals, in which the ventilating arrangements were
-deficient, that pyœmia and Hospital gangrene had appeared among the
-sick in consequence. These diseases disappeared on the introduction
-of ventilating arrangements, whereby 2,000 cubic feet of fresh air
-per bed per hour were supplied to the wards. Notwithstanding this
-large quantity, however, the ward atmosphere was found not to possess
-sufficient freshness or purity: and the quantity of air had to be
-increased in subsequent ventilating arrangements. As much as 4,000
-to 5,000 cubic feet per bed per hour have been supplied in certain
-Hospitals. At the rate of 4,000 cubic feet, the ward atmosphere is
-found perfectly fresh.
-
-[Sidenote: Night Ventilation.]
-
-At one of our largest London Hospitals it will be perceived that
-above the one door of each ward is a large ventilator, ordered to be
-open day and night--that beyond this ventilator, which opens into the
-landing-place, is a large window which opens into the external air;
-and thus admits fresh air into the ward at night, diminishing the
-foul night atmosphere. This night ventilation system is good; but it
-requires careful watching, as chilly patients, Nurses, and sometimes
-Sisters, are very apt to give, after they conclude the rounds are over
-for the night, a sly pull at the rope and to shut the window, and thus
-imbibe the foul air directly generated, in quiet.
-
-
-[Sidenote: Special Wards, whether desirable or not.]
-
-15. SPECIAL WARDS.--It may be laid down as an axiom in the management
-of sick affected with certain zymotic diseases, such as fevers,
-cholera, dysentery, &c., that they should be distributed over a
-wide superficial area, and have a large allowance of cubic space.
-Agglomeration of such cases in small ill-ventilated wards is quite
-sufficient of itself to occasion a high proportionate mortality
-among the sick. In mild climates and seasons very little protection
-is necessary from the change of temperature; so that the sick from
-epidemic diseases can be camped out and exposed to the full influence
-of the atmosphere, not only without danger, but often with great
-benefit. It is only when the temperature is low and variable, and the
-season inclement, that danger is likely to accrue from this exposure.
-And hence the necessity of inquiring how we can best combine the
-requisite elevation of temperature and the most suitable amount of
-cubic space and ventilation for the treatment of these diseases in
-Hospitals.
-
-Medical Men generally are satisfied that these ends cannot be safely
-arrived at by agglomerating sick in fever wards in Hospitals. And hence
-has arisen a practice, which experience appears to have approved,
-of intermingling a small number of fever cases in wards containing
-a certain number of sick from other diseases. The practice appears
-to be not only perfectly safe, but advantageous for the sick. It
-is known, however, that if the proportion of fever cases exceeds a
-certain number, the other cases in the ward are apt to become affected
-with fever. It would appear as if, so far as the fever is concerned,
-the cubic space occupied by other diseases was to a certain extent
-available for the use of the fever cases. But the proportion of such
-cases, that can be advantageously placed among the general sick of any
-ward, will depend upon the size of the ward, the means of ventilation,
-the number of cubic feet per patient, the position of the windows, the
-exposure of the building, and other similar circumstances.
-
-Again, it is doubtful whether the preservation of an uniform
-temperature in any Hospital, even in one set apart for chest
-complaints, is beneficial for the sick, or whether it be beneficial to
-agglomerate consumptive cases, without very special precautions, under
-the same roof. Without discussing the validity of the opinions held in
-Southern Europe as to the contagious nature of consumption, it may be
-very fairly doubted whether a number of cases placed under a common
-roof, and breathing a common atmosphere, would not yield a higher rate
-of mortality than the same cases would do if distributed through the
-wards of a well-ventilated Hospital, among other diseases.
-
-The subject is worthy of examination. At all events the phenomena
-observed in this disease in the warmer climates of Europe have led
-to the popular belief above stated; and it would appear to point
-to a higher rate of mortality as a not unlikely result of the
-establishment of special Hospitals or wards for consumptive diseases,
-unless extraordinary care were taken to ventilate them properly, and
-to imitate the natural variations of temperature which appear to be
-necessary for recovery.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 16. Proposed Regulations as to Payments, by
-Superintendent-General.]
-
-16. All salaries and wages of Matrons and Nurses should be paid, on
-the Superintendent-General’s order, from the Hospital chest, to the
-Matron, who should pay the wages and other expenses of the Nurses, and
-account for all monies received by her on such orders. All outfits and
-travelling expenses, in cases of transfer, &c., should be provided on
-the order of the Superintendent-General.
-
-[Sidenote: Opinion as to Superintendent-General paying Wages and
-Salaries.]
-
-There would be considerable difficulty in the way of making
-all payments at a distance to Nurses, direct from the
-Superintendent-General, otherwise than by orders on the Hospital chest
-or Treasury. But there can be no doubt that the Nurses ought to be paid
-by the Matron and by no one else. The service of Nurses in Hospital
-is a peculiar service, and if not successfully conducted by influence
-never can be by coercive discipline. It would be a great mistake,
-therefore, to throw away any means of influence which we can command,
-and the “eye of the maid-servant is to the hand of her mistress” now as
-it was 2,000 years ago. The fact of paying and being paid helps greatly
-to establish the proper mutual relations between the superior and the
-subordinate. The Matron would draw from the Hospital Treasury, on the
-orders of the Superintendent-General, and would account to her. As a
-matter of discipline, it would make no material difference whether the
-orders of the Superintendent-General, in favour of the Matron, for the
-pay of the Nurses, are cashed by the Hospital Treasurer or by a banker,
-always supposing that the Treasurer is bound to honour those orders,
-as any other banker would.
-
-[Sidenote: Matrons abroad may dismiss Nurses under appeal.]
-
-The Matron, in any Hospital out of Great Britain and Ireland, should
-be able, with the concurrence of the Governor of the Hospital, to
-dismiss and send home any Nurse; or the Governor himself, on his own
-responsibility, may direct the Matron to do so, under appeal, however,
-in either case, to the Superintendent-General, who shall decide, after
-the arrival of the Nurse, whether she is to be dismissed or whether she
-may be placed in another Hospital.
-
-It should be secured, not left to chance, that the Matron be
-immediately made acquainted with any complaint of the Medical Officers
-against a Nurse.
-
-[Sidenote: Matron to draw Rations and Extras.]
-
-The Matron should be able to draw from the Purveyor, on her own indent,
-with the sanction of the Governor of the Hospital, such rations and
-extras as she may consider necessary for the Nursing establishment, and
-make the arrangements for cooking. In the United Kingdom the Matron
-should be able to make arrangements, subject to the approval of the
-Superintendent-General, for commuting rations for mess-money, not pay.
-
-The Governor is responsible for the sufficiency of all supplies
-and none ought to be expended, without his sanction. This might be
-indispensable, if there were danger that supplies might run short.
-
-[Sidenote: Opinion as to Governor’s jurisdiction over Nurses.]
-
-Upon both these latter points, supposing the Governor of a General
-Hospital to exist, he must have power to maintain the discipline of the
-Hospital, in all its Departments, as a General commanding a division
-has, in regard to every regiment composing it. But he ought to exercise
-it only through the Matron, as commanding a corps. He must also have
-power to require the exclusion from the Hospital of any Nurse whose
-conduct he may find to be inconsistent with maintenance of discipline,
-and this power he would enforce, on his own responsibility, by
-directing the Matron to remove the offending Nurse from the Hospital.
-The conduct of the Nurse would become the subject of investigation
-afterwards, in terms of the established regulations. But practically
-such a case could hardly occur, unless by the fault of the Matron, who
-would, of her own accord, desire to remove a Nurse, on being satisfied
-that such a measure was necessary or expedient. It would be proper,
-too, both for her own justification and for the maintenance of the
-Governor’s supremacy in the Hospital, that the Matron should obtain
-his concurrence in the removal of a Nurse from the Hospital. The
-proceedings, in all such cases, would, of course, be reported by the
-Matron to the Superintendent-General.
-
-Whether the Governor has the power of removing the Matron, who clearly
-and properly ranks among the officers under him, should be settled and
-not left to be disputed about in a distant station. At all events,
-if he has this power over her, it must be guarded, as extending only
-to suspension from office, in cases of alleged flagrant neglect or
-misconduct, till the whole matter can be remitted and decided on by the
-Superintendent-General.
-
-
-[Sidenote: 17. Nurses’ Wages.]
-
-17. Generally, as to the question of wages and pensions, a regulation
-that Nurses shall have a small annual increase of wages is better than
-one giving an increase after five or three years.
-
-[Sidenote: Efficiency of Nurses does not increase by springs and
-starts, like Grasshoppers.]
-
-Efficiency does not go by starts and springs, like grasshoppers, but
-makes “a small annual increase,” like the wages proposed.
-
-Nay, I appeal to everyone with experience in these matters whether the
-greatest improvement is not made the first year, the second year a
-little less, and so on the third and fourth, till, when the fifth year
-comes, if improvement has not been made by that time, it never will be.
-
-[Sidenote: The first five years a constant improvement. Afterwards if
-there has not been improvement made before, no hope at all.]
-
-For trust-worthiness is the true efficiency of a Nurse. And it may
-safely be said that, if by the end of the first year she has not
-improved in trust-worthiness, she had better go; and if she have not
-almost reached her culminating point by the fifth year, she certainly
-will not improve afterwards.
-
-[Sidenote: Three principles in Wages.]
-
-The reasonable principle I believe to be, 1, to begin improving the
-wages at as early a period as possible; 2, to let them increase till
-the Nurse reaches her maximum of efficiency; and, 3, after that to make
-no more increase.
-
-[Sidenote: By rate of Wages to retain those who are efficient.]
-
-Because the object is to induce the young and efficient women to stay,
-not the old ones. They will stay long enough, because the old ones
-nobody else will take.
-
-[Sidenote: By rate of Pension to reward those who have been efficient.]
-
-The rate of pension ought, on the other hand, to increase with the
-number of years’ service, and continue increasing till the end. The
-principle of pensioning is different from that of wages. After the
-woman has reached her maximum of efficiency, which certainly will be
-not later than forty-five, probably not later than forty years of age,
-the inducement to stay should be the improvement of pension. This
-compensates for any apparent injustice in the first principle towards
-an old servant.
-
-[Sidenote: Civil Service an Example.]
-
-No other system appears to be founded on common sense; and it is one
-generally acknowledged in the Civil Service, where salaries are made to
-rise as soon as possible. Military Hospitals must not be made training
-schools for Nurses; else it would be better to admit them much younger
-than at the age of thirty years.
-
-[Sidenote: Opinion as to Wages and Pensions.]
-
-If a Nurse cannot enter the Service till after she is thirty, the
-majority will no doubt be some years above thirty when they enter, say
-an average of thirty-five; and five years appear a very long probation
-for a person at that age before increase of wages begins. In most
-cases, in Civil Departments, there is only one year of such probation
-before increase begins, though the persons are much younger when they
-enter. A maximum might be fixed, beyond which the wages should not
-rise, and when the increase of pension would be sufficient inducement
-to remain. Very few Nurses can be expected to continue really efficient
-till sixty years of age; but it is often difficult to say that a person
-is disabled, though she may have become less active and efficient.
-If there is no retiring allowance there will be great reluctance to
-dismiss her, and it might, in that case, be cruel. The better plan
-would be to promise a small pension after ten or twelve years’ service,
-on a scale so graduated thereafter as to offer an inducement to remain,
-at the same time that it would afford facility for enforcing retirement
-without injustice. This would be economy. The “Nursing Sisters” grant
-£20 after twelve years’ service.
-
-After a time there may probably be difficulty in dismissing persons who
-have done good service for ten years, but have declined in efficiency,
-unless there is a retiring allowance. They may be reluctant to retire;
-and, if so, it would be almost impossible to dismiss them, without
-some kind of provision. This is a difficulty which is encountered in
-every employment in which there is no such provision. Persons who can
-hardly be said to be disabled but who have become less efficient are
-retained, because, if dismissed, they have no means of livelihood.
-
-I have consulted the best authorities upon these points; and I find the
-following general principles admitted:--
-
-
-GENERAL PRINCIPLES AS TO WAGES AND PENSIONS.
-
-[Sidenote: (1.) Same Salary at first.]
-
-(1.) At whatever age a Nurse enters the Service she shall begin with
-the same salary.
-
-[Sidenote: (2.) Same Annual rate of increase.]
-
-(2.) The annual rate of increase shall be the same for all ages of
-entrance.
-
-[Sidenote: (3.) Maximum Salary fixed.]
-
-(3.) The maximum salary shall not exceed £.
-
-[Sidenote: (4.) Pension for Service after Ten Years.]
-
-(4.) The pension for service shall not begin until ten years of
-completed service.
-
-[Sidenote: (5.) Amount of Pension a certain Percentage on mean Salary
-of preceding year.]
-
-(5.) The amount of pension shall be a certain percentage on the salary
-during the year preceding that on which she is pensioned.
-
-
-APPLICATIONS OF THE FOREGOING PRINCIPLES.
-
-[Sidenote: (1.) Annual rise of Wages till the maximum of efficiency.]
-
-(1.) That the wages of Nurses shall rise annually, for a definite
-number of years, attaining their maximum, on an average, at the age
-forty-five, when the Nurses are found to be most efficient.
-
-[Sidenote: (2.) After five years’ Service Pension for Disability.]
-
-(2.) That, after five years’ service, the Nurse shall, in the case of
-ABSOLUTE DISABILITY, become entitled to a pension during the period of
-her disability.
-
-[Sidenote: (3.) Pension on a Scale graduated on the Wages.]
-
-(3.) The pension will be on a scale graduated on the wages. It will be
-twenty per cent. of the annual wages in the year of service, 5–6, and
-the rate to be granted will rise progressively two per cent. per annum,
-until the rate on the wages becomes seventy per cent.
-
-[Sidenote: (4.) All Nurses to retire at Sixty.]
-
-(4.) All Nurses will be placed on the Retired List at the age of
-sixty.[16]
-
-[Sidenote: (5.) Nurses to serve again who are Pensioned for Disability,
-when Disability ceases before Sixty.]
-
-(5.) Those Nurses who are pensioned at an earlier age, for disability,
-will, if called upon, be liable to serve when that disability ceases,
-or to forfeit their pension. They must therefore bring an annual
-medical certificate of disability to the Superintendent-General, in
-order to receive their pension.
-
-[Sidenote: (6.) Nurses partially Disabled to receive partial Pension.]
-
-(6.) Nurses who are partially disabled will only be entitled to
-a certain proportion of the pension allowed in the scale, to be
-determined, on representation made by the Superintendent-General.
-
-
-[Sidenote: Example.]
-
-Example.
-
- COMPLETED YEARS
- AGE. OF SERVICE. WAGES. PENSION.
-
- 30 0 £20? }
- 31 1 22 }
- 32 2 24 } Gratuity
- 33 3 26 }
- 34 4 28 }
- ----------------------------------------
- 35 5 30 × ·2 = £6
- 40 10 40 ·3 12
- 45 15 50 ·4 20
- 50 20 50 ·5 25
- 55 25 50 ·6 30
- 60 30 50 ·7 35
-
-These principles, if admitted, would suggest the following heads for
-regulations as to Nurses’ wages and pensions:--
-
-[Sidenote: (1.) Amount of Wages, first year, £20.]
-
-(1.) At whatever age a Nurse enters the service, the amount of wages
-paid to her during her first year of service, will be £20.
-
-[Sidenote: (2.) Annual rate of increase up to £50, when it ceases.]
-
-(2.) There will be an annual rate of increase of wages equal to 10 per
-cent, of the first year’s wages, until the yearly wages amount to £50,
-beyond which there will be no further increase.
-
-[Sidenote: (3.) No Pension till Ten Years’ Service completed, nor for
-Disability till Five Years.]
-
-(3.) A pension will be awarded for service to any Nurse, who may
-retire, on account of age, at the expiry of ten full years’ service,
-but in case of disability, a Nurse shall receive a pension after
-five years’ service, or a gratuity, according to circumstances, if
-discharged for disability, before she has completed five years of
-service.
-
-[Sidenote: (4.) Rate of Pension.]
-
-(4.) Rate of Pension. The pension will be on a scale graduated on the
-wages. It will be 30 per cent. of the wages received by the Nurse in
-her tenth year of service, and the pension granted to Nurses who have
-served more than ten years, will rise at the rate of 2 per cent. of the
-wages for every additional year of service, until the pension amounts
-to 70 per cent. of the wages received during the year preceding its
-grant, beyond which no higher pension will be granted, except in cases
-of special devotedness to the public service, when an addition to the
-regulated rate of any pension may be granted on special recommendation,
-made by the Superintendent-General of Nurses, setting forth the nature
-of the service for which such augmented pension is to be granted.[17]
-But no such pension shall exceed the amount of £50.
-
-[Sidenote: (5.) Nurses, Pensioned for Disability, whose Disability
-ceases, may be called on for Service.]
-
-(5.) Any Nurse pensioned for disability, may be called on for service
-in the event of such disability ceasing before the age of sixty, in
-which case her wages will be the same as they would have been, had she
-not been disabled.
-
-(6.) Every Nurse who has completed her sixtieth year, must retire from
-the service on her rate of pension.
-
-(7.) Any Nurse, temporarily or permanently disabled in the service, who
-has served more than five and under ten years, will be entitled to a
-lower rate of pension, according to the circumstances of each case, as
-represented by the Superintendent-General.
-
-[Sidenote: 18. Number of Nurses to Patients.]
-
-18. Nurses should be selected and appointed by the
-Superintendent-General of Nurses for each General Hospital, in a
-proportion not exceeding one nurse for every twenty-five cases.
-
-There is nothing so fatal to discipline as to require by regulations
-what it is known and admitted cannot be performed. Such rules are made
-to be broken. Therefore, is it not better, instead of fixing a number
-to fix a limit, and say “not exceeding one to every 25 or 30 patients,”
-leaving it to the Superintendent-General to economize Nurses, and not
-appoint the full number permitted, unless when really necessary? In one
-case she might consider one nurse for fifty or even sixty sufficient;
-in another, one for every twenty-five might be few enough. Why tie up
-her hands against economy as well as against extravagance?
-
-At the same time it is necessary to state--
-
-(1.) That, by all accounts, at home and abroad, in the English and in
-foreign armies, the proportion of severe cases is very considerably
-less, in time of peace, in a Military Hospital than in a Civil one,
-especially in the surgical wards.
-
-(2.) That the Nurse’s time, being relieved of the waste incurred by
-fetching and waiting for things, the cleaning of the ward being done by
-Orderlies, and, an important item, the Ward-Master being responsible
-for the serving the patients’ food, twenty-five sick are not enough, on
-an average, to occupy, properly, her time.
-
-(3.) That idleness, always pernicious, is never more so than to
-Hospital-Nurses.
-
-(4.) That petting the patients, by way of filling up time, would be, of
-the two, more pernicious than idleness.
-
-(5.) That it is most important, apart from these reasons, to train and
-accustom these Nurses to serve efficiently large numbers of patients,
-so as to make them useful in war-service, where every woman who can be
-spared is better away; and where a small efficient staff would, please
-God, do excellent service.
-
-(6.) That it is not in human nature, taking its average, supposing the
-Regulations lay down that the proportion is not to exceed 25, for many
-Nurses not to murmur at having more; whereas they ought from the first
-to understand, that the service is a very laborious one, and that none
-but women able and willing to undergo and render laborious service,
-ought to enter it, or be suffered to remain in it.
-
-(7.) Care must be taken therefore that in fixing this minimum, no use
-may be made of it dangerous to the service, either in the Hospital work
-itself, or in provoking adverse criticisms upon these Regulations in
-quite different places. Twenty-five cases are not generally enough.
-
-[Sidenote: 19. Precautions in sending Nurses abroad.]
-
-19. It would be expedient to take the advice of an able and honest
-man of business as to whether the Superintendent-General should, on
-engaging a Matron or Nurse, have her signature to a bond or not.
-On the one hand, we know what bonds are to loose consciences, and
-if the promulgation of the Regulations give undoubted power to the
-Superintendent-General and to her Matrons on foreign stations, I
-should prefer having no bond. But this is for a man of business to
-answer. It is important to remember that the power of instant dismissal
-for misconduct, and of sending the Nurse home must be retained,
-which renders the service different from ordinary female service. A
-discharged governess or servant, if she insisted on remaining at her
-own expense at the foreign station, could not be sent home forcibly
-by her late mistress; now it is essential that an offending Nurse be
-forthwith passed on board the first returning ship. Also performances
-similar to those of one or two of the women in the War-Hospitals who,
-on hearing of good situations, misbehaved in order to be discharged,
-ought to be effectually prevented. A lawyer must advise, first, if
-it can be; secondly, how it can be done. The Superintendent-General,
-on sending abroad Nurses, ought to have some security either that
-they remain there and do their duty, or that they be sent home for
-her judgment if they fail in duty. To have them either going abroad
-as Nurses by way of securing a free passage, and then looking out
-for lucrative situations, or accepting the offers which might, and,
-occasionally, undoubtedly would, be made to them, would be most
-injurious to the Service. Can it be prevented by any stronger measure
-than the instant forfeiture of all claim to the eventual pension? If
-so, it should. Could this power be extended to the washerwomen who
-would probably be sent with the Nurses ordered to War or out-of-the-way
-foreign stations? Perhaps it will simplify things not to include them
-in the Regulations.
-
-[Sidenote: Hospital Laundries.]
-
-The persons provided by the Officer, whoever he may be, to attend to
-the hospital linen under the orders of the Matron, will be pretty
-sure to give the Matron trouble. But it is much better to begin very
-modestly, and to avoid alarming the Attendance Department; and so to
-be content with the people provided in the linen store, and not at
-all to invade the regions of the kitchen. By degrees, please God the
-work prospers, it may be extended. I fear a laundry of men, except in
-war-service, will be a costly and inefficient concern. Yet a laundry
-of women, exempt from the control of the Matron, would be probably the
-worse evil of the two. And it is both right and expedient to move very
-slowly, and to begin with the nursing service alone. Ultimately, if we
-invade both laundry and kitchen, I should still wish, in both, to have
-as few women as possible. The fewer women are about an Army Hospital
-the better.
-
-
-
-
-ADDENDA WITH REGARD TO FEMALE NURSING IN A MILITARY HOSPITAL ON THE
-PAVILION OR LARIBOISIÈRE PLAN.
-
-
-[Illustration: _PARIS_
-
-Hospital de Lariboisière
-
-612 Lits.
-
- A. Bureaux.
- B. à rez de chaussée Cuisine. au 1ᵉʳ Etage Logements d’employés
- --au 2ᵐᵉ Etage Dortoirs des Garcons de Service.
- C. idem Pharmacie. idem idem
- -- idem Chambres des Elèves internes.
- D E F G H I J K. Chauffoirs.
- L M N O P Q. Batiments de Malades.
- R. à rez de chaussée Buanderie. au 1ᵉʳ Etage Lingerie.
- au 2ᵉᵐᵉ Etage Dortoirs des filles de Service.
- S. Communauté.
- T U. Bains.
- V. Chapelle
- X Y. Amphithèatres.
- Z. Manège et Magasins
- W. Ecurie. Remise et Salle des Morts.
-]
-
-1. In considering the Pavilion Plan to be in future received as the
-sanitary necessity for Hospital construction, we must look upon it as
-susceptible of many modifications.
-
-And, particularly in adapting it for a Military Hospital, we must
-ask by what modification can it be made, 1. Most economical as to
-attendance, a greater amount of which is rendered necessary than by
-other plans of construction.
-
-2. Easy as to supervision; and, of course, a Hospital spread over the
-extent of space now proved to be essential by sanitary knowledge,
-whether built on the Pavilion plan or not, must multiply the amount of
-supervision over that required in the concentrated over-crowding of the
-old Hospital system (over-crowding not with regard to cubic space in
-the wards, but to the superficial area on the ground).
-
-3. Economical as to the number of sick to be accommodated on the same
-floor, so as to save unnecessary waste of time and strength on the
-stairs to both Ward-Masters and Nurses. Each Nurse should have, in time
-of peace, not less than from 50–60 patients under her charge.
-
-4. Efficient as to convenient accommodation for Nurses and
-Ward-Masters, near to the wards of which they are in charge.
-
-[Sidenote: 1. Pavilion Plan indispensable on Sanitary grounds. Its
-Difficulties, on the score of Discipline in Military Hospitals, to be
-openly met and guarded against.]
-
-1. The Pavilion Plan, while it is incontestably superior, on sanitary
-grounds, to any other, while it perhaps may be made equally economical,
-with regard to building, is more expensive than the older crowded
-and badly-constructed Hospitals, not only as to ground, but because
-each separate entrance, staircase, set of appurtenances, represents
-an additional cost of materials, and of hands to keep them clean and
-in order. Human life is, however, a more expensive article than any
-other. If human beings, and especially sick human beings, are to be
-spread over as much space as possible, which is now known to be an
-essential to health and more especially to recovery, this must be done
-under any system and can be best done under the Pavilion system. It
-of course necessarily entails a greater amount and cost of attendance
-and of supervision. Pure air and light are the prime necessities of a
-hospital. These are best secured by the Pavilion Plan, and therefore
-it is the cheapest in the end. As to the hands, there never ought,
-never will, never can, be a superfluity of hands in a well-regulated
-Hospital. The duty of the hands consists of two parts--to keep the
-Hospital clean; to attend the sick. I had rather not enumerate the
-instances where I have seen that, often from the most various causes,
-one result arises--that more time and care is given to floors,
-stairs, &c., &c., &c., than to the sick. Extreme cleanliness is of
-vital importance; this should be combined with extreme simplicity
-of detail, and with providing for considerable numbers at once. You
-can effectually clean a large ward in much less time than two small
-ones; a long stair than two short ones, &c. Extreme, _not finicking_,
-cleanliness, thorough ventilation, for which an ample supply of
-opposite windows will certainly in the long run prove infinitely the
-best plan, and careful nursing, are probably the main conditions,
-humanly speaking, of a large proportion of cures--subsidiary to the
-medical or surgical treatment.
-
-Sanitary necessities are never to be rejected, on account of the
-trouble they give or of the means of cleanliness which they render
-necessary. Because the saving of life, not the saving of trouble, is
-the object of all sanitary appliances, Hospitals among the number. And
-the saving of life is the only real economy. If you have saved “hands”
-and trouble, and lost life, you have been extravagant. The object is
-not to banish appliances which will cost trouble in keeping them
-clean, but to discover those appliances which can be kept clean, at
-least cost of labour. And this is perfectly possible.
-
-[Sidenote: 2. Easy Supervision to be provided for.]
-
-2. The Vincennes modification of the Pavilion plan has been adopted,
-among other reasons, for the greater facility of supervision it
-affords. The Military Superior, the Surgeon, the Matron, can at any
-instant pop in upon any ward of a Hospital which has one roof. Each
-pavilion may, unless the matter be specially considered with a view
-to providing this effectual supervision, perceive the approach of any
-inspector. The system of scouts, watch, alarm, is well understood in
-many hundred wards, whose patients would be puzzled to give the things
-names. Military patients will know both things and names. Remember
-that Ward-Masters, Orderlies, and Nurses require inspection as well as
-patients. Whatever system of Hospital construction is adopted should
-provide for easy supervision, at unexpected times.
-
-[Sidenote: 3. If from 24–30 Patients be the right Number, Sanitarily
-speaking, for a Ward, the Pavilion Plan should, in a Military Hospital,
-be so arranged that more than one such Ward should be on the same
-floor, for facility of Supervision.]
-
-3. The more we see of different systems, the more we see the great
-mistake of giving a Nurse too little to do.
-
-Twenty-four ordinary sick or surgical cases are too few for a Head
-Nurse.
-
-In a Military Hospital, the proportion of heavy cases is in ordinary
-times considerably below the average proportion of such cases in a
-Civil Hospital, open, as the latter is, to accidents, and to the cases
-of dangerous disease always more or less rife in low and crowded
-neighbourhoods.
-
-Upon an average, a third or a fourth of the cases in the ordinary
-surgical wards of a Military Hospital will be ulcers from causes honest
-and dishonest. What these men will require is rest (the cleanliness
-which is often so irksome a novelty to the corresponding Civilian
-patient is routine to the soldier), and very simple treatment.
-
-It is most important, if possible, to form a staff of active,
-laborious, useful women, who, if ordered on war-service, can at once
-cope with numbers, and serve efficiently a considerable number of heavy
-cases.
-
-Relieved of all cleaning, and relieved of the great loss of time
-incurred by fetching, waiting, &c., &c., none of these Nurses, who
-are, in fact, Head Nurses, should serve less than forty men. And, as I
-before submitted, I had rather she served fifty or sixty than forty.
-
-Give them twenty-four patients, and either they will become idle,
-finicking women, or they will take to petting the patients, a thing to
-be sedulously avoided everywhere, most of all in Military Hospitals.
-
-[Sidenote: 4. Importance of the Head Nurse sleeping close to her Ward.]
-
-4. The more we see of different systems, the more apparent becomes the
-importance of the Head Nurse (all these are Head Nurses) sleeping close
-to the ward:--
-
-As regards the efficiency of her service:--
-
-As regards the saving her own time, strength, and securing her a
-modicum of comfort in a work where, if she does her duty, she will
-never have a superfluity of comfort. Time, strength, and this modicum
-of comfort, enter much into a Nurse’s health--and health is essential
-both for efficiency and economy.
-
-Where the Nurse sleeps at a distance from her ward, her efficiency,
-both as to superintendence and work, especially at night, in dangerous
-cases, is seriously impaired.
-
-If she sleeps at a distance from her ward, her comfort, also, such as
-it is, is destroyed. Whatever a Nurse does for herself, she must do
-by fits and starts. A really efficient Head Nurse is never able to
-make anything for herself, though she often would far rather save the
-money it costs to “put it out.” The most simple mendings, even the feat
-of stowing away the laundress’ supply of a Saturday evening, become,
-when a ward is heavy, or when there are two or three of those cases
-of urgent danger, so many of which, by God’s blessing, the assiduous
-care of these women saves, year by year, in our Hospitals, a procedure
-done in several acts. The misery of dividing her small effects (the
-smaller the better) between a day-room and a distant sleeping-room,
-the unseemliness and inconvenience of carrying things backwards and
-forwards, cannot be described.
-
-If it be possible, the Nurses must sleep adjoining their wards; and it
-will not do to give each only 24 patients.
-
-It would be considerably better, if feasible, to have two Nurses in
-contiguous rooms; but in the Pavilion Plan this would involve bringing
-one Nurse away from her ward; and rather than this, the next best,
-though inferior plan is to put one Nurse immediately above and below
-the other, with a distinct bell which she can in a moment ring from
-her bed into the other Nurse’s room, to summon her if needed.
-
-[Sidenote: Importance of Lighting Hospital Wards by Gas, with Sanitary
-Precautions.]
-
-Some years ago gas was laid on in the Sisters’ rooms in Guy’s Hospital.
-In the other Hospitals there is an allowance of candle to each
-Sister. The disadvantages of gas are its alleged unhealthiness and
-its certainly being disagreeable to some eyes. Its advantage is its
-cheapness. Liberty to buy a candle and not use the gas is allowed at
-Guy’s. As it will be a very important thing to conduct the Nursing
-Service as economically as possible, and as there must not be any
-wretched false economy as to essential matters, which in the end always
-proves waste, it will be well to save as much as can be in matters not
-essential. It would be worth while to ascertain the average amount
-of saving which the substitution of gas for an allowance of candle
-has effected at Guy’s. Gas is used in the wards of St. Bartholomew’s,
-St. Thomas’s, and Guy’s, day and night. It appears, when ventilation
-is properly attended to, to answer well, and to do no harm. At night
-the gas is lowered so as to leave the ward just light enough to see
-all that is done in it: if bleeding, &c. occurs, it can in an instant
-be raised, and the ward lighted up. London Hospital burns gas in the
-evening, and throughout the passages at night; but when the night watch
-begins at nine, the wards are dark, except the Nurse’s candle. A spare
-candle, un-lighted, is always at hand.
-
-It is very important for the order of a ward that the attendant in
-charge, and also any inspector suddenly entering, should see at once
-all that is going on in the ward. Where there are dangerous cases, this
-is of great moment; and where there are not, it is equally necessary
-for the police of the ward. A candle or a rushlight give insufficient
-light. Properly lowered, gas at night does not disturb the patients.
-After a night or two, those who are accustomed to sleep in the dark get
-used to it. If the Nurse sleeps adjoining the ward, there _must_ be
-sufficient light in the ward at night. If the gas-fittings are properly
-tight and if every gas-burner has a ventilator, so that the products
-of combustion are effectually conveyed away, for each gas-jet consumes
-as much air as eleven men, it would be greatly preferable that there
-should be a low gas light in the wards at night.
-
-[Sidenote: II.--1. Should it be necessary to serve one Pavilion with
-one Nurse means by which this could be effected.]
-
-II.--1. Suppose the Lariboisière plan retained, as proposed at
-Aldershot, for a Military Hospital, with wards of twenty-four beds
-each--then, with fear and trembling, but with the firm conviction
-that it is better for human nature, most of all, for nursing human
-nature, to have somewhat too much than a great deal too little to do,
-I respectfully recommend that one Nurse serve the three wards of each
-Pavilion.
-
-One woman cannot sleep alone in the Pavilion. The Nurses must sleep
-together near the Matron’s quarters. If the Nurses sleep away from
-the wards there should be some way by which a Nurse can at once be
-summoned, in case of any urgency in her ward, and it would be well
-to consider this in the distribution of quarters. Either the Matron
-should lock the Nurses’ quarters at night, and any summons should be
-brought to her and by her referred to the Nurse; or the summons should
-go straight to the Nurse’s door. There are difficulties both ways,
-even supposing these summons should be unfrequent. The Nurse of each
-Pavilion should inhabit the room on the ground-floor ward, where the
-heaviest surgical cases will be probably placed, whence she can better
-command the movements of the Pavilion, and attend the entrance of the
-Surgeon.
-
-[Sidenote: 2. Head Nurse’s Day in a Pavilion Hospital.]
-
-2. Her day might be something like this (in time, perhaps, God will
-bless us with some Army Chaplain who will get up early and give us a
-very short service morning and evening):--
-
-She should be effective, and enter the Pavilion about 6 A.M., go
-through the wards, read prayers in one by turns at the appointed hour,
-and give out the linen wanted. (Six is the nominal hour when the Head
-Nurses of one great London Hospital enter on their duty.) Here must
-be no nominal hours, all must be real, though not overstrained. Then
-the dressings, &c., attendance on Surgeons, &c. With 72 patients on
-different floors, she must train the Orderlies to do the lighter
-dressings (by training I mean real teaching, not leaving the Orderly to
-find them out himself); she must see all the wounds of all her wards
-which she does not dress herself at least every other day (which she
-can do by seeing some in the morning and some in the evening), and she
-must dress the heavy cases of all the wards herself. All this, with
-method, and not losing time by fetching and waiting, an efficient Head
-Nurse can do.
-
-She must be responsible for the linen of the wards; but this must be
-simplified as much as can be, so as to secure responsibility, yet
-relieve the Nurse of unnecessary time spent over it.
-
-The Nurse should be relieved of all writing and counting, on the score
-of loss of time incurred. It will not do to charge a Nurse, with
-seventy-two patients on three different floors, with serving each man
-his portion of diet; the diets of two wards would get cold while she
-was serving the first. It will be better to make the Ward-Master of
-Pavilion wards responsible for the serving the diets. There must, of
-course, be a card at each bed, or some other record, showing the diet
-the man is ordered. The Nurse must know at a moment’s glance what each
-patient is ordered.
-
-The largest London wards are the two male accident wards in the
-London Hospital. Each Head Nurse has charge of five wards of 12 beds,
-separated (and in some respects impeded) by two lobbies. Very often
-there are fifteen beds in each ward (not by over crowding), and these
-Head Nurses are often to be seen in charge of seventy-five patients
-each, including many serious, and some urgent cases. The two lobbies,
-the small wards, and the duty of some daily writing and arithmetic
-in settling the diets, with some daily loss of time in fetching and
-waiting for medicine, render a Head-Nurse’s service, as regards
-“manual” labour, less efficient than it might be; even where she is
-most efficient.
-
-Relieve the Nurses as much as possible of all writing and arithmetic.
-If it could be possible to relieve them altogether of the “settling”
-the diets, so much, by a great deal, the better. In the Lariboisière
-system, with one Nurse to each Pavilion, it is utterly impossible to
-prevent the Nurse losing daily time and strength on the stairs. But,
-relieved of writing, of arithmetic, of losing time by “settling” and
-fetching, such women as it will be our aim to procure can get through
-the duty of seventy-two patients, although with the serious drawback of
-their being in separate wards and on separate floors.
-
-If, however, the Pavilion plan were so modified as to have two
-pavilions end to end, with an intervening staircase, so spacious and
-well ventilated as to cut off the ventilation of the two wards on the
-same plane, then all the conditions as to health, and facility of
-nursing and supervision, would be much more easily obtained. Of this
-more hereafter.
-
-[Sidenote: 3. Responsibility of Nurse for Discipline of her Ward or
-Wards--how Modified in Military Hospitals.]
-
-3. As to the Nurse’s responsibility for the good order of the three
-wards in a pavilion, supposing the three wards are served by one Nurse,
-there must always be a clear difference between this responsibility
-in the Head Nurse of a Civil and a Military Hospital. The Civil Head
-Nurse, whose assistants are all Nurses, who with herself are under the
-Matron, is charged with, and responsible for, the good order of the
-ward, and it becomes her duty, the moment she finds herself unable to
-do this alone, at once to call in the Steward, or equivalent Officer,
-in whose hands is the police of the Hospital.
-
-The Military Head-Nurse’s Assistants are Orderlies, _i. e._ men and
-soldiers, who, with the patients, are under military discipline. Of
-this military discipline, the military power from the Commandant down
-to the Non-Commissioned Officers acting as Ward-Masters, &c., is in
-charge; the duty of the Military Nurse is, I apprehend, in case of
-any insubordination which she cannot put down at once, to call in the
-Ward-Master or equivalent, before calling in the superior Military or
-the Surgical Officer; it being, however, well understood on all sides,
-that she has the right of direct appeal to the superior Military or
-the Surgical Officer, if the Ward-Master does not do his duty, or
-in the event of a grave irregularity, if he is not at hand, besides
-its being her duty to report such to the Matron, if the case admits
-of being deferred till that can be done. It is impossible to settle
-details until the regulations as to the new Hospital Corps are fixed;
-and whatever regulations, whether for Nurses or for Orderlies are
-made, some difficulty, and much discretion will be inevitable and
-necessary in working them. But it is necessary to bear in mind that
-whereas in the Civil Hospital the Head Nurse, under the control of, and
-responsible to, the Officers, including the Matron of the Hospital,
-is solely in charge of both the nursing and the discipline of her
-ward, both as to patients and as to Assistant Nurses; in the Military
-Hospital, she is in charge of the nursing, and the Ward-Master of the
-discipline, both of patients and Orderlies. To be in charge of the
-nursing, implies to have power to enforce discipline, but this is
-rather, in ordinary cases, to call in the military power, beginning
-from the lowest or Ward-Master’s grade and reporting this to the
-Matron, than to invoke herself the military superiors. Therefore it
-would be well worth while trying how far it would answer to serve the
-three wards by one Nurse, who, in each ward where she successively is,
-is bound, on perceiving any irregularity, to call in the Ward-Master,
-and, in contingencies, to appeal directly to the Surgeon and the
-Captain of Orderlies, and to make the discipline of the three wards
-the charge of the Ward-Master, who is bound to go through the wards
-when the Nurse is not in them. The Ward-Master, in order to fulfil his
-charge, must enter all the wards, while the Nurse is in one of them; so
-that the patients of one ward, who may know that they are safe from the
-Nurse for half an hour or more, as she is in another ward, know that
-they are not safe from the Ward-Master.
-
-In a military Hospital we must bear in mind that it is essential that
-the discipline over patients and orderlies should be exercised by men,
-and that the Ward-Masters must be the lowest and immediate deposits of
-this power of discipline.
-
-All these things must be settled with the concurrence of the
-Director-General.
-
-It is a great comfort that the Hospital staff returns to soldiers. We
-shall get on infinitely better with them than we could have done with
-the late Medical Staff Corps, though, after all, in the long run, we
-should manage with them too. If only God helps us with the sort of
-women required, thoroughly efficient Nurses, laborious active women,
-discreet as well as well-conducted, and aware (a little) of the sort
-of work and place, they are in!--let us trust this to Him, when the
-time comes, and depend upon it, to give each Nurse plenty to do will
-become one great means of forming such women--provided, which must be
-strenuously kept in view, they are made to do it.
-
-[Sidenote: 4. Importance of Lifts.]
-
-4. It is very important to have the system of lifts throughout the
-Hospital, although here, as throughout, the plan of Pavilions renders
-them much more requisite, and makes them work less efficiently than
-the block plan. Lifts, to carry meals and medicine, linen, coals, &c.,
-&c., to and from the first and second floor wards, are very preferable
-to the Orderlies carrying them up and down. One sort of load ought
-certainly not to be brought up and down by lifts, but to be carried up
-and down by men, viz., coffins and the dead. Using the lift for this
-purpose (as is done in one Civil Hospital) is on all and every account
-thoroughly objectionable.
-
-The system of lifts is the more important, because although there is
-no objection to the washing of tea cups, drinking cups, and medicine
-vessels at the sink in the scullery, it is certainly neither necessary
-nor safe to wash the dinner dishes close to the sick wards. By a little
-arrangement, the whole of these could be removed by lifts to a scullery
-beside the kitchen, and there cleansed and set aside for next day’s use.
-
-[Sidenote: III.--1. Casualty Wards for noisy and offensive cases should
-be separate from the ordinary Wards, and under a completely-appointed
-Staff of their own--both for Sanitary and administrative reasons.]
-
-III.--1. Sanitary necessities can never be interfered with. The
-concentrating offensive and noisy cases together, while entirely
-separating them from each other, in a completely appointed set of
-wards, is a far more efficient working thing than appending a small
-ward to each ward.
-
-St. Thomas’s (a very admirable Hospital in very many things) has a
-casualty ward (for such cases) for men and one, adjoining but separate,
-for women, under the charge of one Sister. Baths are in the wards.
-
-Guy’s had the same provision with, however, the drawback that there was
-not a Sister in charge, but a Nurse over other Nurses, with higher pay,
-but not a Sister or Head Nurse. However excellent such a Nurse may be,
-every ward _must_ be under the same regular government as is general in
-the Hospital, if discipline and order are not to suffer. Every ward or
-set of wards should be under a completely appointed staff.
-
-St. Bartholomew’s had a set of casualty wards, including two of about
-ten beds each, several small wards of two and one bed each, including
-two with gratings and other melancholy necessary appliances to prevent
-extremely violent delirious patients from becoming suicides. These
-wards were often partially empty, never quite so. They were long served
-like the casualty wards of Guy’s; but some years ago they were placed
-under the charge of the Sister of the male operation ward immediately
-above, who received in consequence a small annual increase of wages.
-
-London Hospital sent its noisome, offensive, and extra-infectious
-cases to its other wards--small wards for one patient each, and, like
-Guy’s, not under the regular management of a regular Head Nurse.
-
-It most certainly appears that the plan of concentrating these cases
-together, but with (as at St. Bartholomew’s) small wards where
-extra-violent patients can be put separately, the whole under one staff
-of Nurses, is far the best working plan.
-
-And for this reason. Occasionally, a very offensive case requires
-little nursing beyond the fixed daily dressings, and can lie quietly
-enough in his bed or ward. But noisy cases almost always, and offensive
-cases generally, require close watching. Now the moment we have a
-patient in a little room at the end of the ward, it is our duty to
-go in and out and see after him, and supposing him to be a violent,
-delirious case, he is, unless under strong restraint, unsafe alone; and
-even then the restraint requires looking to. In very many cases the
-frequent inspection of Nurse and Orderlies would not be enough, and the
-man ought to have a watcher.
-
-We can never send one of the Orderlies of the ward, wanted for its
-regular duty, to sit down in one of these little rooms; and we can
-never keep a fixed extra Orderly idling about, unless the little ward
-is inhabited. We must then fall back upon extra Orderlies, put in when
-the case wants close watching--of course not otherwise.
-
-At night, also, the watching which suffices for the ward will often not
-suffice for the extra case--and he must have a watcher apart.
-
-The plan of extra Orderlies or extra Nurses is a very bad one, to be
-avoided as much and as long as possible; it very seriously interferes
-with the discipline of wards.
-
-Recollect that each offensive or extra-infectious case, put into the
-little ward, ought to represent a great amount of separation and
-care, which it will be difficult to secure. His mug, utensils of all
-descriptions, bandages, &c., ought to be washed separately from those
-of the patients of the large ward. Is this easily secured?
-
-In the two Borough Hospitals they at once remove a case of erysipelas
-or gangrene, occurring in any ward, erysipelas from venereal wards
-included, into the casualty ward. In the two other great Hospitals
-it is only when the erysipelas or gangrene becomes severe that the
-removal is made. Now at once to remove these cases from the ordinary
-wards is very advantageous.
-
-St. Bartholomew’s larger wards for male and female casualty cases, two
-small wards for two patients each, and two grated wards for one each,
-are very efficient. The wards are all contiguous, and, as has been
-said, under the charge of a remarkably efficient Sister, who has charge
-also of the male operation ward immediately above. The little casualty
-wards, of course, add to the work, and greatly to the anxiety of
-watching; but certainly violent delirium tremens’ cases, alone and in
-a secure ward which can be darkened, appear often to quiet much sooner
-than where several of these wretches lie shouting to and at each other.
-Delirium tremens will never be a thing unknown in a Military Hospital.
-
-One such case in the little ward adjoining the Pavilion Ward would be
-a heavy infliction on the severe cases in the latter; the noise would
-be heard throughout it. And unless the ward were properly secured, or
-unless the man were under strong restraint--and then that would require
-constant looking to--he would not be safe a moment alone; while the
-Orderly was emptying slops or bringing in his dinner, something might
-occur.
-
-[Sidenote: 2. Restraint or Non-restraint in Delirium Tremens.]
-
-2. Restraint is again a thing which must be left to our masters, and
-to them solely--but an ugly, sorrowful, little truth may here be told.
-Restraining and non-restraining processes, and their results may be
-seen, both where, in the same Hospital, one or more of the Surgeons
-orders restraint never to be used to his patients, however violent, and
-others order it to be used in violent cases: and where the rule of the
-Hospital is to restrain violent cases, removing the restraint so soon
-as the paroxysm is over, or as soon as amelioration renders the sudden
-return of paroxysms less likely. I am not speaking of lunatic asylums,
-but of delirium, particularly delirium tremens, in hospitals. Lunatics
-occasionally enter the Civil Hospitals, but, of course, as soon as
-that supreme earthly misery is ascertained, they are removed to the
-proper refuge. It is my humble opinion and firm belief that mechanical
-restraint excites a patient much less, and quiets him much sooner, than
-the prolonged struggle with his attendant’s arms and hands, which
-_must_ otherwise be resorted to.
-
-The coercion apparatus ought also to be good, not cheap, and always in
-perfect order. The least thing out of order either causes pain, which
-when it can be avoided is cruel, or it endangers the efficiency of the
-whole. The strength and cunning of these patients resembles those of
-madmen, which for the time being they are.
-
-Restraint renders the usual complement of ward servants able to manage
-many cases. Non-restraint means that some person must stand or sit by
-or upon the patient’s bed, and hold and struggle with him often for
-hours--also that generally this person must be a stranger to the ward.
-Extra attendants are most injurious to discipline. Could there be a
-set of casualty or equivalent wards, with its own Head-Nurse, the sick
-would gain much.
-
-But if necessary to adopt the little ward with every ward--in that case
-the Nurse must manage the three additional patients--twenty-four or
-twenty-five are, indeed, too few.
-
-[Sidenote: IV. Simplicity of Construction essential to Discipline.]
-
-IV. In all Hospitals, let the construction be as simple as it can be.
-Let its splendour be its lofty airy wards, with plenty of windows;
-water in all due abundance on each floor; an ample, not excessive,
-supply of linen, polished impervious walls and ceilings, well-laid and
-bees-waxed oak floors, and a thorough not excessive, supply of good
-apparatus of the various necessary kinds. But every _unneeded_ closet,
-scullery, sink, lobby, represents both a place which must be cleaned,
-and which must take hands and time to clean, and a hiding or skulking
-place for patients or servants disposed to do wrong; and of such no
-Hospital will ever be free. And every cornice, every brass lock or
-handle, which could be replaced by a plain china or ebony one; every
-decoration, or flourish, or ledge, on doors, windows, tables, beds,
-presses, &c., represents either a collection of dust or a great waste
-of hands, time, and strength in unnecessary cleaning and dusting. These
-are not crotchets, but the result of close observation of the practical
-working of these matters. Every five minutes wasted upon cleaning what
-had better not have been there to be cleaned, is something taken from
-and lost by the sick. Let the appurtenances of the wards be simple and
-complete, but as plain and as undecorated as it is possible to be.
-
-[Sidenote: Polished Walls.]
-
-Polished impervious walls and ceilings are of the first consequence
-in Hospitals. It is perhaps hardly necessary to state that, if Parian
-cement be used, it must not and need not be of the kind lining the
-wards and corridors at Guy’s Hospital, which is as rough as the
-roughest plaster, of a dark and dirty colour, and which nothing could
-improve but being lime-washed twice a-year; it should be polished like
-that used at the Lariboisière Hospital at Paris, and of a pure white.
-
-[Sidenote: Covered Exercising Place.]
-
-In building a new Hospital, some covered arcade or some place where
-the patients might take exercise in wet weather, and where inspection
-could be exercised over them, without fuss, is worth contriving. In St.
-Thomas’s, the patients walk under the covered arcades of the court.
-
-[Sidenote: Reserve Wards.]
-
-Both in Bethanien and in the Charité Hospitals at Berlin there are
-reserve wards,--or rather in the Charité there is a reserve Hospital,
-into which most of the sick are moved for six months in the year, to
-change the air alternately of all the wards, which during the time
-receive a thorough cleaning. Great stress is laid at Berlin on thus
-providing, when building a new Hospital, a certain reserve space, which
-obviates the necessity of less efficient and far more costly steps
-afterwards.
-
-[Sidenote: V. Nurses’ Meals.]
-
-V. Let us, by all means, consider as settled, that the Nurses’ food is
-sent them cooked. Possibly, in the long run, the undoubted advantages
-of this plan will be found to be over-balanced by its disadvantages;
-but let us begin by trying it. I submit that their dinners, and
-possibly suppers, should alone be sent them cooked, and that each Nurse
-should receive a fixed weekly quantity of groceries, and a daily or two
-days’ allowance of bread.
-
-For packing up the Nurse’s meals sent her from the kitchen, a Vienna
-custom might be useful. Each Nurse to have a long, strong, straw
-basket, properly named or numbered. Some contain five dishes and
-covers, but two or three would here be sufficient for every purpose,
-including an occasional slice of pudding. The dishes strong tin, with a
-tin cover, and if the Nurse prefers eating her dinner out of it rather
-than the dignity of plates, and the trouble of washing them up, the
-Matron should let her take hers her own way. If taken by hand, two
-baskets of this sort can be carried with ease. But if the Matron, as
-a general procedure, sends each Nurse a hot little dinner, of a good
-well-cooked portion of meat and vegetables, one such dish and cover
-will do for one Nurse, and three, five, or six can be accommodated out
-of the same basket, or one large basket, carried by two men, would
-serve all the Nurses round. The dishes should, in either case, be
-numbered or named, not the Nurse’s name, but the ward.
-
-A dish and cover of strong, coarse earthenware is used in the Vienna
-Hospital, as a grander edition of dinner, &c. The tin ones keep warm
-without fire for a long time. If the meal arrives when the Nurse
-cannot eat it, put by on the hob, or some provision for warming in the
-scullery, it will keep warm and good till she can eat it.
-
-[Sidenote: VI. Arrangements for a Pavilion served by one Nurse.]
-
-VI. Supposing that we serve each Pavilion by one Nurse, I submit that--
-
-[Sidenote: 1. Nurse’s Day-room.]
-
-1. The Nurse’s day-room should be on the ground floor.
-
-[Sidenote: 2. Ward-Master’s Sleeping-room.]
-
-2. The Ward-Master should sleep in his room on the second or highest
-floor; should the Nurses sleep in the Pavilion, the Ward-Master should
-still sleep in it.
-
-In the event of the Pavilions being arranged end to end, as already
-suggested, the difficulty in regard to Nurses’ and Ward-Masters’ rooms
-would be materially diminished.
-
-[Sidenote: 3. Where should Orderlies Sleep?]
-
-3. I think, but am not sure, that the Orderlies had better sleep away
-from their wards, but I would leave this to be settled by the Doctors.
-In cases of sudden outbursts of danger, delirium, or drunkenness, from
-the results of concealed spirits, and of the Surgeon being sent for,
-it is useful to have, at once, other than the Night Orderly at hand.
-And a part of what has been said as to the importance of the Head
-Nurse sleeping near her ward, applies to the Orderlies. Yet there are
-important reasons why the Orderlies should not be or feel too much at
-home in their wards; and if the authorities are disposed to try the
-plan of lodging the Orderlies together, away from their wards, they
-are probably right, though I should not be surprised if, after a fair
-trial, it were found better to revert to the having them near the ward.
-The Pavilion Plan, which, on the one hand, gives all concerned more
-liberty of doing wrong than the block plan, and which, on the other,
-renders it more difficult to call in help, whether of supervisor or of
-Orderlies, if help is suddenly wanted in the night, makes it the more
-desirable to let the authorities take quite their own way, as to this.
-
-[Sidenote: 4. Where should Orderlies Dine?]
-
-4. I think the Orderlies had better have their cooked meals sent them
-into the wards. Of course, they can only eat together in detachments;
-but in many cases, the absence of even one of the Orderlies would be
-very inconvenient. Perhaps just as the bell rings to summon to the
-common meal, something is going on which requires all the ward service;
-the man either goes late to a cold dinner, or goes away just when he is
-wanted. If his dinner is brought to him in one of these emergencies,
-it is put by to keep warm till it is over. Regularity as to meals,
-as far as possible, should be strictly attended to; and is, in all
-well-regulated wards: and it is well, where, as in some Hospitals,
-there is a fixed hour for meals; but it would seem better that the
-meals should come to the ward servants than the ward servants go to
-their meals.
-
-[Sidenote: 5. Should Orderlies be brought together?]
-
-5. In the case of Civil Hospitals served by women, it is very important
-that each Head-Nurse, and each set of Assistant-Nurses, should sleep,
-eat, and live in the ward and its appertaining rooms, and not assemble
-together more than can be avoided. With Orderlies the case is partly
-different. Still I would not unnecessarily bring them all together, any
-more than allow them to be too much at home in their wards.
-
-[Sidenote: 6. Should Orderlies have a Day-room in Pavilion?]
-
-6. If the Orderlies do not sleep in the Pavilion they should not have a
-day-room.
-
-[Sidenote: 7. Scullery to each Ward.]
-
-7. To each ward should be attached a scullery, small, but not too
-small, which only muddles things and work, well provided with cold,
-and, if possible, with warm water; and it should be law that no patient
-enters the scullery unless sent there by the Nurse to help in washing
-up, &c.; and, as a rule, they ought not to be sent there. Make them
-useful in the ward; keep the scullery for the Nurse and Orderlies.
-
-[Sidenote: 8. What should be done in the Scullery?]
-
-8. From this scullery let the Nurse get the water she
-requires--Orderlies ditto.
-
-Let the Orderlies eat their meals in it, if they do not eat them away
-from the ward. The food of the Orderlies is generally different from
-that of most of the patients, and it answers better for them to eat
-their meals not under the noses of the patients. In emergencies, of no
-rare occurrence, the Orderly must watch a patient and eat his dinner at
-the same time, and so must the Nurse; but, as a rule, it is undoubtedly
-better that ward-servants should not eat under the observation of the
-patients.
-
-In the scullery all the cleaning must take place, which is not done in
-the lavatory.
-
-In the scullery extras are to be warmed, drinks ditto, hot-bricks
-heated, water-bottles filled, &c., &c., &c., and none of these things
-are to be done at the ward-fire.
-
-[Sidenote: Poultice-making.]
-
-On the other hand, there is no way so good of making poultices, a thing
-humble but important, as for the Nurse to stand at a small table in
-front of the ward-fire, to make the poultices there, spread them, and
-forthwith apply them.
-
-Sometimes in a large ward, where the Surgeon orders them extensively,
-a large iron pot is filled with poultice, and then quickly spread and
-applied. Sometimes the pot is filled and the poultices spread in the
-scullery or kitchen, to avoid the mess in the ward. When a number of
-poultices are thus spread away from the sight of the patients, even by
-very clever Nurses, some arrive too large, or too small, or too broad,
-or too narrow; and either the poultice has to be returned, or, as of
-course usually takes place, to be put on the wound it does not fit.
-
-I would not trust any Nurse, including myself, to make a number of
-poultices of the right size, unless within sight of the patients.
-Rather than do this it is better to make the poultice-pot (wood does
-not hold heat, this must be of iron), in the scullery, to take it into
-the ward, and there spread and apply the poultices.
-
-But a large iron pot of linseed poultice seldom contains the article
-nearly so well made, as when made in smaller consecutive quantities in
-a wooden bowl. The bowl does not keep warm above a certain time. Where
-the poultice is made in a mass, even by very clever Nurses, it never is
-so well made as when the Nurse makes the poultices in the wooden bowl.
-These must be forthwith spread, applied, and the bowl re-filled, if
-more are wanted.
-
-This is another reason why the person who washes the wound should also
-make the poultice, as also why the Orderlies should clean the ward, why
-the Nurse should as far as possible be relieved of all “mental labour,”
-and why kept as much as possible to “manual labour.” All severe wounds
-she should wash and dress herself, and many a wound becomes severe,
-when the patient is allowed to fiddle over it himself. Some wounds will
-not bear being left uncovered, and of course in some cases the Nurse
-will wash the wound, and immediately afterwards apply the poultice.
-In general, the Surgeon will consider the wounds take no harm from
-being washed all round, and then poulticed all round. This requires
-not to be over-hurried, and not to lose a moment’s time. A careful
-Nurse will never apply a poultice without having first seen the wound:
-carelessness, haste, idleness, over-work, and prudery, each and all
-produce very sorry results as to this.
-
-I think, therefore, poultices should be made in the ward, and
-immediately after the table cleared away, and the slight mess also.
-In some Hospitals they place a straw carpet just round the table, and
-also carry it to any bed which requires an extra mess in dressing or
-cleaning.
-
-[Sidenote: 9. Presses in Ward.]
-
-9. A regular store closet is hardly desirable. A good arrangement is
-this:--
-
-At the end of the ward, nearest the Nurse’s room, or the ward-door, a
-large press for linen.
-
-By it or opposite it another press, for stimulants, dangerous
-medicines, stock medicines, such as castor oil and one or two others
-which are always to be at hand, though not ordered for any particular
-case, stock lotions (as few as possible), lint, old soft linen,
-stronger but not coarse ditto for pads, &c., cotton wool, tow, oilskin,
-splints and pads, &c., &c. Of all these things, the Nurse should always
-have a certain reserve on hand.
-
-It will be well worth while to see that these presses are made
-commodiously for their purpose. The linen press should have broad deep
-shelves, and the different kinds of things should be sorted apart; the
-other press should have broad deep shelves for the heavier things,
-and separate shelves for the bottles; the stimulants by themselves in
-one row, the stock medicines in another, unless these and the stock
-laudanum were together, but they are better apart, and the dangerous
-things upon the topmost shelf; another row for sweet oil, mustard,
-stock lotions, &c., another row for ointments. Each bottle and pot to
-be distinctly labelled in whatever is reckoned the most lasting manner;
-opinions differ as to labels and letters cut in the glass. The latter
-are boring by night, if something is suddenly wanted, and it is just
-then that mistakes are to be guarded against. A strong clear PRINTED
-label, securely fastened to the bottle, is preferable, to be renewed
-when necessary, as Orderlies’ thumbs even while holding a bottle, if
-the Nurse’s hands are on the bed, wear labels out. There is a great
-saving of time and of chance of mistakes effected by clearly printing
-the directions for the administration of medicine, “once,” “twice a
-day,” “every three hours,” &c., and affixing them to each medicine
-bottle.
-
-Of both these presses the Nurse should have the key or keys. One key
-might do for both, but it may be best to have two keys.
-
-It is a very good plan where the shape of all medicine bottles and of
-those for liniments is distinctly different; and where, _e. g._, square
-bottles are used for poisons, or blue bottles for poisons, and square
-for lotions.
-
-A small narrow shelf over each patient’s bed, or over his locker,
-solely for his medicines and wine. When these are on the locker it is
-less convenient. Where the medicines are not dangerous, it is better
-to have them thus at each bed, than concentrated away from the beds.
-Dangerous medicines should never be left at a patient’s bed.
-
-The two presses will answer all demands. As, however, it does not
-do not to have a supply of everything that may be wanted always in
-readiness, a stand or table in the ward should have upon it a small
-supply of whatever may be suddenly wanted--a little lint, linen, tow,
-and two or three vessels. The supply of lint, &c., to be small enough
-for the Nurse to keep account of it, and for the patients to know that
-account is kept of it.
-
-[Sidenote: “Apparat” in German Hospitals.]
-
-In constant daily use in the surgical wards of the great Vienna
-Hospital is a thing called in Teutonic style “Apparat.” The Nurse
-carries it round for herself, when preparing and dressing the
-patients, and carries it after the Surgeon when he makes his rounds.
-The system of both dressing and washing is in some respects so
-different from the English one, that the fittings would vary.
-
-This concentration of what is wanted for dressing and washing wounds,
-and for attending the Surgeon in his inspection of them, and of what
-is at once wanted on any bleeding, fit, &c., is very useful; all the
-more from its being in a compact portable form, which can be thus
-successively carried to each bed. An English carpenter would make a
-lighter and handier thing. Brass basins, which are there used, are
-not desirable. Of course, one must be most especially anxious not to
-introduce any novelty, particularly any foreign novelty, faster than
-can be avoided, and we may consider it better either to leave the
-general system unaltered of rushing on some emergency to the dressing
-table drawer, or closet, and thence bringing successively the things
-wanted, or at all events not to extend concentration further than
-the excellent plan, so far as it goes, of the London Hospital, where
-each Head Nurse attends the Surgeons with a large basket in her hand,
-containing most of the dressings required, spunges, and one or two
-little matters also usefully at hand. The _apparat_ has the advantage
-of carrying with itself the basins used for washing. In the Military
-Hospital of Vienna a tray attends each Surgeon, without basins.
-
-[Sidenote: 10. Nurse’s Room.]
-
-10. It is important to have the Nurse’s room opening at once into the
-ward, and, upon the whole, I should incline to its having but one door,
-although it may be thought better there should be a second, so that she
-can leave her room without being seen to do so by the patients. Also,
-by all means, let the scullery be opposite the Nurse’s room, and not
-between the ward and the room. As an invariable Hospital rule, rather
-more than elsewhere in Military Hospitals, publicity may be considered
-to be a very great police, and a still greater protection. It is far
-better that twenty-four patients should see the Nurse’s door than one
-or none; and that her room should open full upon the ward than into an
-intervening scullery.
-
-In contemplating a Military Hospital, we contemplate a place through
-which, one year with another, all characters, including a few of the
-vilest, pass. These are not theoretical matters. The more repulsive the
-subject, the more prevention is better than cure. Guard against too
-many closets, sinks, &c., &c., &c.
-
-[Sidenote: Lavatory.]
-
-At the end of the ward there should be a lavatory, with a row, or
-two opposite rows, of white earthenware basins fixed in a stand,
-with outlet tubes and plugs: each basin should have a hot and cold
-water-pipe: and there should be not less than one to each four beds.
-There should also be in the lavatory a hot and cold water-pipe, from
-which a portable bath can be filled.
-
-[Sidenote: Water-closet.]
-
-At the furthest end of the ward should be a water-closet, with not
-less than one soil-pan to each eight beds: and white earthen or
-porcelain urinals in the same proportion. In the London Civil Hospitals
-water-closets are now in general use throughout the wards, but not in
-all of the great Hospitals. In all the Civil Hospitals, it is usual
-that the patients’ water-closets have no inside bolt or lock, and
-that there is only accommodation for one inside. In some London Civil
-Hospitals the male patients, able to take exercise, are expected to
-make use of urinals out of doors. These matters one, two, or three
-experienced army surgeons had better pronounce upon; other things are
-to be considered than the recommendations of architect, plumber, or
-even sanitarian.
-
-[Sidenote: Sink.]
-
-There is in a Berlin Hospital a very useful piece of prosaic
-apparatus--adjoining the water-closet, a sink, with a high, large,
-deep, round, pierced basin of stone, above a _large_ hole, into which
-the contents of a bed-pan can be at once emptied, and from which the
-bed-pan is at once effectually cleansed. Adjoining this is a sink into
-which all other slops are emptied. In mentioning this pierced basin or
-sink solely for emptying and cleansing bed-pans, &c., which is used at
-the Bethanien Hospital at Berlin, and is far better than emptying the
-said vessels into the often-occupied water-closet, and then cleansing
-them in an awkward fashion between the water-closet and the sink, it is
-necessary to add that the cock ought to extend far enough over the sink
-for the bed-pan, &c., to be thoroughly cleansed by a stream of water
-falling directly into it. The Nurse stands at the sink, empties the
-pail, &c., in it, without fear of splashing, and rinses and fills it,
-without stirring from the place. Now this absence of splashing water
-and of moving about from sink to pump, or cock, saves mess and time.
-The oblong sink, usual in England, has by no means the same advantages.
-
-(The partition containing the sink would be an appropriate receptacle
-for the bed-pans to hang by hooks or nails on the wall pending their
-use.)
-
-[Sidenote: Baths.]
-
-In Civil Hospitals, two baths, in an airy closet at the end of the
-ward, to be locked at all times when not in actual use, are a very
-great advantage. Bringing a bath into a ward, which in many urgent
-cases must be done when the baths are distant, is a messing discomfort.
-Still it had better be left to surgeons to say whether, in Military
-Hospitals, it would not be preferable to have, in each ward, only a
-portable bath, on wheels, covered with india-rubber, to be brought
-into the ward for any urgent case; and to take all the men able to
-walk, or safely to be carried, to the Hospital baths. Of these, some
-trustworthy, or intended and supposed to be trustworthy, man, who
-ought to rank as a non-commissioned officer, should have charge. An
-intelligent and respectable-looking man, a serjeant, has charge of the
-baths in the Garrison Hospital at Vienna.
-
-In a great London Civil Hospital, St. Thomas’s, it is the very
-admirable practice for each patient (of course with necessary
-exceptions) to be bathed on his or her admission. The Sisters are
-responsible for examining each woman in the bath, which is within the
-female wards, and for at once reporting before suffering them to go to
-bed, any case of suspected pregnancy, syphilis, or contagious disease.
-A man does the same for the men, who are bathed apart from the wards.
-This arrangement is an excellent one. On the other hand, severe cases,
-just able to be carried to baths, get no good by going through the air,
-and being jolted up and down stairs.
-
-In planning a Military Hospital, in which the service of women is to
-be introduced, it is important to obtain the advice of experienced
-Army Surgeons as to the arrangement of appurtenances of the wards to
-be used by the patients alone. Endeavour to prevent the system of
-holes and corners. It is best that the Nurse’s door should command the
-view of those who come in or out of the lavatory, and in or out of the
-water-closet. This whole section is both ugly and important.
-
-[Sidenote: 11. Summary.]
-
-11. To sum up. I think it would work the best to have no store-closet,
-only two well-appointed presses, by which a certain amount of cleaning
-is saved, and a corner avoided.
-
-Could two cupboards or presses in the wall be arranged for the ward
-linen and the ward stores, it would be preferable to presses placed
-against the walls. Take care, however, that the wall is sufficiently
-thick, so that the presses are not damp, and if this cannot be provided
-against, keep to presses separate from the wall.
-
-Believe that all this is neither theory nor fidget--but practice.
-
-The furthest end of the ward should contain a lavatory, a water-closet,
-and the pierced basin for emptying and cleaning bed-pans is a very
-useful thing. At the other end of the ward, the Nurse’s little room,
-her door opening full upon the ward. If the upper half were of glass,
-with a curtain before it, allowing the Nurse to see the ward without
-being seen, it would be all the more useful. At St. Thomas’s, a window
-opens into the ward, the Sister drawing a blind when she chooses, and a
-door opens into the passage, just within the ward doors, opposite the
-scullery, so that the Sister enters the scullery, in which there is
-a water-closet, for the accommodation of herself and Nurses, without
-traversing her ward. Whether door or window, the Nurse should see at
-once all that is going on in her ward. I prefer a door; yet, if there
-is to be a ward for one, it may be best and most central to have the
-Nurse’s window on the large ward, and her door open on the passage.
-Opposite the Nurse’s room should be a scullery, not too small. The
-scullery should be well provided with cold, and, if possible, warm
-water.
-
-If a supply of hot water can be obtained by turning a cock, this
-is best. Provision should be made in the ward scullery for keeping
-poultices warm which is every now and then wanted. It is not right to
-wash eating-vessels and poultice pans, &c., in the same sink; and this
-should be considered in arranging the scullery. If each ward washes its
-own bandages, which it ought not to do, the second sink will come in
-usefully for this. It is worth while, in enforcing extreme simplicity,
-to prevent jumbling together eating-vessels and things for wounds and
-sores. Sinks are infinitely most handy when made deep, somewhat in
-the shape of broad round basins, with hole at bottom; it saves much
-splashing and mess; the cock to overhang full the middle of the sink.
-The Wall against the sink should have some protection.
-
-Such a scullery, with complete efficient simple apparatus for its
-various purposes, places for washing up and cleaning, and for ward
-purposes and cookery, so that the Nurse can warm the drinks, prepare
-fomentations, &c., without jostling the Orderlies, who are washing up
-or cleaning, will be a very great comfort, simplification, and promoter
-of order, cleanliness, efficiency, and work. At one corner a decent
-little table for Orderlies’ meals, above it their separate safes for
-their bread, cold rations, &c., &c.; each to have and keep his key;
-each to have his locker.
-
-Each floor and ward will require a scullery. It is far better for each
-ward to contain its own appointments--and all the other stores to be
-together, apart. On the second floor might be the Ward-Master’s room;
-_vice_ the Nurse’s room.
-
-[Sidenote: 12. Nurses’ Sleeping Quarters.]
-
-12. Nurses’ quarters, if we are driven to their not sleeping near
-their wards, should be adjoining the Matron’s two rooms, and separate
-water-closet, in a part of the Hospital as central as can be managed
-without trespassing on our betters. I would simplify these quarters as
-much as possible--either a series of very small rooms, or one great
-space partitioned off each into a little cell, with a window, bed,
-washing table, chest of drawers, and a very small wardrobe, with space
-to hang up three or four gowns, deep enough for another row for shawl,
-&c., at top a shelf for bonnet and caps, at bottom a deep drawer for
-boots and shoes. These things will be a convenient riddance to the
-chest of drawers, and comfort to the women. In each cell very strong
-hooks to hang up and air a little gowns taken off at night, and one
-or two chairs. The nurses must wash their hands, &c., in the rooms
-off their wards, and I think it must be understood as a rule that
-they leave their quarters in the morning and return to them at night.
-Optional carpet.
-
-Each cell to be numbered either with number or with name of Pavilion.
-Opposite this space a small lumber room, wherein each nurse may deposit
-her box, thereby hindering dissemination of bugs. Opposite also a
-running open cupboard, with partitions numbered or named as rooms,
-containing each Nurse’s broom, dustpan, &c., each with a key.
-
-Also pump, sink, water closet.
-
-[Sidenote: Furnishing.]
-
-When furnishing begins, it will be well worth while to see that all
-articles of furniture, whether for wards or Nurse’s quarters, admit of
-being easily swept and scrubbed underneath, and swept and dusted at
-top. Chests of drawers, &c., with too narrow space between bottom and
-ground, harbour dust, or sadly waste a few precious minutes in the most
-busy part of every day. As few high pieces of furniture as possible, to
-gather dust and be out of easy reach; as few as possible of cumbrous
-articles difficult to move from the wall, to sweep and dust behind, &c.
-
-There ought to be, near the Superintendent’s quarters, one or two
-small rooms, where, necessity occurring, sick Nurses might be lodged.
-We cannot hope always to escape having sick Nurses; and there would
-be serious objection in a Military Hospital, where only one Nurse
-sleeps on each floor, to having the Nurse ill in her room for more
-than 2 or 3 days at the outside. Or there might be one good-sized airy
-room, with two or three dark washable curtains dividing it into little
-dormitories, so that one Nurse, whom the Superintendent must engage and
-watch, could attend them all. And as Her Majesty’s Nurses must have
-allowed them such decent comfort as can be, but no fastidiousness, I
-think the cubicles in one room would be best. Not to be called so,
-however, by any means, as it would sound Latin and “Puseyitical.” The
-Nurse’s ward to be locked and key kept by Superintendent, except when
-tenanted. I should hope three beds would answer thoroughly, as well as
-that the ward would be empty eleven months out of the twelve.
-
-Considering the awkwardness of illness among Nurses, when it did occur
-in a Military Hospital, it would be worth while that, adjoining the
-little ward, there should be a little room for any one infectious case
-which might occur; _e. g._, supposing one Nurse ill in the ward with
-bronchitis, it would not do to put another with small-pox into the
-ward,--at least it would be very impolitic. The ward should have a
-water-closet and a little sink of its own, and a little cell, but with
-window and fireplace, for the attending Nurse to lie down in. When not
-used, once a month’s, or week’s at the most, cleaning by a charwoman
-would be enough. It should be always clean and ready for use. In the
-Civil Hospitals, few years pass without sundry Head-Nurses and Nurses
-dying, not a few Nurses being warded, and sundry Head-Nurses ill in
-their rooms. The peculiarity of Military Hospitals makes this little
-preparation for what is certain every now and then to occur seem
-desirable and economical; to hire lodgings in the neighbouring town
-would be in all ways a worse plan.
-
-[Sidenote: 13. Classification of Cases.]
-
-13. Endeavour, if possible, to obtain a classification of the severe
-and non-severe cases, and let the Nurses be only appointed to the wards
-of severe cases. The convalescent cases to be successively removed to
-the convalescent pavilions, whether they bear or not that name. No
-convalescent ward in any of the floors of the Pavilions to be served by
-Nurses.
-
-[Sidenote: 14. Nurses to be called by the Names of their Wards.]
-
-14. It will be found excellent in many respects not to allow the
-Nurses’ names to be used in the ward of the Hospital, or among each
-other, so far as the Matron takes cognizance of. In the great London
-Hospitals the name of a Nurse is never heard, except occasionally to
-each other as a solace, partly very natural, partly harmless vanity.
-She is Sister or Nurse of such and such a ward. In hasty parlance she
-is distinguished from the others by the name of the ward only. In it
-she is always addressed as Sister or Nurse.
-
-Thus a Sister of St. Thomas’s Hospital, whose services in the War
-Hospitals of the East I can never forget, was always at St. Thomas’s
-spoken of out of her ward as Sister of George, or, more commonly,
-Sister George; and spoken to quickly or called to in a hurry as George.
-
-All this, the only course of all the great and, I believe, of the
-smaller London Hospitals, works excellently, in many ways.
-
-[Sidenote: 15. Foul Linen--how to be Disposed of.]
-
-15. Arrangements should be made that foul linen remains for the least
-possible time out of the laundry. As regards the laundry deposits, the
-best plan is that of the London Hospital, where each ward has a bin of
-its own marked accordingly. To similar bins all the foul linen should
-be, at least, daily carried, unless it is judged best to receive and
-wash all the linen in a heap, returning numbers only to each ward. The
-former plan is preferable. In any case the linen of the “foul wards”
-should be received and washed apart. During the time, which ought to
-be as short as possible, between dirty linen leaving the patients and
-reaching the bin or bins, a large box in the scullery is making the
-best of a bad business--the presence of foul Hospital linen always is
-that--and is preferable to a closet.
-
-[Sidenote: 16. Washing Bandages.]
-
-16. Washing bandages, a very important thing. Shall a washerwoman
-be told off for that particular purpose? or shall the Orderlies of
-each ward do it _alla meglio_? The former is the better plan; if not
-adopted, the Nurse must see well to the matter.
-
-[Sidenote: 17. Splints--Bandages, Lint, &c., where to be kept.]
-
-17. It would depend upon what sort of work is usually going on in the
-Surgical Wards of a Military Hospital in peace whether it will be worth
-either a press with glass front, in which splints, pads, &c., &c., are
-excellently arranged, as at St. Bartholomew’s; or the pad-basket and
-splint-rack, which are also excellent, provided in London Hospital.
-The splint-rack, enabling the Surgeon at once to see and choose of all
-shapes and sizes, is perhaps only suited for an accident ward, and
-would be out of place in a military ward in peace. It may be better
-to have these stores entirely in some dispenser’s or store-keeper’s
-jurisdiction, and to let the Nurse confine herself to padding, &c., any
-splint sent by the Surgeon into the ward. Let our masters take exactly
-their own way about this.
-
-Bandages, lint, &c., &c., &c. should perhaps rest entirely with the
-Dispenser, otherwise it would be useful in the greater Hospitals, to
-have under the Matron a Nurse charged with preparing them and giving
-them out, writing in a book the date, amount of each, and the ward they
-are given to. In a small Hospital the Matron could do this herself.
-
-[Sidenote: Cotton Lint never to be used.]
-
-While speaking of lint, it seems a duty to state that, in some of
-the Military Hospitals, in certain County and even London Hospitals,
-and also in Workhouses, and in the practice of private Surgeons, a
-preparation of cotton has been recently substituted in the dressing
-of wounds for _charpie_ or Surgeons’ lint, properly so called. So
-miserable an economy at the expense of the sick is not adopted in
-several, at least, of the London endowed Hospitals, probably in none.
-For all purposes for which lint is necessary cotton fibre should be
-totally disused, in the army and everywhere else. It is irritating
-and injurious to wounds. It increases human suffering; it delays
-patients in Hospital, and, in doing so, of course, increases the cost
-which such a substitution has been intended to reduce. Nurses should
-be particularly careful never to use this material, which is easily
-distinguished, even by the touch. Any Surgeon may tell the best of it
-from lint by submitting it to microscopic examination, and on doing
-so he will readily discover that characteristic of cotton fibre which
-renders it so ill adapted for surgical dressings. It does not absorb
-the discharges from wounds, as linen lint does. The fibre is ragged
-instead of being smooth, and it is apt to become matted together, and
-to adhere to the surface and edges.
-
-[Sidenote: 18. Classification of Women.]
-
-18. It is essential to have as few women as can efficiently do their
-work. Supposing the Hospital were for one thousand patients, not taking
-into account that some wards would probably be foul wards, where I
-earnestly hope female service will not be, at present at all events,
-introduced, and that some wards would be for slight or convalescent
-cases, where I hope it never will be--supposing each Nurse served
-seventy-five patients, supposing one Nurse, at the very least, was told
-off for the linen, fourteen or fifteen Nurses would serve the Hospital.
-I conclude the Matron to have no cognizance of the laundry.
-
-[Sidenote: Superintendent’s Store room.]
-
-The Superintendent[18] will require a store room, or at least a store
-closet, and hers should be well appointed. It would depend upon the
-other arrangements of the quarters, whether the world in general, when
-sent for to fetch what it wanted, enter from the same side as the door
-of the Superintendent’s bed-room, or from the other side. And it would
-depend upon the nature and amount of stores of which she had charge, in
-the larger Military Hospitals, whether or not she should have a Nurse
-told off for this also. Economy is essential; but useless fiddling
-over every duster or scrubbing-flannel given out, &c., &c., &c., sadly
-hinders the Matron’s time from more important things.
-
-Housekeepers must be avoided, and every woman must have a distinct
-and sufficient share of work, and each be distinctly and equally
-under the Matron. Still it would be advantageous if we could from
-the first include in the staff of Nurses for the larger Hospitals,
-one or two places which could be filled by efficient persons who yet
-were unfitted for the ward work, which calling will be, and ought to
-be, laborious and wearing enough. Many a woman would never do to look
-after a Pavilion and seventy-five men; who yet, in charge of linen or
-stores, would be most valuable, and influence most beneficially the
-Nurses, whom yet she might be unfit to govern. The system of the Sœurs
-de St. Vincent, who, in theory and fact, subject entirely to the will
-of the Superiors in general practice, are yet selected and trained for
-spécialités, who remain long in these spécialités, which spécialités
-include such requiring more or less of physical strength, seems to be
-one giving many useful hints for us.
-
-
-
-
-ADDENDA AS TO MIXED NURSING BY NURSES AND ORDERLIES IN MILITARY
-HOSPITALS ON THE DOUBLE PAVILION PLAN.
-
-
-I. After much anxious thought, re-consideration of all things, and
-pondering, I submit--
-
-1. That three Orderlies will efficiently serve a ward of from 28 to 30
-patients, including night-duty.
-
-2. That each of two wards of 30 each, should there be two such under
-the same Head Nurse, on the same flat, ought to be entirely separate in
-all other respects.
-
-3. That if night-duty be required, each such ward should have an
-Orderly on night-duty.
-
-4. That each such ward should have a scullery.
-
-With regard to these questions, I further submit--
-
-1. Economy of hands, combined with efficiency of service, is an urgent
-thing in all Hospitals; most of all in Military Hospitals,
-
- On the score of expense;
- On that of efficiency of inspection;
- From the nature of Military Hospitals, where the aim should be
- throughout to combine great simplicity with thorough efficiency;
- From the importance of training the staff, male and female, of
- Military Hospitals, for service in War Hospitals, where every man
- or woman who can be spared is better away.
-
-2. Yet economy of hands, carried too far, becomes, like all other such
-economies, penny wise and pound foolish.
-
-3. Without doubt, large wards can be efficiently served by fewer hands
-than small or moderate wards. But, as sanitary considerations limit the
-size of wards to from 24 to 30 patients, let us make this the basis of
-all calculation.
-
-4. The more it is considered, the more essential it appears, to train
-Nurses, from the first, to do efficiently a great deal of work. A small
-staff of respectable, laborious, and thoroughly efficient women seems
-the thing to be aimed at; whether considering Military Hospitals by
-themselves, or as a training-school for Hospital war-service.
-
-5. It would be better to give each Nurse one great ward; but wards
-above a certain size are inadmissible for sanitary reasons.
-
-6. The care of 24 to 30 patients is not sufficient duty, by a great
-deal, for a Nurse.
-
-7. Therefore, upon the whole, and as decidedly the lesser of two evils,
-I recommend assigning to each Nurse two wards.
-
-8. It is less difficult, and less objectionable, that she should have
-charge of two wards on one floor, than of two wards on two floors.
-
-9. As regards the Nurse, I recommend therefore, upon the whole, to
-give each Nurse the charge of two wards of 30 men each; the wards to
-be on the same floor; but, except as being under the same Head Nurse,
-entirely separate.
-
-10. It is important to repeat that the Nurse (who is Head Nurse), will
-be set free of two things, which consume much of a Civil Head Nurse’s
-time.
-
-(1). “Settling the diets,” and fetching, besides waiting for, portions
-of those diets (_e. g._ wine) and medicine.
-
-(2). Distribution of Diets.--It is quite possible that, in no long
-time, it may be found desirable to assign this duty to the Nurse.
-But it would be better to try to have it efficiently, which implies
-honestly, discharged by the Ward-Master. It will relieve the Nurse
-daily of considerable time; and it charges the Ward-Master with a
-definite duty which he can perform. The more he has defined duties, the
-less he will be inclined to fidget and disturb the Nurse. He is pretty
-certain to do this; but definite duties will diminish the tendency.
-
-I should avoid giving the Ward-Masters too few wards. Otherwise they
-will make themselves insufferable obstructions, one way or another, to
-the Nurses. I should say that each Ward-Master, in charge of a Pavilion
-of six wards of 30 each, besides the small wards for one, would not
-have at all too much to do. Where there are no Nurses, the Ward-Master
-should have Assistant Ward-Masters in their place.
-
-N.B. Wine might be treated as medicine, and, as such, delivered by the
-Nurse. Wine and medicine are usually, in the Civil Hospitals, given
-from the Apothecary’s shop at the same time. Or it might be considered
-desirable to leave this duty to the Ward-Master. In either case, it
-will never do to serve a bad case at once with all his wine, and either
-to let him stupify himself by swallowing it at once to make sure that
-he has it; or to set it by his bed-side for the flies to spoil it, or
-for a dishonest comrade, or here and there an Orderly, to drink it. The
-Nurse should receive, whether directly or from the Ward-Master, the
-wine of such patients, and should administer it in successive small
-fresh portions. The intelligent administration of wine ordered to bad
-cases is one of those momentous _minutiæ_ by which, I do believe, and
-believe more and more, many lives are, by God’s blessing, annually
-saved in English Hospitals which would be lost elsewhere. Of course the
-only Regulation about wine should be to specify whether the Ward-Master
-or the Nurse should administer it.
-
-11. Relieved of the loss of time incurred by fetching and waiting, and
-relieved at starting, at all events, and we will hope permanently, of
-the time consumed in distributing the diets, I certainly consider that
-a Nurse of the class of which, please God, Her Majesty’s must all be,
-(strong, laborious, active, and conscientious women,) can efficiently
-serve two wards of 30 men each.
-
-
-_Orderlies._
-
-12. I should prefer wards of 30 each to wards of 25 each.
-
-13. In forming rules for the proportion of Orderlies to sick, it is
-important to consider that the duty varies extremely according to the
-appurtenances of the ward.
-
-14. I consider extreme plainness and simplicity to be proper and
-indispensable to a Military Hospital. Let us take for granted (and may
-it prove correct to do so), that in none of Her Majesty’s Hospitals
-Orderlies’ time will be wasted in cleaning any ornamental things,
-whether unnecessary furniture, flourishes, or cornices, &c., &c., on
-necessary furniture; supernumerary shelves, nooks and corners, &c.,
-&c. Once provided, all these things must be carefully and constantly
-cleaned, or they become receptacles of dust and breeders of fleas; and
-to clean them involves enormous waste of time. A few minutes daily
-wasted on each of many things, make an enormous sum.
-
-15. But it is very true economy to supply, if possible--which in old
-buildings it often is not--every ward of every hospital with a constant
-supply of water, (taking care that it is not wasted by mischievous
-or childish patients); and to give every ward of every Hospital the
-use, under proper control, of a lift by which, at fixed hours, food,
-medicine, linen and fuel are brought into the wards.
-
-Believe that this is not theory, but the result of practical
-observation, much extended.
-
-16. Now, these two things--supply of water (if hot and cold so much
-the better, and supply of water imports, of course, the appliance for
-getting rid of it, and of the contents of bed-pans, &c., &c., by one
-or more sinks) and the use of lifts can be applied to a new Hospital;
-can possibly, not certainly, be applied to some of the old Hospitals
-within the Kingdom,--can certainly not be applied to many of the Army
-Hospitals abroad.
-
-17. Upon an average, these two things make the difference of one
-Orderly’s duty to a ward of 30 men.
-
-18. And a ward of 30 men, so supplied, would be efficiently served by
-half a nurse and three Orderlies, including night-duty.
-
-19. Without these two things (it is a mere comparative question as to
-loss of time and absence of thorough cleanliness, whether the water is
-brought from a pump in the court, or a stream some hundred yards off,
-above or below), and many, if not most, Army Hospitals abroad, must
-always remain without these two things, I consider that one Orderly to
-every seven patients will not be too much; while it is certain that,
-other things being equal, the ward with the appliances and the three
-Orderlies will be better served than the ward without the appliances
-and with the four Orderlies. Where there is no Nurse, one Orderly for 7
-patients will always be advisable.
-
-In these memoranda as to Orderlies’ work, &c., no notice whatever
-has been taken of the possible abolition of scrubbing, because it
-does not do to count unhatched chickens. If, however, that formidable
-weekly business could be got rid of, as well as the bi-weekly or daily
-washings of bed-head-floors, &c. the labour of the Orderlies would be,
-without underrating that required for keeping oiled floors cleaned,
-very materially lightened.
-
-
-_Night-duty of Orderlies._
-
-20. Convalescent wards, which will be of great use in many ways,
-will be of use here. With them Nurses will have nothing to do. It
-is possible enough that, in course of time, the Medical Officers
-will desire to have Nurses there, and that it may be useful to place
-there elderly, still efficient Nurses; but let this come or not as it
-will, and let us keep quite clear of them, at all events, till the
-Nursing-service be tried and established in Army Hospitals. In these
-wards, night-duty will probably be quite unnecessary, though in that
-case either an Orderly or Assistant Ward-Master ought to sleep at hand;
-and night-duty is a service which must be spared wherever it can be
-spared, and rendered as efficient as possible wherever it is really
-wanted.
-
-I have before submitted that in Paris, Vienna and Berlin, the
-average of severe cases in Army Hospitals, in time of peace, is very
-considerably lower than in Civil Hospitals.
-
-This quite as much applies to English Army Hospitals. Whether the
-ordinary wards would require night-duty I do not know. If they often
-did, I should prefer having a regular night-duty in them. If they
-seldom required it, I would not have it.
-
-21. In Civil Hospitals, served by women, I should undoubtedly prefer
-assigning the night-duty to one Assistant Nurse.
-
-22. But Orderlies are in sundry respects different, and, upon the
-whole, I recommend not to have night Orderlies, but to let each Orderly
-in turn do the night-duty.
-
-23. It is important to remember--the more so as it is often
-forgotten--that to lay more upon human nature than its Maker has made
-it to bear, is to do a foolish, let alone a wicked thing. Upon an
-average, all men and women can dispense with, or abridge sleep for more
-or less time. Upon an average, all men and women, after a laborious
-day, require a good night, in the long run. When they do not have it,
-either health, efficiency, or sobriety, or all go.
-
-Believe, again, that this is not theory, but the result of practical
-observation, much extended.
-
-A strong soldier is no exception to the general rule. In the long
-run, if made to do night-duty after a laborious day, he will either
-go to sleep, or drink to keep awake, or he will get knocked up before
-his time. And this it is part of his business to be in time of war;
-therefore, in peace-service, it is economical to let him last his time.
-It is then sound economy to give watchers sufficient sleep.
-
-[Sidenote: Scheme of Night-Service for Three Orderlies watching by
-turns.]
-
-24. Supposing regular night duty required, in a ward of 30 men,
-supplied as above, and served by half a Nurse and three Orderlies,
-it might be worked thus: the Principal Medical Officer would decide
-whether the same Orderly should do the night duty for a week, or the
-three on successive nights: probably the latter. The Orderly might come
-on night duty at 9 P.M., and remain on duty until 9 A.M., thus taking
-his share in the heavy morning work of cleaning the ward, &c. In all
-well-ordered Hospitals it is required that this should be done by 10
-A.M., in some by 9 A.M. Earlier is undesirable in the English latitude
-(in other climates it is different), unless either the patients are to
-be disturbed earlier than English Surgeons consider right; or the ward,
-&c. cleaning is hurried through. A large ward, got into thorough order
-by 9 A.M., is in very good time. Of course it may happen occasionally
-to be got ready somewhat earlier, but this refers to the average.
-
-
-SCHEME FOR THREE ORDERLIES A. B. C. SERVING WARD X.
-
-Monday, 3 P.M. A goes to bed, after taking his share of the morning
-work, eating his dinner, and helping to clear away ward dinner, &c. 9
-P.M. A comes on night duty, after 5 hours’ sleep, and allowing 1 hour
-for undressing, dressing, and eating his supper.
-
-Tuesday, 9 A.M. A goes off duty, having watched until 6 A.M., having
-breakfasted, having taken his share of the morning work, and leaving
-the ward clean. Let him have the option of one or two hours’ fresh air,
-either now, or before 3 P.M.; let him sleep full three hours; let him
-have his hot portion of dinner taken to him at the usual hour, unless
-all the Orderlies on night duty are served together at a different
-hour; and let him, 3 P.M., return on duty, washed and shaved. B goes to
-bed, &c.; 9 P.M. B comes on night duty.
-
-Wednesday, 9 A.M. B goes off duty; 3 P.M., C goes to bed, &c.; 9 P.M.,
-C comes on night duty, &c.
-
-I have reckoned 12 hours for the Orderly to be off duty. It is better
-for him to have eight than seven hours’ sleep, and one or two hours’
-fresh air are more healthy, and make a man last longer than going
-to and from his bed and his ward. An English soldier comes on duty
-clean, washed, and shaved, a once national peculiarity it is highly
-desirable he at all events should retain--at any rate that of thorough
-cleanliness--the shaving is unfortunately now not certain; for this and
-for his meals, some little time must be given. I think you will get
-more, and get it longer, out of the man by giving him 12 hours on night
-duty and 12 hours off. Still it will not do to interfere too much with
-analogies, and the proper authorities must decide whether this is too
-much.
-
-[Sidenote: Exercise for Orderlies.]
-
-25. Again, leaving the question for decision to the proper authorities,
-I had rather each Orderly had one hour or two hours for exercise each
-afternoon or each alternate afternoon, care of course being taken that
-he did not exercise himself in some tap. He should report himself to
-the Nurse, or to the Ward-Master, or Assistant Ward-Master on going and
-on his return. So should the Night-Orderly when coming on and going
-off duty. Also in many emergencies of no very unfrequent occurrence at
-home, and constantly abroad, the Orderly must dispense with recreation
-time. But as a rule, it is certain that fresh air is necessary to
-preserve health in Hospital duty. Doctors of all kinds know and act on
-this as regards themselves.
-
-The waste of time and strength, at present too often incurred by the
-endless fetching, heavy carrying, &c., of many Hospitals is in a
-considerable degree counteracted by its forcing the Nurses into other
-than ward air; the air of a Hospital Court is better than that of the
-best ventilated wards as it is, not as it might be. The same applies,
-in its degree, to Orderlies. But it is better, and far more economical,
-to avoid the fetching and carrying as much as possible; to keep the
-ward attendants in the ward to their duty under the supervision of the
-chief and responsible ward-servant; and to give each in turn a short
-daily recreation, if possible.
-
-[Sidenote: Night Refreshment for Orderlies necessary.]
-
-26. Now comes a thing I am very anxious about concerning night duty,
-the more anxious because it is important, and because I am afraid it
-is an innovation. I have watched the night duty with particularly
-anxious interest, in each Hospital I have entered, feeling at once its
-importance and its difficulties, and of the following principle I am
-thoroughly certain.
-
-The Orderly doing night duty should either be allowed refreshment
-during the night, or the recurrence of this night refreshment should be
-considered in allotting the rations.
-
-In none of the Civil Hospitals, so far as I know, is night refreshment
-given. The Nurses usually on board wages, apportion, when they can,
-some from their food. In one Hospital there exists a rule that no
-Night Nurse is to take refreshment during her watch, the intention
-being to keep her more vigilantly to her duty. This is one instance
-among many of the serious and cruel mistakes which men of business or
-benevolence, or both, make, when legislating on matters which they do
-not understand. It is, fortunately for the fine Hospital where it is
-the rule, practically disregarded; the Head Nurses knowing well that a
-Nurse watching and fasting in a ward from 9 to 9, or even from 9 till
-the breakfast hour of 6, would either soon be unfit for duty, or put
-drams in her pocket, or doze through the night.
-
-A strong soldier, required to watch in a ward and fast from 9 P.M. till
-9 A.M., or 6 A.M., or shortly before, would stand the trial quite as
-ill as a Nurse. There is an admirable rule at two foreign Hospitals
-where I have served. Sisters watch in some wards, Men Nurses in others;
-and each watcher receives from the house, on going on night duty, a
-bottle of beer, a can with about six or eight cups of coffee, milk and
-sugar in proportion, and three slices of bread and butter. The Sister’s
-bottle of beer is about one pint; the Man-Nurse’s double; his coffee
-can is also a good deal larger. The rule of allowing sufficient for
-three solid refreshments (which of course can if desired be made by the
-watcher two or three) during the night, is an excellent one.
-
-I think it would be very sound economy to allow each Orderly on night
-duty, a proportion of beer or porter, of coffee or tea, and of bread
-and butter, or bread and cheese, to take at his own time during his
-watch, besides his supper before going on duty, and his breakfast just
-before 6, (both Nurse and Orderlies ought to have breakfasted by 6,
-and to begin the day duty at 6, and I wish it began by opening the
-windows and repeating the short prayers for 5 or 6 reverent minutes).
-Of course it may be considered preferable to reckon this night-ration
-in the Orderly’s rations. Or suppose the bread and beer or porter to be
-reckoned in the rations, and a can of coffee given him for the night
-watch. Settle details as is best, and of course analogies must be
-considered; but in truth hospital watching is a very peculiar business;
-important, unobtrusive, most peculiarly trying, and the bright side of
-very few Hospitals. Each watcher should undoubtedly have refreshment
-for the night.
-
-The Nurse should have her groceries in the lump, and refresh herself
-as she likes out of them. Her watching, if she does her duty, will be,
-when she has bad cases, severe enough; but I would not provide her with
-extra refreshment; as the watching is not prescribed and regular duty.
-
-There should be as little extra watching on the part of Orderlies as
-is possible; when it is indispensable the extra watcher should have
-the same night-ration. I submit my strong impressions on the subject
-of this night refreshment now, because, small as it may seem, it very
-largely enters into the working of a night watch.
-
-I have suggested the division of the Night Orderly’s sleep, because,
-if A. comes on duty at 6 A.M., and is sent to bed at noon or 1 to get
-ready for his night watch at 9 P.M., he is scarcely fit for a long
-sleep, and supposing the patients dine at noon (an excellent hour) he
-has not, or scarcely, taken his share of the clearing away which,
-got over in time, enables the other Orderlies, one or both, to have a
-short recreation in the afternoon. Also if sent to bed at one he has
-not eight hours’ sleep, as out of that he has to undress, dress, and
-sup. Also he has to remain on duty from 9 P.M. to 9 P.M. next night,
-which is much too long as a rule. If he does not go to bed before his
-watch, and goes off duty at 9 A.M. next morning, whatever time may be
-then allowed him for sleep, he cannot, as a rule, be depended upon for
-performing his watch duty efficiently.
-
-[Sidenote: Where are the Night Orderlies to Sleep by Day?]
-
-27. If the Ward Orderlies watch by turns, it should be arranged that
-the men who sleep before and after the watch can do so quietly. This
-is by no means always attended to, as to Nurses in Civil Hospitals.
-Upon the whole, I cannot think it would answer to have always the same
-watchers, as regards Orderlies. The other Orderlies, supposing them
-lodged apart from the wards, will certainly go seldom enough to their
-quarters during day, except during their exercise time. It may be
-thought essential to retain soldiers under very primitive notions as
-to quarters. So though in a dormitory of women, I think little cells,
-parted either with a partition or a curtain, the whole thoroughly
-airy, are in all respects preferable to unparted rooms, it may be,
-by some, thought better that the Orderlies shall sleep in large airy
-wards, not parted by curtains or partitions. I know, however, one high
-Military authority, at least; who considers the same reasons apply to
-men as to women in this. Soldiers are generally able to go to sleep
-whenever ordered. Indeed their general capacity of doing whatever they
-are bid is one of their many fine points. The Orderlies’ wards must be
-under some sort of inspection, and noise must not be suffered in them.
-Non-Commissioned Officers, either Ward or Assistant Ward-Masters, or
-some special functionary (but such I would not multiply) must sleep
-near, and have general charge of the order and quiet of such wards. I
-conclude that one or more Assistant Ward-Masters, at all events, must
-watch, and as they must sleep by day, this will fit in well enough.
-
-I should avoid putting the Orderlies in a too much out of the way part
-of the Hospital; they should know themselves liable to inspecting
-visits any time. I am not sure that Ward or Assistant Ward-Masters
-would not be much better guardians of the Orderlies’ wards than any
-special functionary. Drink is the vice of these men, noble fellows
-as, as a body, they are, and I should avoid quartering any man too
-comfortably and solely in one particular post. Cases have been where
-the duenna of the Nurses’ dormitory was herself a determined, disguised
-drunkard, and reported others accordingly as she was bribed or not with
-drink for herself.
-
-The whole question of Orderlies sleeping near or away from their
-wards should be well considered by the proper authority, two or three
-experienced Army-Surgeons. Upon the whole, I think it would be well to
-try the quartering them separately: there is much to be said on both
-sides as usual.
-
-[Sidenote: Comparative Merits of Different Systems of Night Nursing.]
-
-28. In several foreign Hospitals a certain number of Night Watchers,
-both Sisters, and Men-Nurses, are told off for night-duty for four
-weeks, during which they are exempted from all labour by day, and
-receive better food than the usual diet. They also receive good
-night-refreshment.
-
-In one Hospital the following is the arrangement. The wards usually
-contain from 10 to 13 beds, and there are many small wards for three,
-two, or one, bad cases or operation cases. All the wards open upon a
-corridor. The Sisters do not watch in the men’s wards.
-
- A Sister watches in the female medical wards }
- ″ surgical ″ } 5
- ″ children’s wards and girls’ ward }
- A Man-Nurse ″ male medical wards } Watchers
- ″ surgical wards and boys’ ward}
-
-An operation-case, or an extra bad or anxious case, or a case requiring
-special attendance and put in a single ward, has an Extra-Watcher.
-Often there are no Extra-Watchers: sometimes there are several at once.
-The Extra-Watcher is either a Sister or a Man-Nurse, taken from among
-the other Sisters or Men-Nurses, who, after his or her day’s duty, does
-the extra watch.
-
-As regards all English hospitals, civil or military, the advantages of
-this system are these:--
-
-1. It severs certain persons for night-duty, who have full time for
-sleep and refreshment in the air during day, and who are allowed to do
-no other work.
-
-2. It secures these persons good food and refreshment at night.
-
-3. These persons know their sick, and, being told on coming on duty, of
-any change, &c., are as much at home in their posts by night as others
-are by day.
-
-4. When it is found that a Sister cannot sleep by day, and, therefore,
-that her health breaks, she is not allowed to finish the four weeks and
-become ill, but is put to another duty and another Sister appointed to
-the watch.
-
-(Many a strong Nurse cannot sleep at day.)
-
-5. The persons so appointed get into the way of it, if they stand it at
-all, and the system is found a great relief to the whole house and a
-great gain to the sick, in the place of another system of dividing the
-night between two Sisters and two Men-Nurses, who each watch half of
-the watch.
-
-_Per contrà._
-
-I. The great London hospitals are places very far from perfect: some
-things may, please God, be, with time, patience, and extreme quietness,
-very much improved; but some things will never be perfect and never can
-be. But they are places where I do believe, and so far as I know, the
-sick are cared for in a way that is done nowhere else. The proportion
-of heavy cases in every London ward, cannot, I think, be met except by
-having a watcher in each. An English physician or surgeon would not
-consider that his cases could otherwise receive the attendance and the
-watching, the observation of possible change and prevention of possible
-mischief, which they ought to receive.
-
-It is right to bear in mind,--
-
-1. That small wards multiply exceedingly the demand for Watchers:
-four wards, of 10 patients each, taking the average of patients as in
-London, would not be attended, according to the English notion, by
-one Watcher; 40 patients in one ward would be fully attended by one
-Watcher. The London Hospital has two Night-Nurses for its quadruple
-wards. An extra Night-Nurse has frequently to be put on, on account of
-the difficulty the subdivision of the ward gives to the watching.
-
-2. That the average of severe cases in each ward of London hospitals
-is very considerably more than the proportionate average of severe
-cases in each ward of the foreign hospitals in question. In all foreign
-hospitals with which I am acquainted the proportion of accidents is
-comparatively small to those of the London hospitals. The docks, the
-manufactures, the crowded and dangerous works, &c., &c., with us,
-account for this.
-
-3. That, striking the balance for and against, it is necessary that
-each London ward should be watched by a Nurse; at the same time, that
-without doubt a certain number of troublesome, ill-conditioned patients
-(no ward of any Hospital is without such) sleep soundly and let their
-neighbours sleep soundly when the Watcher only looks into the ward at
-frequent intervals, who would, if the Watcher sate in the ward the
-whole night, make it their business to require attendance from the
-Watcher during the whole night, or at least much oftener than by the
-other plan.
-
-II. The second flaw of the above system, as it applies to London
-Hospitals, is, that it renders Extra-Watchers so often indispensable.
-
-The employment of Extra Watchers can never be wholly prevented, but it
-should be the endeavour of every Hospital to employ such as seldom as
-can possibly be. Extra watching is most injurious to the health of all
-ward-servants, and to the sobriety, and therefore morality, of many
-paid ward servants.
-
-This is a very important reason, I humbly consider, for avoiding as
-much as possible small wards.
-
-I do consider small wards very objectionable in working a Hospital.
-
-But it is right to remember that we have been told of England, of
-Austria and of Prussia that the proportion of severe cases in Military
-Hospitals in time of peace is considerably smaller than in Civil
-Hospitals. Night watching is not done in the Military Hospitals either
-of Vienna or Berlin. Orderlies, or an Orderly, sleep in each ward, and
-watching is only done to bad cases.
-
-How far English Army Surgeons consider night watching desirable in the
-Army Hospitals I will presently tell.
-
-I should think the convalescent wards, among many important advantages,
-would receive a number of patients who require no night watching. An
-Orderly ought to be at hand here, but not watching.
-
-If night duty is considered requisite in the ordinary wards, I do
-not see how the English standard of things could be met, excepting by
-having one Watcher in each ward where there is regular night watching.
-
-I think, however, that the foreign system of night watching above
-detailed might give very useful hints for women in war service, and for
-emergencies of cholera, &c., &c., in home service; and with regard to
-supervision in the latter.
-
-I think, with submission to the proper authorities (the two or three
-experienced Army Surgeons I have so often adverted to) feeling strongly
-that awkward mistakes might occur in several of these matters without
-them, as civilians and women cannot and ought not to trust their
-own judgments respecting such, that in a large Military Hospital,
-an Assistant Ward-Master ought to go round the wards at night. Not
-with any idea of his rendering assistance to the Watchers over bad
-cases. The Nurses must do their duty of Head-Nurses, and see to this
-themselves. Perambulation through a large Hospital at night in point
-of fact excludes the possibility of doing anything in any one ward,
-unless in some exceptional occurrence which only proves the rule. The
-object is the important one of seeing that the Orderlies are awake,
-sober, alert, and at their duty, and that the patients are quiet and in
-bed. The Nurse would hear any noise, but there is such a thing as quiet
-drinking, as well as noisy drinking.
-
-In St. George’s there is a Night-Matron, chief over the Night-Nurses,
-who goes through the Hospital every hour during the night-watch.
-
-I have heard this spoken of by experienced Authorities of other
-Hospitals with approbation and envy, and some idea was entertained
-of introducing it into another great Hospital. In Civil Hospitals, I
-think, but I do not know, that the benefits of this Night-Matron may be
-perhaps more imaginary than real. The Head-Nurses at St. George’s sleep
-away from their wards; a great mistake, I humbly consider.
-
-But Military Hospitals are entirely different in sundry essential
-respects. I think a non-commissioned officer, Assistant Ward-Master
-for instance, ought to make his rounds every night. When once such a
-service takes place, every hour is better than three or four times a
-night. He must be “up to” sundry things--taking the wards in uncertain
-rotation, sometimes returning suddenly on his steps, &c., &c., &c.
-
-It will be worth securing, if possible (this parenthesis will be
-understood), that the Nurse’s water-closet should be within her room,
-if not, as close to it as may be.
-
-[Sidenote: Present State of Night-Nursing in Military Hospitals.]
-
-29. The following extraordinary system of Night Nursing is that which
-prevails in the Army at present:
-
-The “nursing is managed” either by means of patients “told off in
-watches” through the night for the purpose of attending to other
-patients, or by means of soldiers sent in from the ranks to attend
-specially upon each bad case; or by Orderlies “arranging it among
-themselves,” without any exemption meanwhile from day duty.
-
-Upon each and all of these systems or no-systems it is hardly necessary
-to make any comment. It is difficult to tell which is the worst.
-
-In the principal, indeed the only General Hospital in England, “Nursing
-is managed by comrade-patients told off in three watches of two hours
-each for the night.” [_sic._]
-
-“Orderlies are likewise warned and often sit up for the purpose.”
-
-These passages are given _verbatim et literatim_, because they are so
-remarkable.
-
-And it is necessary to add that these patients being the relapses among
-the “Invalids” are nearly the worst cases we have.
-
-Were it the report of a Head-Nurse in a Civil Hospital to her Resident
-Medical Officer, it would undoubtedly cost her her place. One scarcely
-knows whether to pity more the sick patient or the orderly patient. One
-scarcely knows how to estimate the amount of medical comforts intended
-to be consumed by the sick patient which will actually be consumed by
-the sitting-up patient, and necessarily so. And the expedient which
-turns over the man who is too ill to be left at all to the care of men
-who ought to be recovering themselves, but who are pulled out of their
-beds for two hours to _nurse_ (for the first time perhaps in their
-lives,) and a very “serious” case too, is to say the least of it a
-singular one.
-
-At Woolwich Artillery Hospital the cases which require constant
-attention are about 2 per cent. There are now 545 patients in Hospital,
-and 11 cases consequently, each requiring one Orderly to itself. The
-Orderlies, according to Regulation, are 55, so that one-fifth part
-of the Orderly service is required for these cases. Yet there is
-no system or arrangement for such. The Orderlies arrange (or do not
-arrange) among themselves to do the reliefs day and night. Of the 11
-cases at this time in Woolwich Hospital with 11 Orderlies sitting
-up with them, it so happens, as I am informed, that only one would
-require, if such were together in wards where regular night nursing was
-established, an attendant specially to itself.
-
-It is needless to enlarge upon the cruelty of the above practice. The
-one serious case is disturbed in the day by the goings to and fro, the
-noise and bustle of the light cases--while these are disturbed at night
-by the sitting-up necessary for the one bad case, which may be besides,
-and too often is, a noisy or offensive one. The bad economy is as
-obvious. It often happens that 11 cases who might all, if in one ward,
-be attended and as efficiently attended, by one Night Orderly, require
-each an Orderly to itself in as many different wards.
-
-In the “Garrison Hospital” at Chatham, “when any case assumes such
-a character as to require more than the usual care and watching, a
-Requisition is immediately sent to the Commanding Officer of the Corps
-to which the man belongs for a steady well-conducted soldier and who
-generally is the man’s own comrade” [so much the worse] “to nurse him,
-and to attend upon him throughout his illness, but who is relieved by
-another as often as the Medical Officer in charge of the case considers
-necessary.”
-
-The following is the average number of sick in Army General Hospitals
-in time of peace at home, for whom night-nursing is considered
-necessary by the Medical Officers. But it is important to add that this
-number would be probably estimated as very much higher if proper means
-of night-nursing were at their disposal.
-
-Of constantly sick mean proportion per cent. requiring night nursing:
-
- General Hospital, Fort Pitt {Medical Division 5
- {Surgical ″ 1
- Garrison Hospital 2
-
-These cases are usually scattered through the wards.
-
-It is but fair to add that the best Medical Officers themselves
-desire another system, or rather are aware that there is at present
-no system at all, and would gladly accept one. “With means for good
-night-nursing,” they say, “arrangements in accordance might be
-introduced. At present we like to have a case requiring much attendance
-amongst cases that require little, in order that the patients or
-comrades may assist.”
-
-What are the consequences of such “assistance” to the cases in question
-has already been fully stated throughout these notes.
-
-[Sidenote: Poor-Law Regulation for Nursing in Union Workhouses.]
-
-“With respect to the use of [the inmates as] servants, they require
-the strictest superintendence on the part of the * * officers. The
-employment of [the inmates] in offices of trust is inexpedient,
-inasmuch as it tends to impair the discipline of the house. In
-offices of mere labour, which can be performed under trustworthy
-superintendence, [the inmates] may be useful. Where responsibility is
-involved, paid servants should be engaged.”
-
-The above is one of the regulations of what?--not of a Charitable
-Institution but of the Poor Law; and the house of which it treats so
-tenderly and wisely is--a Workhouse![19] If paupers are to be thus
-cared for, how should it be with our soldiers? If any “office” can be
-called one “of trust,” surely it is that of carrying out the orders
-of the Medical man in a critical case, a case of life or death! Can
-any “responsibility” be “involved,” greater than this? Yet these are
-just the cases left to the “Comrade Patients.” For ordinary cases the
-ordinary attendance is given; for serious cases, the untrained and
-unskilled attendance. Yet, if the Hospitals are not for these serious
-cases, what are they for? For these alone, however, is no systematic
-provision made. One would think that every bad case took the Hospital
-by surprise. Imagine the orders of the Medical Officers carried out
-by nurses (?) changed “every two hours,” and who are, in fact, sleepy
-patients!
-
-The system of Military nursing and management, as described by Army
-Medical Officers themselves in the above quotations, and which is,
-we are expressly told, to be re-enacted at the Royal Victoria Netley
-Hospital, is precisely the one which led, as a matter of course, to
-the calamities, as far as nursing was concerned, in the Hospitals
-in the East, and which will lead to them again so long as it is
-continued. Even in the case of invalids, who may not require such
-careful attendance as sick, the system of nursing by comrades is most
-objectionable; and if the attendance at Netley can only be carried out
-on such a plan, it is doubtful whether Netley should be used even for
-an Invalid Hospital.
-
-The question has been asked the Netley Committee, By whom are your
-Invalids to be nursed, when sick? And it has been answered, that they
-are to _nurse each other_!
-
-
-II. NURSE’S ROOM, &c.
-
-[Sidenote: Nurse’s Room.]
-
-It is essential that between every two wards, in a hospital where the
-blocks are built end to end, there should be, as at the new Military
-Hospital of Vincennes, a lobby with a thorough supply of pure fresh air.
-
-If it were possible, where the Head Nurse, or rather in a Military
-Hospital the Nurse, has charge of two such wards on the same floor, to
-let her have a long, narrow room, with screened windows, opening into
-both wards, the door opening into the passage in the midst, it is worth
-contriving.
-
-[Sidenote: Medical Officer’s Room.]
-
-2. The Medical Officer’s room should be on the ground floor at the
-entrance and apart from everything else.
-
-The servant or whoever cleans the room, should not be a Ward-Orderly,
-(ward-attendance cannot be kept too entirely separate from all other
-concerns).
-
-[Sidenote: Water-Closets.]
-
-3. The ward water-closet should have a pane of glass at top, so that
-a faint gas-light in the lavatory at night can light sufficiently the
-closet, and the (bed-pan) sink.
-
-The water-closet should be constructed, as is done often in those of
-English railway stations, so that each visitor involuntarily, on rising
-or on opening the door, purifies the concern.
-
-Besides the ward water-closet, there should be general water-closets,
-and urinals separate from the wards, for the use, during the day, of
-those patients who can leave the wards.
-
-The latrines at the Lariboisière Hospital are a good example, both for
-what should be avoided in construction, and what should be imitated in
-position.
-
-The sort of latrine used there would never do for England.
-
-The men able to go out are expected to use by day an urinal in a corner
-of the little garden belonging to each pavilion.
-
-At night no sick men are allowed to leave the ward on that or any other
-pretence; they must use the latrines.
-
-The latrines are at the furthest end of the ward. Opposite the one
-door is a partially glazed door, beyond this is a large window, grated
-in network as well as with panes and frame. On one side opens a space
-where the men, able to get up, are expected to wash, and which,
-moreover, contains two latrines, each separated by a partition and
-secured by a door. The same arrangement prevails on the female side.
-
-The rule of having the water-closet on the furthest side of the ward,
-removing all pretence of leaving the ward by night, is excellent.
-
-[Sidenote: Warm and Cold-Water Supply.]
-
-4. The importance, immense addition of efficiency, and ultimate economy
-of carrying warm and cold water into every ward, and the necessity
-of intending and contriving this in the first construction of a
-Hospital,--subsequent additions and alterations being generally less
-effectual, and always more expensive--cannot too frequently be repeated.
-
-[Sidenote: Corridors.]
-
-5. Corridors as proposed at Netley are useful and objectionable. They
-lie between one side of the wards and air. They make oversight of the
-patients more difficult; and when a number of patients are walking up
-and down them, the serious cases in the wards are disturbed. On the
-other hand, it is desirable to have some place of exercise and yet
-shelter for patients, capable of being heated and of being overlooked.
-There ought to be no accumulation of patients at the same time suffered.
-
-With regard, however, to corridors inside the building, if there
-are none it is all the better for the sick; that each ward should
-have two rows of large windows opening direct into the outer air is
-indispensable, as has often been said already.
-
-[Sidenote: Lobby.]
-
-6. Provided this double range of windows be secured, double wards of
-thirty on the same floor would cause no disadvantage to the sick.
-
-But, if such be determined on, let especial care be taken to separate
-the two, not by a showy hall, but by a lobby and an ample staircase,
-extending from top to bottom of the building, and communicating freely
-with the open air at the roof, as well as by the stair-windows:
-admitting a thorough current of external air, so that, of a morning
-especially, the two wards do not mutually send the close air into each
-other.
-
-The lobby should not be turned into a vestibule. Thorough air is all
-that is wanted. Patients should not be suffered to remain in it.
-
-[Sidenote: Material of Ward Utensils.]
-
-7. The material of the different utensils required for ward service
-should be settled. In the use of glass or earthenware for all
-eating, drinking, and washing vessels there is great superiority as
-to cleanliness, and the saving of time and labour in cleaning these
-materials, to those of tin or other metal. Still two things have to be
-weighed against these great advantages. First, if these vessels are
-cleaned by Ward-Orderlies, the amount of breakage would be much greater
-in proportion than as done by Nurses, and it is imperative to have as
-few women as possible in the service of Military Hospitals. Secondly,
-it is very important to avoid even the appearance, especially at first,
-of anything like introducing luxury into Army Hospitals; and I can
-quite understand this appearing like luxury.
-
-The material of one description of ward-vessels should in particular be
-left to the Surgeons. In sending to distant foreign or war-stations,
-urinals of tin have one material advantage over those of glass or
-china, that they do not break so easily; but, as to home-service,
-these tin urinals cannot, by any amount of cleaning, be freed from an
-unclean smell. In Vienna General Hospital, where economy is exceedingly
-attended to, all the urinals are of glass, as the superior cleanliness
-is considered well worth the additional expense. A damaged or broken
-glass or earthenware urinal is dangerous; and if there is difficulty in
-obtaining the immediate issue of a new for a damaged one, it is better
-to have tin.
-
-In Vienna General Hospitals the patients’ eating vessels were formerly
-of tin; but were some time ago furnished of earthenware, for the same
-reasons as those given above; also because the hot tin vessels were
-found awkward to the patients. (I do not think much of this latter
-reason; in hospitals, there is little fear of food reaching the
-patients too hot). In Vienna and Berlin Military Hospitals the eating
-vessels are all of tin.
-
-[Sidenote: Reserve Wards.]
-
-8. In building a large new Hospital, the question of whether or not
-reserve wards, or Pavilions, should be provided is an important
-question, to be referred to the proper Authorities. In one German
-Hospital is a Sommer-Lazareth, or separate Hospital, which most of the
-sick occupy during the six summer months. This is considered the best
-plan; but so expensive that well-considered arrangements in designing
-the building may render its adoption unnecessary. In another German
-Hospital is a group of wards on each of two floors, into which the male
-and female patients, especially the surgical cases, are successively
-moved; both in order that during this time the other wards may be
-thoroughly cleaned; also to change the air; also in case of some sudden
-epidemic, &c.
-
-In every Hospital a thorough cleaning of the wards is essential. In
-three of the great London Hospitals this is done every year, in one
-every three years. Nuisance as it is, for the time being, it is such
-a complete purification of places which want purifying, that having
-it done every year is preferable to every three years. For the same
-reasons bare white walls, whitewashed every year, and oftener if there
-has been some sudden outburst of any zymotic disease or Hospital
-gangrene are preferable to all colour. But polished impervious cement
-is, it is needless to repeat, the only really safe Hospital wall. When
-the cleaning time of a great London Hospital draws near, the number
-of patients is gradually reduced, and none but urgent cases taken in.
-The cleaning usually begins with the topmost ward of one part of the
-building, or of several parts of the building at once. The patients are
-usually moved to the ward immediately beneath. The ward goes through a
-complete purification, also reparation of whatever wants repair. All
-its furniture ditto; the bedsteads in particular. Afterwards windows
-and doors are left wide open for two or three days, and nights so
-far as feasible. In about a week from its commencement the cleaning
-is over; the patients moved back; and the ward or wards so cleaned
-recommence their usual taking-in--and so on. The cleaning of a great
-London Hospital usually takes two full months; and a great nuisance
-it is for the time, but the place benefits by it the whole remaining
-ten. It is excellent economy to have plenty of hands, so as to have
-the cleaning part, in distinction to the airing part, done as quickly
-as thorough cleaning admits of. It is very bad economy to put too much
-of this great extra cleaning upon the Nurses. This would of course
-not apply to a Military Hospital, where it is important the Orderlies
-should become as thoroughly qualified as may be for foreign and war
-service. It is necessary that whatever exterior help is called in,
-should be closely overlooked; contractors and contractors’ servants
-being seldom overmuch troubled with conscience.
-
-Now it might be exceedingly worth while to have one or more reserve
-Pavilions, with a view to this annual cleaning.
-
-If the flooring of polished oiled boards should be found to answer
-(that it should receive a fair trial is very desirable, as it might
-result in a material benefit to our Hospitals), it would be doubly
-useful, when, every third year or so, the oiling and polishing required
-renewal, to leave the newly-oiled wards empty for a fortnight. An
-additional week or two would additionally harden and improve the
-flooring; but a fortnight would suffice.
-
-It might also be right to have reserve wards for what must occur every
-now and then in a Military Hospital, an influx of patients beyond the
-usual number, or an outbreak of cholera, or some malignant epidemic,
-which it might be desirable to isolate from the other patients.
-
-It may now be confidently expected that, under the new _régime_, the
-progress in improvement of Military Hospitals will proceed rapidly;
-that it will be quietly done is almost as certain--real improvement
-and noisy philanthropy being fearfully inconsistent with each other,
-especially in that momentous machine called the Army of England, which
-is no safe plaything.
-
-Dr. Helm, the Director of the Vienna General Hospital, in a little
-pamphlet published some time ago, insists on the importance, in
-designing a new Hospital, of providing Reserve wards, especially with a
-view to dangerous epidemics. They should admit, he urges, of easy and
-complete isolation from all the remaining parts of the building.
-
-[Sidenote: Occasional Revision of Rules.]
-
-9. Dr. Esse, Director of the Charité, at Berlin, in a practical and
-systematic, but pedantic and pudding-headed, little book on Hospitals,
-published in 1857, strongly urges the importance of occasionally
-revising and altering the rules of Hospital Officers and servants, and
-all the Charité instructions end with this proviso of alteration. It is
-one of our many unavoidable difficulties that it is necessary to begin
-our work under definite rules, while it is also necessary to consider
-the service, for some years to come, as tentative and experimental. It
-is well to bear in mind what cannot be expressed.
-
-[Sidenote: Defect in some Systems of Nursing.]
-
-10. In admiring much, very much about the German Hospitals, it
-becomes necessary not to omit a warning. A number of women, all equal
-among themselves, with no female Superior or Superiors whatever,
-under the sole control of men, in an ascending scale from the
-Abtheilungs-Inspectoren or Oberkrankenpfleger, through Doctors of
-sundry ranks, to the Director himself, such is the system followed,
-as in the great Charité Hospital at Berlin, so in the great General
-Hospital at Vienna; and this cardinal mistake leads to many others.
-
-[Sidenote: Nurses’ Exercise.]
-
-11. It is desirable that the Rules should give daily exercise to the
-Nurses, or rather that the Rules should give them the right of daily
-exercise; that the Superintendent should encourage and exhort them to
-take fresh air daily when feasible, leaving them sometimes to take a
-little quiet in their rooms. But in war service, and sundry foreign
-stations in time of peace, not merely exigencies of service (which at
-home will and ought often enough to curtail or abrogate exercise time),
-but various other reasons might render it very undesirable to give the
-Nurses right to two hours’ daily exercise. It must be impressed upon
-all Superintendents, that it is essential in the long run to the health
-of Nurses to have fresh air; but in many foreign stations it might be
-far better for the Superintendent to take, or rather send, them out for
-one _vice_ two hours, &c.
-
-In war and foreign service, the exercise time must be at the discretion
-of the Superintendent.
-
-There may be awkwardness enough on sundry home stations in allowing
-each Nurse two hours at her own discretion outside of the Hospital
-every day. Still it is right to look things in the face. The Rules do
-not contemplate a Sisterhood, but a staff of secular women, bound by
-strict rules in all that concerns the duty they undertake, left to
-themselves as to sundry things which in Sisterhoods are ruled. (How
-and by what measures in process of time strong and quiet religious
-influence may be brought to bear upon this staff, is the question of
-vital importance as to the whole; without it, I doubt whether the
-service of women would, in the long run, answer in Military Hospitals,
-which are and must remain very peculiar places; with it, it might
-please God to suffer good service to be done Him). Nurses trusted to do
-their duty in wards must be trusted to walk out alone if they choose,
-and I would not attempt to restrict it, though the Superintendent must
-see to this, so far as she can without doing or encouraging spy-work,
-a thing which has many advantages, and is often done in various, very
-various ways, but which in the long run brings no blessing, and _pro
-tanto_, degrades all who are concerned with it.
-
-[Sidenote: Number of Ward-Masters.]
-
-12. In Vienna Military Hospital each set of five or six wards, with 30
-or 40 patients, sometimes 20, in each, had a Sergeant and a Corporal
-over the Orderlies. (Berlin Military Hospital is served by Civil male
-Nurses).
-
-I think a Ward-Master would be enough for each Pavilion of six wards
-of 30 patients each, in three stories, each couple of wards being in
-charge of a Nurse, and each ward served by three Orderlies.
-
-
-III. REGULATIONS.
-
-[Sidenote: Query as to depriving certain Patients of Visitors.]
-
-1. Proper military and medical advice should be taken as to whether it
-would be advisable to draw a distinction between the venereal and the
-other patients.
-
-In the Vienna Military Hospital they are locked up by themselves in
-particular wards, but are allowed to see their comrades at visiting
-hours.
-
-In the Berlin Military Hospital they are locked up in wards, and
-allowed to receive no visits whatever, excepting, of course, from the
-Chaplain and the proper Military and Medical Officers; and in the case
-of dying patients from their nearest friends.
-
-Nor are they allowed exercise in the grounds.
-
-This excellent regulation makes them heartily tired of the venereal
-wards, and even this is a very salutary thing.
-
-In the Vienna and Berlin Civil Hospitals, the venereal patients of both
-sexes are also placed in locked wards, and allowed no visitors. Nor are
-they allowed exercise in the grounds or garden.
-
-In the two Paris Venereal Hospitals no visitors are allowed.
-
-Now, as the more disagreeable the subject, the more necessary it is to
-be explicit upon it when entered upon, this wholesome discipline exists
-in a very faint degree in our great Civil Hospitals,--a thing not to be
-lost sight of in introducing any change in the Army Hospitals.
-
-The three greatest London Hospitals have venereal wards. The female
-patients never leave the ward. The male patients take exercise in the
-court. In one case the rule is, that this should be at different hours
-from the other patients; the rule is not strictly adhered to.
-
-The exercise question should, in Military Hospitals, be left entirely
-to the Surgeons; they may fairly consider it enters into the question
-of treatment, which is different from the Continental treatment. The
-enforcement of different hours of exercise from those of the other
-patients is good, as is every brand which can, quietly and effectually,
-affix disgrace to these wards.
-
-Deprivation of visitors, if it could be done, would be very salutary.
-In the great London Civil Hospitals, men and women visit the male
-venereal wards; women alone the female wards (and melancholy things
-are the visiting hours there; here and there a heart-broken mother,
-abundance of prostitutes, and no lack of procuresses. A firm and
-vigilant Head Nurse will sometimes refuse admitting one of the two
-latter sorts to some patient, whom she knows they are endeavouring
-to make sure of again; but as the rules admit female visitors, and
-she is by rights only entitled to eject a visitor whose behaviour
-is disorderly in the ward, the Head Nurse can only do this in point
-of fact by straining the rules, and cannot do it often). The female
-visitors of the male venereal wards are usually, on the average, much
-less disreputable than those to the equivalent female wards; and are
-generally wives, mothers, and sisters, seldom prostitutes. There can
-be no doubt, however, that it would be much better if the patients of
-neither male nor female foul wards were allowed visitors, unless in
-the comparatively very rare cases of extreme danger; it would, in that
-case, be necessary that the Hospital should supply them with linen, and
-either supply them with groceries or forbid their receiving them from
-without.
-
-In various essential respects the patients of a Military Hospital are
-different from those of a Civil Hospital. Were it possible to prevent
-all female visitors to the wards, except in dangerous cases, this
-would be best. If the existing rules or practice do not compel the
-sentries to refuse entrance to all disorderly women, however orderly
-their behaviour, such a rule, at any rate, should be enforced. And if
-all visitors, male and female, including, of course, soldiers, could
-be refused admittance to the venereal wards, always excepting cases of
-great danger, it would be very desirable. At all events, it would be
-very desirable to have all female visitors, without exception, excluded
-from these wards. These things are, I do consider, very important. But
-I would not press them, if refused.
-
-Let the female service obtain, please God (I do not write these words
-_pro formâ_,--if possible, I feel every day more intensely how solely
-it is to Him we must trust in this difficult work,--the more so that,
-if possible, I feel every day more intensely the importance of, if He
-grants it success, improving secular Hospital nursing, leaving the
-English Sisterhoods, which will always have great advantages, and, I
-believe, great disadvantages, with reference to Hospital nursing, to
-take their share in this great field, which has plenty of room for
-both), let, I say, the female service obtain a firm footing in the Army
-Hospitals, and with it, and by cautious degrees, sundry ameliorations
-will creep in insensibly as to decorum among other things. Those solemn
-beautiful words I have always felt so full of meaning to us, “In
-quietness and in confidence shall be your strength.”
-
-[Sidenote: Query as to Numbering Patients.]
-
-2. Military as well as Medical advice should also be taken upon the
-following point:
-
-In most, not all, the great London Hospitals the patients, whose names
-are on their bed-tickets, are called by the numbers 1, 2, 3, &c.,
-suspended over each bed; sometimes a patient’s name is never heard in
-the ward.
-
-Now, very possibly, this would not at all do in a Military Hospital,
-and, if so, there is not another word to be said about it.
-
-Otherwise, very few things so effectually save time, as the numbering
-plan. (In Civil Hospitals it is also excellent in other ways, of much
-less consequence in a Military Hospital, which will never, I conclude,
-be afflicted with “gentlemen,” Mr. So-and-So, and Master So-and-So,
-which latter inscription is frequently to be read on the letters of
-little boys in Hospitals, whose friends, on visiting days, also enquire
-for them by that title). But few things, I repeat, so effectually
-save time as numbering instead of naming the patients (names, of
-course, to be on bed-tickets). If, however, the officers consider it
-“unsoldierly,” give it up at once.
-
-[Sidenote: Regulations as to Swearing.]
-
-3. The regulations lately in force contained in plain strong language
-prohibition of swearing and indecent language in Hospitals; they are
-quoted from the Articles of War. It would be well to retain this in
-any new Regulations; and the retention of this Rule is not the less
-important when women are put in charge of Military wards, since, though
-it is not their business to maintain discipline, it is their duty to
-call in those whose duty it is when discipline is infringed. And it is
-important that this prohibition of swearing and foul language should
-not be looked upon as an individual or collective crotchet, or female
-innovation, but remain the rule of the Service. Such language would
-never be used in the Nurse’s presence unless by her own fault. But it
-should be unheard in the ward, whether she is in it or not. The old
-definite words should be transcribed.
-
-[Sidenote: Conclusion.]
-
-I do not like writing any part of the above, not because it can, in
-any sense, be said to strain the necessary principle of reserve, save
-for strictly business purposes, as to all which is, strictly speaking,
-Hospital business, but because of the extreme caution necessary as
-to this sort of topics. Still life is so uncertain that the possible
-introduction of permanent Female Service into Army Hospitals has
-determined me on writing what I had rather not have written.
-
-
-
-
-ADDITIONAL HINTS AS TO PAVILION HOSPITALS SUGGESTED BY THE CONSTRUCTION
-OF THE LARIBOISIÈRE HOSPITAL AT PARIS.
-
-
-I.--_Ventilation._
-
-The question of ventilation is so all-important, so much doubt still
-seems to exist as to the comparative merits of natural and artificial
-ventilation, so much has been said in favour of the latter, because it
-is seen adopted in the finest hospital in the world, the Lariboisière,
-that I have added a few practical remarks upon this system. The
-conclusion is, that even at the Lariboisière, without opening the
-windows occasionally, and especially in the morning, real freshness
-is never obtained in the wards, and that, therefore, if there must be
-artificial ventilation, that is the best which allows the most of the
-windows being opened.
-
-On the men’s side, Thomas’ system, or that of injecting air at given
-points, by means of two high-pressure steam engines, each working a
-large fan, is adopted. On the female side, Duvoir’s system affords
-ventilation by extracting air at given points. In both, a number of
-shafts and openings provide for the exit of the air.
-
-Persons at the Lariboisière Hospital, who ought to be good judges,
-including foremost the Director, an experienced and able administrator,
-consider the ventilation on the male side the most expensive and the
-best, both for day and night, being the coolest in summer and the
-warmest in winter. In winter two great advantages are assigned to this
-side: first, the heating being provided by the Hospital, the wards
-are warmable at pleasure; whereas that of the female side is provided
-by the contractor at a fixed degree of heat, which, in extra cold
-weather, is augmented: from 15° to 18° C are the usual limits of the
-winter temperature on the female side, while that on the male side is
-usually several degrees higher. Secondly, the system of heating on the
-male side permits the windows to be opened: while on the female side
-objections are often made to opening the windows in winter, which it is
-alleged interferes with the heating.
-
-_Per contrà._ How difficult it is to learn any facts by hearsay we
-know. Other persons who ought to be good judges think the male side
-apt to be too warm in winter, especially at night, and consider the
-temperature on the female side quite sufficient.
-
-Both sides are ventilated both by the windows and by the machinery by
-day in summer. Both sides are ventilated, each by its own different
-machinery, by night in summer, except that, exceptionally on hot summer
-nights, a window is opened two or three times in the night, or five
-minutes every hour.
-
-Both sides are considered to be ventilated in winter mainly by the
-machinery by day; and both sides are entirely ventilated in winter by
-the machinery by night.
-
-As far as can be made out from conflicting accounts, (conflicting
-from the very simple reason that one person will consider a ward, or
-drawing room, for that matter, airy which another will consider close;
-one, pleasantly warm, another too hot or too cold), it is practically
-found impossible to freshen the ward of a morning without opening some
-windows, and to keep it fresh during the day without now and then doing
-the same; and it is easier to open the windows on the male side in
-winter than on the female side.
-
-The ventilation on both sides is considered to work with equal
-efficiency during the whole of the day.
-
-Of the eighteen wards, the ventilation on entering the wards at five
-a.m., when the ward nightwatch has generally not opened a single
-window, is certainly surprisingly good; _i.e._ the air is surprisingly
-little bad. _But neither here, any more than anywhere else, are the
-wards effectually freshened, until the windows are, of course with
-proper caution, opened._
-
-In both these particulars, no difference is to be observed between the
-male and female side.
-
-In repeating that the Director, and other persons who ought to be good
-judges, consider the machinery of the male side the most expensive and
-the best, I add these things:
-
-First. Since this machinery was erected, so far as concerns the steam
-engine, it is said that equally efficient and much less expensive
-engines have been erected in other Hospitals, among others, Necker and
-Beaujon. In both Hospitals, the plans of Duvoir and Van Heecke are
-in use, one on either side. But certainly, the system of outlets at
-Beaujon for the foul air is by no means so good as at the Lariboisière.
-
-Secondly. If an accident happened to the machinery of the male side,
-which is in communication with the steam engine, the results might be
-very serious. Twice a stove has burst on that side, happily without
-damaging anything else than furniture near it; had patients been near
-it, they must have been hurt or killed: and an accident on a large
-scale might blow up not a small part of the Hospital.
-
-More or less danger is inseparable from powerful steam machinery, or
-powerful machinery of any kind: the question is one of degree.
-
-Thirdly. Both sides of the Hospital have one thing in common. Except
-the sculleries of the 3 ground floor wards on the male side, which
-have each a stove or fire place, the kitchens or sculleries attached
-to all the other wards are warmed by hot water. Undoubtedly this saves
-much mess, much cleaning of stoves &c., and much bringing of fuel
-and consequent dirt. But the absence of fire is always a loss to the
-service of a ward. Sundry things, some one or other, often all of which
-are constantly wanted in a large ward, _e.g._ warming broth or drink,
-cooking for an extra bad case, warming poultices, warming (not airing)
-linen for ditto, &c., &c., &c., are much more slowly done by water than
-fire heat, and it is a question, variously answered, whether some of
-these things are as well done by the slow water method, as by the quick
-fire heat. Occasionally the hot water is not forthcoming, a nuisance
-alike to the ward attendants of the ward whose scullery is thus heated,
-and to those of the wards supplied with stoves, which have then to do,
-in driblets, considerable extra duty.
-
-During the hot months the smell of the latrines is very little
-perceptible in the wards, generally not at all: but the test of this,
-as of the ventilation, is in winter, when the large window close to the
-latrines is generally closed, and the smell is very offensive.
-
-
-II.--_Oiled Boards_ versus _Parquets_.
-
-1. They have in common the superiority over common floorings--that they
-are not scrubbed, and the damp thus arising is avoided.
-
-2. As regards labour, so far as Civil Hospitals are concerned, where
-the ward service is done by women, _parquets_ would be more laborious
-than scrubbing; a large ward, to be kept in a proper state, requires
-a certain amount of _frottage_ (the peculiar polishing of _parquets_)
-every day; and this _frottage_ is held to be unfit, from the fatigue
-it causes and the strength it requires, to be done by women, and is
-always done by men. Certainly Ward Nurses could never be required to
-_frotter_; it is altogether a man’s business.
-
-3. As regards labour, so far as Military or Naval Hospitals are
-concerned, where men preponderate in the ward service, it is my
-impression (for of course I cannot pretend any certainty as to this),
-that sailors who are proverbially handy (a different quality from
-either laboriousness or endurance, though they have these too) would,
-with instruction and painstaking, accomplish in time _frottage_; that
-civilians would under the same conditions; that soldier orderlies
-(infinitely, I humbly think, the best material for the staple of
-military ward service), would generally make bad _frotteurs_.
-
-4. As regards labour, cleaning oiled boards, though a laborious
-business, is much less so than either scrubbing or _frottéing_; and
-is fully within the power of average strong women: none other should
-nurse. (What subdivision of cleaning the ward, and of nursing properly
-so-called, might both improve the work done and relieve the Nurses, is
-another thing; my impression remains, that it is better to consider
-these things to a certain extent as distinct duties, discharged by
-women ranking alike; and that in a ward of forty, served by a Head
-Nurse and three Nurses, to charge one with the main ward cleaning, is
-better economy of strength and time than to divide it among the three).
-
-5. As regards labour, any Orderly giving his mind to it for a day at
-the shortest, or a week at the longest, ought to learn thoroughly
-how to clean polished oiled boards well, always supposing him to be
-properly taught a very simple thing, which, like everything else, can
-be done well, ill, or indifferently.
-
-6. Apart from the question of labour augmented or spared, the
-advantages of oiled and polished boards I believe to be these:--
-
-(1.) Prevention of dust.
-
-(2.) More easy purification of the air of the ward in the morning.
-
-The air of every ward becomes more or less impure during the night,
-and the floor and furniture more or less dusty. Making the beds in the
-morning adds to the dust the night has accumulated.
-
-The dust is more thoroughly destroyed by the cleaning necessary to
-oiled and polished boards _of the Bethanien variety_, than by any other
-cleaning I have seen. It is fairly destroyed; whereas both _parquets_
-and boards generally retain a little.
-
-Also, the water, with which the oiled boards after being swept are
-cleaned, freshens the ward and purifies it of the closeness remaining
-of the night air, in a very speedy and remarkable manner, which is even
-more evident as well as more useful in winter than in summer--as in
-winter it is not possible to admit as much air from the windows as in
-summer, especially when it is most wanted, in the cold, close, early
-mornings.
-
-The advantages of oiled and polished boards as counteracting the
-spread of miasma, which is strongly dwelt on at Berlin by competent
-authorities, I have not alluded to, as probably _parquets_ are
-considered equal in these respects to them.
-
-Stains, mess, and dirt falling on polished oiled boards are much more
-easily cleaned than on parquets.
-
-
-NOTE.
-
-_Mode of Cleaning Ward and Room Floors at Bethanien, Berlin._
-
-
-I. DAILY.
-
-1. Take a common hair broom, a broom with a hard brush, a cloth of
-coarse flax, and one or two pails of cold water.
-
-2. Sweep the floor and skirtings with the hair broom.
-
-3. Dip the cloth in a pail, wring it gently between the hands, so as
-to have the whole equally wet, not running. Throw it on the ground,
-reverse the hard broom, and placing the reversed handle upon the cloth,
-clean the floor close to the skirtings, not the skirtings themselves,
-and the corners. When the cloth becomes dry, rinse it and re-wet it in
-the same pail.
-
-4. Then wet the cloth somewhat more, wringing it as before, throw it
-on the floor at the end furthest from the door, and placing the brush
-of the hard broom upon it, brush, firmly and quickly, each board in
-the direction that the boarding runs, about as far as the arms can
-reach, standing, not kneeling. A small ward can be at once brushed wet,
-a large one must be divided into parts, and each part be successively
-brushed wet and brushed dry. When the cloth becomes dry, rinse it and
-re-wet it.
-
-5. To brush dry, rinse and well wring the cloth, brush as before. The
-firmer you can press, the better and quicker the floor will be dried.
-When the cloth becomes wet, rinse it and wring it as before.
-
-6. Change the water when dirty. More or less water must be used,
-according as the floor is trod by dirty boots and shoes.
-
-7. Aim at drying the floor by one dry brushing; if not, it must be dry
-brushed a second time. Once should suffice.
-
-8. Ten minutes, at the furthest, after the dry rubbing is over, the
-floor ought to be thoroughly dry. When it is quite dry, sweep quickly
-over it with the hair broom.
-
-9. On putting by the cleaning materials, rinse well the cloth in clean
-water.
-
-
-II. WEEKLY.
-
-1. Brush the skirtings with a small hard brush, and wipe them dry with
-a rag, as the cloth would be too large, and wet the walls.
-
-2. Use more water to clean the floor, which will probably require two
-dry brushings.
-
-3. Clean the brooms and pails.
-
-
-III. ANNUALLY.
-
-1. Throw warm, not hot, water on the floor, and brush firmly and
-quickly, wet and dry. A very little soda in each pailful will be an
-improvement. More than very little will injure the flooring.
-
-[A new cloth, which it is economical to cut from a great piece which
-makes into some or many dozens, should be steeped for a night in a pail
-once filled with boiling water, and in the morning rinsed and wrung
-several times in clean cold water, then used at once. Two or three new
-cloths can be steeped in the same pail.]
-
-
-III.--_Cautions in Hospital-Building.--Often repeated, but oftener
-neglected._
-
-1. Wherever practicable build the hospital on arches; but, for the sake
-of discipline, they should be locked up.
-
-2. If practicable, let the laundry, if served by women, be removed from
-sight of the place where the patients take exercise, and of the ward
-windows.
-
-3. In a Civil Hospital it is objectionable to give the female patients
-right to take exercise in corridors which the officers and servants
-have constantly to traverse to go to and from the wards. In a Military
-Hospital it is of little comparative disadvantage that the patients
-should do this, although,
-
-4. In building a hospital it might be well worth while to contrive
-that the covered space, essential to give the patients power of taking
-exercise, should be used solely for that purpose.
-
-5. In Germany, the general opinion is in favour of small wards, twenty
-beds are considered the desirable maximum; twelve, _per se_, better
-than twenty.
-
-Ditto in Belgium, under the same restriction, although, in practice,
-there are wards containing larger numbers.
-
-In the old Hospitals at Paris, the number of patients is too large.
-The Charité has long great wards of 100 and 120 patients. At St.
-Louis (which is mostly for cutaneous, not venereal, diseases, where
-the patients usually are long under treatment and able to go about,
-and where there is little acute illness,) wards of eighty and seventy
-beds are the rule, smaller wards the exception. This may be considered
-an exceptional class of patients. The Charité, somewhat densely
-pressed upon by neighbourhood, is also not considered a favourably
-circumstanced Hospital as to air.
-
-Putting aside for a moment the sanitary question, which we have fully
-discussed elsewhere, and which appears to be decided in favour of wards
-of from twenty to thirty patients, we will look upon the question of
-administration. The moment we consider that a great public Hospital
-has to provide efficient attendance for all the sick it receives,
-that it must be economical of attendance, both because the expense of
-attendance, as well as the other requirements of the sick, commands all
-practicable economy; and because efficient attendance in sufficient
-numbers is difficult to obtain; it becomes evident that it is far
-better for the sick to have larger wards, efficiently served by as few
-attendants as is compatible with efficiency.
-
-This, which is the fair statement of the case, strikes those who have
-watched the working of the system of small wards in North Germany as
-more true than ever.
-
-Such persons consider that the size and numbers of the wards at the
-Lariboisière Hospital, viz., thirty-four beds, including the two in the
-little ward, are good: that preserving the existing considerable space
-between the beds, and supposing the same ratio of conditions as to
-windows, &c., and the small ward for two at the end, wards of forty or
-fifty would be equally healthy for the sick, but that the number fifty
-should not be surpassed.
-
-Assuming, however, that thirty patients in a ward, or thirty-two, are
-the maximum number, sanitary and administrative necessities being
-conciliated, let us see what we do in our Military Hospitals at home.
-
-In most of our Regimental Hospitals the number of wards and of
-holes and corners, in comparison with the number of sick, is quite
-extraordinary.
-
-In a hospital for a battalion 500 or 600 strong, we shall find eight
-or ten wards of small size, a small kitchen, everything, in fact, on a
-small scale, just as if a large French Hospital had suddenly collapsed.
-
-How much more sensible would it not be to have one or, at most, two
-large wards for thirty sick each, with a small casualty ward and an
-itch ward!
-
-How much less expensive such a structure would be in erecting and
-administering, and how much more easy would be the discipline and
-oversight, not to mention the greater facility of ventilation!
-
-6. There is nothing at the Lariboisière Hospital answering to
-casualty wards. Besides the eighteen wards of thirty-four each, the
-Hospital contains two little (and inconveniently placed), wards of
-ten beds each, which, when medical cases overflow, are made medical
-wards; and which are closed when the ordinary wards suffice. But of
-casualty wards, for offensive, or noisy cases, there are none, and the
-double-bedded little ward at the end of each large ward is intended to
-answer this purpose; also, but subsidiary to this, to allow now and
-then a patient of the better class to have the comparative privacy.
-
-This latter consideration does not apply to a Military Hospital. As to
-allowing Non-Commissioned Officers for instance to be in the little
-wards, discipline would, I think, very soon suffer.
-
-But _if_ casualty wards are provided for extra offensive, and noisy
-cases, it seems to me that any Hospital would be much better without
-these small wards attached to each larger one.
-
-_Apart from the purposes which the casualty wards answer_, they are
-a nuisance. If convalescent patients are put into them, they are
-comparatively removed from inspection, and often play tricks there.
-Patients requiring much attention can seldom be put there, however
-their condition otherwise fits them for the little ward, because the
-ward attendants, and especially the Sister (as in secularly served
-Hospitals the Head Nurse), find it _impossible_ to serve the inmates of
-the little ward properly, if there are also many serious cases in the
-large ward.
-
-I submit therefore that the small ward is only an incubus, if casualty
-wards are provided. One thing is certain: a patient requiring much
-attendance, put into a little ward, ought to have an extra attendant
-to himself, by day and by night; otherwise, either he is more or less
-neglected, or he unduly monopolises the service of the ward attendants.
-
-It remains a question for far others than women to settle, whether
-offensive and delirious cases are under more favourable conditions of
-cure when scattered in little wards, than when assembled in a large, or
-in several small wards. On this subject, I can only add my confirmed
-belief that a large airy ward, provided with a few small wards, and
-with complete ward attendance, is a much better place for the care and
-attendance of such cases, than small wards attached to the ordinary
-wards.
-
-7. Avoid many holes and corners. I could _not_ recommend a dining room
-for patients attached to each ward, or floor, or pavilion. If there is
-any dining room, let all the convalescent patients of the wards not
-being convalescent wards, dine together in a room apart from the wards,
-and let the rest dine each at his bed side. If not, let each patient
-dine at his bed side.
-
-At the Lariboisière Hospital, each ward has a vestiary, a doubtful
-arrangement. The nature of a Military Hospital renders it proper to
-have but one vestiary under charge of some man.
-
-8. If possible, let all foul linen be delivered daily, twice perhaps
-better than once daily, into the laundry, so as to remain the shortest
-possible time in the neighbourhood of the ward; otherwise, do what you
-will, foul Hospital linen will fairly, to say the ugly truth--stink,
-and its temporary receptacle will stink also. I would not make this
-temporary receptacle a room. A large chest in the scullery, a region
-under constant purification by fire and air, would be, as already
-hinted, p. 88, the least bad place for an accumulation inevitable
-to all Hospitals, but which should accumulate for as little time as
-possible.
-
-9. Provide from the first room for storing and issuing dried clean
-linen, as well as laundry room.
-
-10. In badly-planned Hospitals artificial ventilation is an
-excellent auxiliary for expelling the foul air, engendered in the
-ward, especially at night; but windows only can be relied upon for
-introducing good air. Let Hospitals, therefore, be so constructed as
-to admit of opening one or more windows as much as possible all the
-year round, with as little chance of draught as may be to individual
-patients, which can be done by providing double windows, opening above
-and below, or by some similar expedient.
-
-
-
-
-NOTE ON CONTAGION AND INFECTION.
-
-
-There are no words in regard to which there is more misconception,
-or more nonsense talked and written, than the two words “contagion”
-and “infection;” and as the word “infectious” has been used in these
-Notes, it is necessary to say what it does mean, and what it does not
-mean. The word “contagion” appears to have been first used by certain
-classical writers to signify the spread of scab among sheep; and it
-would have been well for humanity if the word had been restricted to
-this very primitive bucolic signification. It was not till centuries
-after Virgil’s death that the common sense of men had descended so low
-as to introduce it into the Medical vocabulary. This took place at a
-period when, from the neglect of sanitary arrangements, pestilence
-attacked whole masses of people, and when no one appears to have
-considered that nature had any laws for her guidance whatever. It was
-not until human intelligence had descended to this depth that men
-seem to have bethought themselves of Virgil’s term as affording them
-an adequate explanation for pestilence, and sufficient reason for not
-exerting themselves to prevent its recurrence. So it has continued
-ever since. The little word used in all innocence by the poet for
-poetic purposes has become the ground-work of every manner of false
-observation, false reasoning, neglect of sanitary laws, lazarettos,
-quarantine, and continually-threatened interruption to the commercial
-intercourse of mankind. No single word has ever done so much harm to
-the human race, or given such a proof of what a mighty thing a word is!
-
-One would have thought that, after the sanitary experience of the
-last fifteen years, the word “contagion” would have disappeared from
-our language; but, even in the last document issued by the expiring
-Board of Health, written by their Medical Officer, Mr. Simon, and
-based on erroneous statistical evidence (Papers relating to the
-Sanitary state of the People of England, 1858), it is stated that “a
-further--practically speaking, unavoidable--cause of premature death in
-every civilized country is the risk of its _current contagions_.” [The
-italics are not mine.] And this refers to small pox, hooping cough,
-measels, and scarlatina, the mortality from which we are to presume, is
-“unavoidable.”
-
-If this be Board of Health doctrine, it is certainly not sanitary
-doctrine. It would have astonished the Health of Towns Commission, and
-the first Board of Health.
-
-“Contagion,” as its etymology implies, means the communication of
-disease from person to person by contact. It is often confused
-with “infection;” but it has quite a different meaning. Contagion
-presupposes the existence of certain germs, like the sporules of
-fungi, which can be bottled up and conveyed any distance, attached to
-clothing, merchandize, especially to woollen stuffs, for which it is
-supposed to have a particular affection, and to feathers, which of all
-articles it especially loves, so much so that, according to Quarantine
-laws, a live goose may be safely introduced from a plague country;
-but, if it happens to be eaten on the voyage, its feathers cannot be
-introduced without danger to the entire community. The absurdities
-connected with the doctrine are numberless. Suffice it to say that in
-the ordinary sense of the term there is no such thing as “contagion.”
-There are two or three diseases in which there is a specific virus
-which can be seen, tasted, smelt, and analysed, and which, in certain
-constitutions, propagates the original disease by inoculation, such as
-small-pox, cow-pox, and syphilis, but these are not “contagions” in the
-sense supposed.
-
-With regard to the mysterious, imponderable, indivisible nonentities,
-which make up our “current contagions,” they may safely be dismissed
-into the limbo of extinct superstitions.
-
-The word “contagion” therefore is altogether objectionable.
-
-The word “infection” expresses a fact, without involving a hypothesis.
-
-It is most necessary, however, that the meaning should be guarded;
-for, just as there is no such thing as “contagion,” there is no such
-thing as _inevitable_ “infection.” Infection acts through the air.
-Poison the air breathed by individuals and we have infection. Shut up
-150 healthy people in a Black Hole of Calcutta, and in twenty-four
-hours you have an infection produced, so powerful that it will in that
-time have destroyed nearly the whole of the inmates. Sick people are
-more susceptible than healthy people; and if you shut up sick people
-together, without a sufficient space and sufficient fresh air, you will
-have not only fever, but erysipelas, pyæmia, and the usual tribe of
-Hospital-generated epidemic diseases produced.
-
-Again, if we have a Fever Hospital with over-crowded badly-ventilated
-wards, or with the air stagnant in them, we are quite certain to have
-the air become so infected as to poison the blood not only of the sick,
-so as to augment their mortality, but also of the medical attendants
-and nurses, so that they shall also become subjects of fever.
-
-It will be seen at a glance that, in every such case and in every
-such example, the infection is not inevitable, but the simple result
-of gross carelessness and ignorance. In certain Hospitals it has
-been the custom to set apart wards for what are called “infectious”
-diseases; but, in reality, there ought to be no diseases considered
-such. It follows from what has been stated that, with proper sanitary
-precautions, diseases reputed to be peculiarly “infectious” may be
-treated in wards among other sick without any danger; just in the same
-way as, with proper sanitary precautions, a number of healthy people
-may be congregated together without becoming subject to the horrors of
-the Black Hole of Calcutta.
-
-It is in the highest degree probable that we should never have heard of
-“infectious” wards, if the other wards of a Hospital had been supplied
-with sufficient space and air for the sick; and in too many cases it is
-to be feared that the presumed “infectious” cases are huddled away into
-small, ill-lighted, ill-ventilated rooms, a kind of Lazaretto, in fact,
-where, if they die, they have at least been kept from doing harm to the
-other sick in Hospital!
-
-It is high time that common sense should deal with the question; for
-there does not seem to be much hope for a deliverance from these
-superstitions from any other quarter.
-
-The “infectious” wards in Military Hospitals correspond, in some sense,
-to the “casualty” wards in Civil Hospitals, into which accidents,
-noisy, and erysipelatous cases are transferred, when necessary. The
-advantages of a separate set of wards for this class of cases have
-been already insisted upon in these Notes; not certainly because the
-cases are inevitably “infectious,” but because the segregation of
-such facilitates greatly administration and nursing, while it removes
-offensive and noisy patients out of the Hospital wards, whose inmates
-they would annoy. The question of infection or non-infection has
-nothing to do with the arrangement. No stronger condemnation of any
-Hospital or ward could be pronounced than the simple fact that any
-disease has attacked other patients than those first affected by it.
-“Infection” and incapable management, or bad construction, are, in
-Hospitals, convertible terms.
-
-It may be useful to mention what the meaning is of the words
-“epidemic,” “endemic,” “sporadic,” and “zymotic.”
-
-When a large number of people are attacked simultaneously with the same
-form of disease it is said to be _epidemic_. When a small number, as,
-_e. g._, the inhabitants of a single court or alley, are so attacked,
-it is said to be _endemic_. When scattered cases of the same disease
-happen, one here, one there, over a large surface, the disease is said
-to be _sporadic_. The term _zymotic_, which includes all diseases of
-the preceding categories and some others, implies the existence of
-certain changes in the constitution or in the blood, rendering persons
-so affected liable to the diseases in question.
-
-It is a vulgar error to suppose that epidemics are occasioned by the
-spread of disease, from person to person, by infection or contagion;
-for it is an ascertained fact that, before any people is attacked
-epidemically, the disease attacks individuals in a milder form, one at
-a time, at distant intervals, for weeks or months before the epidemic
-appears. Before an epidemic of cholera, these cases consist generally
-of diarrhœa of more or less intensity, followed by a rapidly fatal
-case or two, very much resembling cholera. Even plague itself, as
-in the recent epidemic at Bengazi, begins with cases which cannot
-be distinguished from ordinary typhus-fever, the succeeding cases
-getting more and more intense, until the epidemic seizure takes place.
-Experience appears to show that without this antecedent preparatory
-stage, affecting more or less the entire population of a town or
-district, the occurrence of an epidemic is impossible--the epidemic
-being, in fact, the last or, so to speak, the retributive stage of a
-succession of antecedent phenomena extending over months or years, and
-all traceable to the culpable neglect of natural laws. It is simply
-worse than folly, after the penalty has been incurred, to cry out
-“contagion,” and call for the establishment of sanitary cordons and
-quarantine, instead of relying on measures of hygiène. Epidemics are
-lessons to be profited by: they teach, not that “current contagions”
-are “inevitable” but that, unless nature’s laws be studied and obeyed,
-she will infallibly step in and vindicate them, sooner or later.
-
-In the words of the Registrar-General, which are as applicable to
-Armies as to States, “Sanitary measures and not quarantines are the
-real safe-guards of nations.”
-
-
-NOTE.
-
-I have just seen a paper by Sir John Hall, entitled “Observations on
-the Difficulties experienced by the Medical Department of the Army
-during the late War in Turkey.” In this somewhat singular document,
-which appears to be a defence of Sir John Hall’s own conduct, there are
-certain statements made about the female nursing establishment in the
-East which require a word of comment.
-
-It will be observed that throughout the paper, the weapon which
-Sir John Hall uses against all civil interference in repairing the
-sufferings which proceeded from the defects of his own department is
-simply detraction.
-
-As for Civil Commissions, they were useless, as for Civil Hospitals,
-they were costly, and their officers lived magnificently and were
-extravagantly paid. As for the nurses, they were benevolent, pious,
-well-intentioned persons, but what could they do? How could one woman
-nurse eighty sick? The medical men thought they could not.
-
-Why had Miss Nightingale stores of port wine placed at her disposal,
-which she could give to the French Hospitals, while he, the principal
-Medical Officer of the Army, had no such stores at his disposal?
-
-Sir John Hall must have already discovered that this old weapon is no
-longer of use in defending his position.
-
-It would have been more to the purpose had he produced his requisitions
-for food, clothing, comforts, &c., and shown how they were refused or
-not complied with. At the very time I gave over part of our own private
-stores of port wine, &c., to the French Hospitals (for part only of
-what was given were Government stores at all), Sir John Hall might have
-obtained, out of the large wine store at Balaklava, any amount of wine
-he required, by merely asking for it. The simple statement of this fact
-would have been a better answer to M. Baudens[20] than assuming that I
-could obtain from Government stores and wine for the French Hospitals
-which he could not obtain for his own.
-
-As to his statement about the Nurses, it simply shows ignorance of the
-whole matter. Nobody ever contemplated giving to a Nurse the entire
-charge of a number of sick in a Military General Hospital. It is no
-part of good Hospital nursing to do so. With proper Orderlies, a Nurse
-can very well attend to sixty or seventy sick. We were prevented,
-indeed, by the authorities, and by circumstances, from organizing a
-proper system of nursing, and were obliged to do all the good possible
-in the best possible way. But Sir John Hall’s method of estimating the
-efficiency of nursing, by dividing the number of sick by the number of
-Nurses, is simply absurd.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[2] As little reference as possible, no reference at all, if it can
-be avoided, should be made, on our part, to the Confidential Report,
-which, in 1855, was presented against the War-Nurses. The less scandal
-about women is reverted to the better--a truth all slanderers have
-always appreciated: “Calomniez, calomniez toujours: il en reste
-toujours quelque chose.” It would be far preferable if Nurses could
-enter the Army Hospitals quietly, and let by-gones be by-gones (the
-useful experience always excepted, which has been gained).
-
-[3] The work was done under many difficulties, some inevitable, some
-which should have been spared. Things happened among us deeply to be
-regretted. Rebellion among some ladies and some nuns, and drunkenness
-among some nurses unhappily disgraced our body; minor faults justified
-_pro tanto_ the common opinion that the vanity, the gossip, and the
-insubordination (which none more despise than those who trade upon
-them) of women make them unfit for, and mischievous in the Service,
-however materially useful they may be in it. Of all this, the material
-consequences might have been spared by some such “General Order” as
-the above, which, at least, prevents others from taking advantage and
-making capital of such faults.
-
-[4] The Extra Diet Kitchens _must_, it is necessary to state, be
-under a separate roof from the General Kitchens, as long as the
-present system (or no-system) of cooking exists. But the sooner it is
-altered the better. There should be one kitchen only. But the Nurse
-should always superintend the administering of the Diets. She is
-unquestionably the proper person, also, to administer the medicines,
-&c. The Orderlies, to be of any use, must act under the direction of
-the Head-Nurse and not independently. It would seem hardly necessary to
-enunciate such a self-evident proposition.
-
-[5] To all references which may here be made to Civil Hospitals I
-should wish to say, by way of preface:--
-
-1. That I have always believed and I believe it more and more every
-day I live, that what is wrong in hospitals is to be patiently,
-laboriously, and, above all, quietly mended by efforts made from within
-them, if it pleases God to grant that blessing upon them without which
-all human efforts are vain, and not by accusations, investigations, and
-noise from without.
-
-2. Also I have always believed, since I knew Hospitals at all, and I
-believe it more and more every day I live, that, with all their faults
-and shortcomings, which are easily learnt and more easily declaimed
-against, our great English hospitals are places in which more is done
-for the relief and cure of human misery, or, rather, of that large
-branch of it arising from disease, than in any other places in the
-world. Also that their faults are not essential to them, but that they
-may, by God’s blessing on the patient endeavours of many years, be very
-much modified.
-
-[6] In their regulation dress they should always appear, except when
-they go on holidays.
-
-But let the Queen pay for the transport of one box and one bag only,
-for each Nurse on duty; and if she takes more let her pay for it
-herself.
-
-[7] I would allow each Nurse 1½ pint of porter or ale _per diem_, or,
-instead of the half-pint of porter, 1 oz. of brandy or a wineglass-full
-of wine, as she likes best. Most Nurses crave, and rightly, for a
-luncheon about 9 or 10 A.M., and drink some beer then. I would let them
-take their own time as to when they drink their day’s allowance. But,
-while trying to suit each Nurse’s varying tastes (and in Hospital duty
-the taste does vary) each Nurse must keep to one thing, say for a week
-or month.
-
-[8] Better than a closet is a moveable dresser, only table-height,
-under which cleaning can be carried on.
-
-There should be no projections in a ward or recess, which are only
-lodgments for flue and dust. The walls of a ward should be even,
-polished, impervious.
-
-[9] With regard to children we might look forward to a time when
-a school might be formed for the children, if any, of such of Her
-Majesty’s Nurses as are widows. This would be an additional bond to
-the Service for the mothers. The children, of course, are not to be
-admitted into Hospital; and strict rules must be made (and kept to) as
-to when the mother should visit them. I do not anticipate that it would
-be possible ever to have married women in the Service. And it is hardly
-necessary to add, that no women but of unblemished character can ever
-be admitted.
-
-[10] Should a woman, however, out of the higher orders, be found as
-efficient as one of the middle classes, as Matron, this should be no
-reason for excluding her.
-
-[11] If it be desired to include some War-Nurses after 40 it would
-be better for the Superintendent-General, with the sanction of the
-Secretary of State, to take, at first starting, a few past the age,
-than, on their account, to alter the age. It stands to reason that, on
-the formation of the Staff, approved Nurses of the War-Service should
-be included in it, for the sake of the Service.
-
-[12] It is better to omit the Belief. Singularly enough it is the one
-thing objected to by Dissenters and Roman Catholics.
-
-[13] If the Surgeons are for the men doing it, I would not overpress
-this point. But, in the case of weak patients, it requires extra
-care, and it would be much better to leave it as the duty of the
-Nurse. At all events it will not answer to leave the enema and its
-administrator unspecified. The Medical Staff Regulations assign it
-to the Ward-Masters. It is a simple thing enough, but one by the
-careless or ignorant administration of which many a man (and woman)
-has been injured for life; and either the Ward-Master, the Assistant
-Ward-Master, or the Nurse should be responsible for it. I should
-prefer, as above stated, charging the Nurse with it; but if objected
-to by the Surgeons, I should at once let them assign it to whichever
-Non-commissioned Officer they chose.
-
-[14] One Nurse might possibly be able to serve the whole Pavilion. The
-highest estimate is here taken.
-
-[15] The floors are of deal; the length and breadth of the boards
-depending on circumstances. Wood skirtings run round the walls,
-following the recesses of the window and doors, 2½ in. in height and
-1½ in. in thickness. The skirtings should have no indents in them,
-which form convenient lodgments for dust and take time to clean. A
-little rim must run round the top of the skirting, edging the wall. The
-skirting should thence descend, unindented, upon the floor. The boards
-are coloured and prepared, as follows: A new floor is rubbed over
-two or three times, with warm linseed-oil varnish, having some fine
-yellow-ochre, powdered, in it; then a coat of “laque-lustre,” a species
-of French polish, is laid over it, the result being a reddish-yellow
-colour, in which the grain and veining of the wood is shown. If, after
-being used some time, it begins to look worn, it is rubbed over with
-oil and a new coat of polish laid on it; but, as this takes a long time
-to dry, it is usual to fill up the worst parts with thin oil-colour,
-and then to take the yellow polish and lay it on, in two successive
-coats, leaving it to dry, if possible, for twenty-four hours, as it
-wears the better the firmer and drier it is. For old boards, that have
-been much used, considerably more laque-lustre is required than for new
-ones.
-
-After laying on the laque-lustre it is desirable that the floor should
-not be trodden upon for six weeks, and it is also well occasionally,
-say about once a week, to polish it, which conduces much to make it
-serviceable.
-
-[16] And this should be adhered to, the rare though extant cases of
-efficiency for Hospital nursing, past this age, notwithstanding.
-
-[17] Great caution must be used in acting upon this. The
-Superintendent-General, or the Superintendents who are responsible to
-her, order the service of each Nurse. How far is it just to consider
-extra dangerous duties or stations meritorious in the Nurse who does
-or suffers from them? Others might have done the same, if so ordered.
-Others might have wished for such an order. Or a strong efficient Nurse
-who, in other respects, gives anxiety, may render extra useful service
-on an emergency, and suffer for it in health: and yet, during her whole
-service, have given more anxiety and less satisfaction than others who
-did not, perhaps had not the opportunity to, distinguish themselves by
-any extra useful service.
-
-[18] The “Superintendent” and “Matron” are here used throughout as
-synonymous terms; because “Matron” is the shorter and more familiar
-name; although, for reasons before given, “Superintendent” would be the
-better word for Military Hospitals.
-
-[19] If it be said that the Workhouse sick are ill-nursed, it is in
-proportion as this rule is broken, not as it is kept, that they are so.
-
-[20] To M. Baudens, whose recent death is so much to be lamented,
-I cannot here but add a tribute of admiration for his wise and
-enlightened sanitary views, during the year of his superintendence over
-the Medical Department of the French army in the East, and of gratitude
-for his ready and magnanimous acceptance of our stores, when the French
-sick were really in want of them, after these had been refused by other
-French authorities.
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- PRINTED BY HARRISON AND SONS,
- ST. MARTIN’S LANE, W.C.
-
-
-
-
-_PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL._
-
-
-
-
-THOUGHTS SUBMITTED AS TO AN EVENTUAL NURSES’ PROVIDENT FUND.
-
-
-I. WAGES AND PROSPECTS OF NURSES.
-
-II. DESIRABILITY OF SOME FURTHER PROVISION.
-
-III. OF WHAT NATURE?
-
- 1. With regard to kind?
- 2. ″ persons?
- 3. ″ objects?
-
-IV. SUGGESTIONS AS TO THE RULES TO BE FOLLOWED.
-
-V. PROSPECTS OF EVENTUAL SUPPORT.
-
-
-I. WAGES AND PROSPECTS OF NURSES.
-
-[Sidenote: The two Classes of Hospital Nurses.]
-
-1. The nurses of the great London hospitals are divided into two
-classes: head-nurses or sisters, and nurses or assistant-nurses. These
-latter are, generally, subdivided into day and night-nurses.
-
-[Sidenote: Head-Nurses or Sisters.]
-
-2. The head-nurses, on an average, receive about £50 a-year and no
-board, or lower wages and partial board; the use of one or two rooms,
-generally unfurnished, and an allowance of fuel and light. Sometimes
-uniform outer-clothing is included. Sometimes two pints of beer daily
-are added to the above.
-
-[Sidenote: Nurses or Assistant-Nurses.
- Day Nurses.]
-
-3. The day-nurses, on an average, receive about 12_s._ a-week and no
-board, or lower wages and partial board; lodging, with the use of some
-furniture; sometimes an allowance of fuel and light apart from the use
-of both in the wards. Sometimes uniform outer-clothing is added to the
-above; sometimes they have also an allowance of one pint of beer daily.
-
-[Sidenote: Night Nurses.]
-
-4. The night-nurses, on an average, receive about 10_s._ a-week and no
-board; lodging, with the use of some furniture; sometimes an allowance
-of fuel and light apart from the use of both in the wards. Sometimes
-they live in their own lodgings, near the hospital, receiving the same
-wages.
-
-[Sidenote: Retiring Pensions and Payments at St. Bartholomew’s.]
-
-5. I am informed that St. Bartholomew’s Hospital has no fixed scale of
-pensions, nor is the term of service defined. But pensions have been
-granted to worn-out sisters of from £15 to £25; as also pensions of
-smaller amount to some worn-out nurses.
-
-[Sidenote: At St. Thomas’s.]
-
-6. St. Thomas’s Hospital, in like manner, has given, without any fixed
-rule, pensions to worn-out sisters, of from £30 to £50. A gift in
-money has been granted on the retirement of a sister; and the same has
-been done in the case of nurses who may have received injuries in the
-discharge of their duties; and in a very few instances of long and
-faithful service they have been pensioned.
-
-[Sidenote: At Guy’s Hospital.]
-
-7. Guy’s Hospital for a long time generously provided for its
-superannuated sisters, but the plan in practice being found very
-objectionable, was a few years since given up, and the authorities
-established a Superannuation Fund for the Servants of the Hospital.
-
-It is compulsory on sisters, optional to nurses, to belong to it.
-Each subscriber receives a book containing printed rules, with tables
-of rates of ages, payments, and pensions, and also blank leaves.
-The subscriber selects the amount of pension for which she wishes
-to subscribe. At each quarterly payment of wages, a proportion is
-paid into the fund; entered in the subscriber’s book, and properly
-attested; the hospital makes a payment of equal amount into the fund
-on the subscriber’s account. If the subscriber die before attaining
-the age when the pension begins, the amount paid by the subscriber
-is disposable by will, and in case of intestacy reverts to the next
-of kin. The pensions, one-half of which are thus purchased by the
-subscriber, and one-half presented by the hospital, vary, if I remember
-rightly, from £15 to £50. In February 1857, no nurse subscribed; to
-which three remarks apply:--first, that every good work takes time to
-grow; secondly, that not a few of the sisters, having looked forward to
-benefiting by the old system of superannuation, rather grudged their
-own payments than sought to induce their nurses to subscribe; thirdly,
-that many of the nurses were really unable to make the payment.
-
-[Sidenote: At the Non-Endowed Hospitals.]
-
-8. The non-endowed hospitals, I believe, but write from very imperfect
-information, grant few pensions. Sometimes they grant a gift of £25
-or less to a retiring head-nurse. Sometimes they employ a head-nurse,
-become too old for her work, as an extra and inferior nurse. Sometimes
-they grant a worn-out head-nurse an asylum in the incurable ward of the
-hospital. I believe the pensions to old nurses are still fewer than
-the few to head-nurses. Definite information could easily be procured.
-Their funds do not permit such a diversion from their main and primary
-object, for which they are often, as it is, inadequate.
-
-[Sidenote: At County Hospitals.]
-
-9. Of the wages and prospects of eventual provision of the nurses of
-the county hospitals I know nothing; but understand that the former are
-lower than, and the latter as entirely blank as those of the nurses of
-the non-endowed London hospitals.
-
-
-II. DESIRABILITY OF SOME FURTHER PROVISION.
-
-[Sidenote: Unfitness of Nurses for any other work.]
-
-1. It may be safely taken for granted as a rule, with few exceptions,
-that a thorough hospital nurse can seldom turn herself to any other
-business. Her life and work are altogether peculiar; she acquires
-a knowledge and habits which incapacitate her from all ordinary
-occupations, grows into fitness for them, and out of fitness for all
-others.
-
-[Sidenote: Shortness of their time of capacity for Service.]
-
-2. No less so, that the time during which a hospital nurse can work and
-lay by, is short, compared with the average duration of other kinds
-of service. Apart from all excess of their own, their work and its
-concomitants wear out hospital nurses fast. In every large hospital
-you will see many women of 40, whom you would suppose 60, and strength
-often decays as prematurely as appearance. Well-ventilated bed-rooms,
-more sleep, and better food, would be materially in their favour; but
-the work can never be other than one which wears out most constitutions
-fast.
-
-[Sidenote: Character of Nurses as a Class.]
-
-3. In the London hospitals there are some women of excellent character
-and of great efficiency; many the reverse, in one or both respects;
-many between the two classes, who generally end by ranking in the
-second.
-
-4. To augment the number of the first class, to reduce the number of
-the second, to induce the intermediate eventually to rank with the
-first, and not with the second, is the desire of every hospital.
-
-5. It is most important, in all things, in none more than in hospital
-matters, to moderate expectations, not to hope too much from any
-measure, or set of measures, and to keep well in view the stern prosaic
-realities of things. The hospitals of great towns are not asylums where
-a few or many selected patients can be received and petted; but great
-receptacles of all sick comers. Their foundations lie down and deep in
-the human sin and misery for which they in part provide, and the traces
-of their purpose and nature must ever remain impressed upon them. They
-are also schools for the practical education of a great profession,
-important to mankind and dangerous to its members.
-
-Hospital nurses are not women attempting or following “counsels
-of perfection,” (whatever incorporation of other elements may be
-eventually effected), but some of those many women whom God has
-ordained to earn their bread by toil, (and in the large towns of
-England honest ways of earning that bread are for women but too scarce
-and too overcrowded), and upon whom He has laid the same condition as
-on all the souls He has made, to keep the commandments to enter into
-life. A very mixed class they must ever remain: to improve the class,
-by God’s blessing, would be to effect a great benefit both to the
-hospitals and to these immortal souls.
-
-[Sidenote: Probable beneficial results of a prospect of eventual
-provision, depending on character.]
-
-6. Among several things which might be done or tried, with the view,
-if it please God to prosper the endeavour, of eventually improving the
-class of hospital nurses, the establishment of some definite prospect
-of eventual provision, dependent upon good character, appears very
-important.
-
-7. It would tend to augment the number of steady respectable women, who
-are anxious to keep a good moral and require a good business character,
-whose aim it is to do their duty, to give satisfaction to their
-superiors, to keep their places in the same hospital, and eventually to
-end their days out of the workhouse.
-
-8. It would tend to diminish the number of ill-conducted women, who
-wander from hospital to hospital; whose wages go in drink or finery,
-or both; who would be disgusted at the idea of regularly laying by for
-their future support, and who would resent strict investigation into
-character.
-
-9. It would tend to induce the intermediate class of women, who
-hesitate between good and bad companions, to incline to the former, and
-to break off from the latter, by the favourable result of provident and
-economical habits on their actual conduct; and by the effect which the
-prospect of a decent support in their age, dependent upon these habits,
-would produce.
-
-
-III. OF WHAT NATURE?
-
- 1. With regard to kind?
- 2. ″ persons?
- 3. ″ objects?
-
-[Sidenote: Kinds of possible assistance, three.]
-
-1. With regard to kind.
-
-There are three kinds of possible assistance.
-
-[Sidenote: Pensions.]
-
-First. Granting free pensions to efficient and well-conducted sisters
-and nurses, under fixed regulations.
-
-[Sidenote: Facilities for Saving.]
-
-Second. Providing sisters and nurses with a secure channel of investing
-their savings; giving them thus the important assistance of saving
-their time, trouble, and expense, in obtaining information as to such
-secure investment.
-
-[Sidenote: Additions to Savings.]
-
-Third. Combining, with the second, a certain proportion of pecuniary
-aid.
-
-As to the first. It would be wise economy if the endowed hospitals, who
-alone could do it, were to grant such pensions; but whether they are
-likely to do more than they do now I am quite ignorant.
-
-Whether our labours in this field should take the direction of the
-second or third, is one of the most difficult questions with reference
-to a thing which is rife with difficulties. Towards solving it, I
-submit that it would be expedient to employ an able and honest man of
-business to procure--
-
-[Sidenote: Information and Advice to be procured on the Subject.]
-
-I. The rules, working, and results so far of the Servants’ Provident
-Society.
-
-II. Of several of the various partly self-supporting and partly
-assisted provident societies of the different trades’ and city unions.
-
-III. Of some dozen benefit societies in large towns.
-
-IV. Of Guy’s Hospital Superannuation Fund.
-
-V. To take the practical opinion of two experienced actuaries.
-
-VI. Also of the Treasurer and Matron of St. Bartholomew’s;
-
-Of the Treasurer, Resident Medical Officer, and Matron of St. Thomas’s;
-
-Of the Treasurer and Matron of Guy’s Hospital;
-
-Of the Chairman of the House-Committee, House-Governor, and Matron of
-the London Hospital;
-
-Of the equivalent authorities of St. George’s, and of two or three
-other hospitals (including King’s College).
-
-[Sidenote: It is not possible for Nurses to purchase Annuities out of
-their Savings.]
-
-My impression is that it is not possible, in the majority of cases, for
-either head-nurses or nurses to purchase annuities out of their savings.
-
-I. Their work wears them out comparatively soon.
-
-II. During its continuance they require to live well _i. e._, to have a
-sufficiency of good plain food.
-
-III. They are obliged to put out and pay for either the whole or nearly
-the whole of their washing, making, and mending (and most properly
-obliged).
-
-Thus apart altogether from the consideration that many nurses are
-widows with families, and many others burdened with helpless or infirm
-relations, and that, in many of these cases, the smallest saving out
-of their wages is impossible, I doubt whether it can be reasonably
-expected that, as a class, hospital nurses should lay by out of their
-unassisted savings a provision for their age.[21]
-
-[Sidenote: Persons to be assisted.]
-
-
-2. With regard to persons.
-
-Shall the Fund be open exclusively to nurses belonging to the proposed
-Institution under Miss Nightingale?
-
- Or extended to those of the London hospitals?
-
- Or extended to all Hospitals in England?
-
- Or in the three kingdoms?
-
- Or in Her Majesty’s dominions in general?
-
-Shall the Fund be extended to private and monthly nurses, including
-midwives, as well as to hospital-nurses?
-
-I submit that we should consult, on these points, the authorities
-of the principal hospitals and a few men of experience in business
-besides. (Philanthropists by trade are, as is well known, the worst
-possible authorities on subjects of this kind.)
-
-My impression is that the Fund should certainly be extended to the
-three kingdoms. Whether it should be extended to the empire would
-depend entirely, in my judgment, upon the check and scrutiny it would
-be possible to exert, on accounts, monies, and certificates, in distant
-parts. Upon this men of business should advise.
-
-I think the Fund might eventually be open to private nurses, midwives,
-and monthly nurses.[22]
-
-I think it perhaps might be open to the St. John’s House nurses and
-to those of any institution which does not provide its servants with a
-pension. The Nursing Sisters’ Society, I believe, have recently decided
-on granting their sisters £20 a-year, after twelve years’ service, a
-wise, generous, and, if properly worked, economical measure. We must
-avoid the very appearance of disfavour to other nursing institutions.
-
-[Sidenote: Objects to be sought.]
-
-
-3. With regard to objects.
-
-Shall the objects be
-
- Material?
- Sanitary?
- Moral?
-
-Or shall they be restricted either to the first only or the first
-and second? Here, again, I submit that we should consult hospital
-authorities and a few men of business and of experience, as to the
-feasibility, often a distinct thing from desirability, of these things.
-
-Upon the whole, and weighing many opposite difficulties, my impression
-is strongly in favour of attempting to combine the three.
-
-
-Material objects.
-
-[Sidenote: Material Objects to be sought.]
-
-The benefit and provident societies embrace many objects: annuities,
-payments on illness, payments at burial, provision for children’s
-apprenticeships, provision for children at death, and other things.
-
-[Sidenote: Provision after Superannuation.]
-
-I. It appears to me that the main if not the only object of the Fund
-should be to provide annuities.
-
-[Sidenote: During Illness.]
-
-II. It would be a question whether or not to arrange for payments
-during illness.[23] Every now and then ward air gets down the throat of
-almost every nurse, and every few years or so there is an illness. In
-many cases a nurse’s pay stops either when or soon after she becomes
-a patient. Some check upon malingering, a thing well known where the
-name is not, is essential to every hospital. Of course it presses
-heaviest upon those who do not require it. After an illness, before
-returning into the wards, the best thing is a short thorough change of
-air. Often a severe illness is, and oftener still would be prevented
-by a week’s change of air, when the peculiar hospital-languor, so well
-known in hospitals, and so indescribable outside of them, first fairly
-sets in. The means of change of air, either before or after illness,
-are often deficient. Still, useful as some such provision would be,
-in many cases every year, it appears to me so subordinate to the
-great object of furnishing these women with some provision on their
-superannuation, that if it in the least impeded or rendered the latter
-less secure, I should unhesitatingly give it up.
-
-[Sidenote: Burial Payments.]
-
-III. With burial payments I think the Fund should have nothing to do.
-
-[Sidenote: Payments for Children.]
-
-IV. As to payments for children, whether on apprenticeship or at
-death:--Upon the whole, after much anxious thought, I think it
-undesirable to encourage mothers, as such. This is one of the many
-points, as to hospitals, where theories and experience differ much from
-each other.
-
-[Sidenote: Reasons against the last Form of Aid.]
-
-A very large proportion of nurses are mothers, often widows, with
-large families, whom they support and put to service out of their
-wages, too often eked out by improper means, _i. e._, bribes and petty
-dishonesty. Many of these women are moral, sober, industrious, and
-doubly anxious to retain their places, on account of their children;
-still there are serious embarrassments in employing them. The wages
-of hospital nurses are not and never can be enough to supply a proper
-support for children, in addition to the support the mothers ought
-themselves to have. Consequently when children are in whole or in part
-lodged, fed, clothed, “educated,” and put to service out of the £50
-a-year of the head-nurse, or out of the 12_s._ a-week of the nurse,
-the mother either stints herself of proper food, proper strong drink
-(we deal with practice not with theory), proper warm clothing, for the
-children’s sake, or she supplies the deficiency by improper means. If
-the nurse cannot afford to live well and abstains from dishonesty, one
-of two things infallibly happens--either she takes to drink, as the
-fallacious support of an exhausted frame, or her strength fails and
-she breaks down, after a few months’, sometimes a few years’ struggle.
-When once she has taken to drink, one of two things invariably follows
-(dishonesty may be presumed to ensue upon, though it often does not
-precede habits of drink); she is or becomes unguarded, and is soon
-found out, and sinks into the miserable second and far too numerous
-class of characterless hospital nurses, unless drink shortly finishes
-her; or, in the other case, she is cautious and guarded--she then
-becomes sly, dishonest, and thoroughly venal; she extorts gifts and
-takes bribes from her patients and their friends--and the friends of
-hospital patients, like others, are of various kinds; she commits
-constant acts of petty but often most dangerous dishonesty, possibly
-remaining an efficient and clever nurse, sometimes a favourite
-nurse; and, so far as regards the crime which has taken the name of
-immorality, a moral woman. A certain proportion of nurses are all the
-above, excepting drink; for though, almost without exception, every
-nurse who drinks takes bribes, some take bribes and do not drink.
-
-Of course widows and unmarried women who are not mothers do the above
-things; but there cannot be a doubt of the additional and terrible
-temptation to women burdened with children, to make money in various
-ways out of their patients. Even in the most favourable cases (and it
-is to be feared they are few) where the real good principle of the
-mother restrains her from venality, there are still serious objections.
-The time when a nurse can go out must necessarily be comparatively very
-limited. The time that is enough for the moderate demands of friendship
-or acquaintance is miserably insufficient for the natural yearnings
-of the mother, especially if the children are young and helpless. The
-consequence is that, either openly or by stealth, she goes to them
-or has them brought to her at unallowed times; or, if the rules of
-the hospital are lax as to visitors, the children are perpetually
-with her: and let it be remembered, that the head-nurse’s room or
-rooms are usually at the entrance of the ward, that being infinitely
-the best place. It is difficult to say whether such a practice is
-most objectionable as regards the children, or the patients, or the
-hospital; and whether it is most objectionable when the children are
-young, or adolescent, or grown up. It is objectionable in all and every
-one of these cases. And no less objectionable is it in the case of the
-assistant-nurse, who where the rules are lax will receive her children
-either in the ward or in the nurses’ kitchen; or where they are strict,
-will have the children come about the hospital and will meet them on
-the sly.
-
-These things enter immensely, minute as they seem, into the discipline
-of wards and of the hospital; and discipline means a great deal.
-
-
-Sanitary objects.
-
-[Sidenote: Sanitary Objects.]
-
-[Sidenote: To discourage admission of women physically unfit.]
-
-A good many nurses enter hospital service who are quite unfit for it.
-Often consumptive and ruptured women, those suffering from piles or
-prolapsus, &c., present themselves, are admitted, struggle on for a
-time, and break down with or without taking to drink. Undoubtedly, none
-but strong healthy women should enter hospital service; the work will
-wear them out quite soon enough, and some of the above complaints are
-particularly liable to follow the work.
-
-Here again men of business must advise: the fund ought to have some
-efficient though not infallible security as to the average good health
-on joining of its members. Life Insurance rules as to this would be to
-the point.
-
-Believe me, all these things are important.
-
-
-Moral objects.
-
-[Sidenote: Moral Objects attainable.]
-
-The most difficult part of a difficult thing, only perhaps it is at the
-same time the most important.
-
-[Sidenote: Need of Certificates.]
-
-I. I think that every nurse, before joining the Fund, should produce
-a certificate from her matron, stating her to be a respectable woman.
-In plain words, for the word respectable is certainly capable of most
-wondrous extension, the certificate should state her to be, in the
-matron’s belief, and to the best of her knowledge, a chaste woman, and
-should specify whether she be spinster, wife, or widow. In either of
-the latter cases, the marriage certificate, and in the last that of the
-husband’s death, should accompany the matron’s.
-
-The matron’s certificate should, I consider, also state her to be
-sober; and it would be a question whether it should not also state her
-to have served for not less than a year in the hospital. The vagabond
-class are a terrible drag upon the whole order; and some of these
-might, from the novelty of the thing, be disposed to join it at first.
-
-II. An important question would be: Should the matron’s certificate
-be renewed every year, and should the continuance of the nurse’s
-membership depend on its production? Men of business must advise as to
-this: I am quite unversed as to the details of Provident Societies.
-
-So far as regards the contributor’s own money, the contract once
-entered into, must certainly be open to no further question; unless
-there has been fraud in the preliminary statement on which it was
-based. With regard to any _assistance_ that may be given the question
-is different.
-
-III. The preliminary certificate I do consider very important, and the
-subsequent ones, if they can be required.
-
-[Sidenote: Hospitals are not places for Penitents.]
-
-Until the hospitals are swept of the many mothers who are not wives,
-now unhappily to be found in them, no real good can be done. Hospitals
-are not, and never can be, places for “penitents;” and they are about
-the most dangerous places where sham penitents can be.
-
-This is precisely what so many people of very different kinds cannot
-or will not see; some from ignorance, some from knowledge, some from
-the vague, silly, kind feeling which does such mischief when exerted on
-practical matters.
-
-Suffer me to submit, without wearying patience by urging proof,--
-
-i. That real penitents are wrongly placed in hospital service, because
-their admission breaks down the standard which respectable women
-who are hospital nurses feel (quite as keenly as their superiors
-do in their own concerns) ought at once to restrain and to protect
-those engaged in this very peculiar, very trying, and very exposed
-work and life. (I have invariably observed that real penitents are
-extra-prudish, and comparatively inefficient, in their hospital duty.
-It will at once be perceived how inevitable this result is.)
-
-ii. That sincere but unconfirmed penitents, in addition to the above,
-are most dangerously and improperly placed in a situation, to them, of
-very peculiar trial.
-
-iii. That sham penitents, who unhappily abound, are dangerous
-everywhere, extra-dangerous in hospitals, whether to superiors,
-companions, or patients.
-
-iv. That although the class must ever be a very mixed one, it is most
-important to have a standard. Let it be necessary for every nurse to
-enter hospital with a good character, and to leave it on losing it.
-Deception, hypocrisy, and successful guilt will be found in hospitals,
-as elsewhere; but the class must be raised, and therefore improved,
-by requiring the condition of good character; though guilt may
-occasionally mask itself behind it.
-
-v. That although, for various and very differing reasons, the
-certificates will be not unseldom untrustworthy, still the same
-reasoning will apply. Upon the whole the tendency will be, by
-requiring the condition of good character, to improve a class which,
-containing, as it does, many well-conducted women, is sadly degraded
-and contaminated by many vile ones.
-
-vi. I do not overlook the fact that honest certificates, especially if
-annually renewed, might give the matrons some perplexity, from reasons
-which need not be enlarged upon. Still, it seems to me, it would be
-well worth trying.
-
-
-IV. RULES TO BE FOLLOWED IN GIVING ASSISTANCE.
-
-Lastly. With regard to rules to be followed in giving assistance of
-whatever kind.
-
-[Sidenote: Need of Advice with a view above all to Security.]
-
-It seems to me most important that we should obtain the opinions both
-of hospital authorities and of a few able men of business, before
-laying down rules. The whole matter is so essentially mixed up with the
-tangible point of securing that the savings of these poor women should
-avail them in their age, that it is urgent to have sound practical
-advice as to letting nothing else imperil this. Security seems the
-cardinal point of the whole, and that is a question for men of business
-to answer.
-
-[Sidenote: Suggestions in detail.]
-
-The following suggestions toward obtaining it are offered.
-
-1. Security of invested savings to be the first and main thing to be
-secured. Every other object should be subordinate to this.
-
-2. If we decide upon aiding their savings, let the security of this aid
-be the main point. Invest all donations, annual or not; unless, should
-any hospitals contribute annually, it might be fairly considered that
-those contributions should be annually used.
-
-3. The aim should be to enable all hospital nurses, of good character,
-to provide annuities for themselves, whether with or without
-assistance. I think assistance will be necessary.
-
-4. Also to enable private and monthly nurses, and midwives, to do the
-same, but without requiring the certificate of character, which, not to
-be a mockery, ought to be an effectual one; and these persons are not
-under a fixed superior.
-
-5. The pensions should, if it be possible, range from £13 or £15 a-year
-to £50 a-year: say £13, £20, £30, £40, £50.
-
-6. Each hospital nurse to produce, before being allowed to join the
-Fund, a certificate from her matron of chastity, general good conduct,
-and a statement as to her being unmarried, married, or a widow, also
-of her having served in one hospital not less than a year. Also
-her marriage certificate, if a wife, and, if a widow, that and the
-certificate of her husband’s death. In the event of her marriage or
-re-marriage afterwards, the marriage-certificate to be produced, and
-her altered name and the fact of her marriage duly recorded in the
-Fund-book. (All this is important: aliases and fictitious marriages are
-sadly common, in this class).
-
-7. If possible the certificate to be produced once a-year, and, on
-its failure, the contributor to cease to have a title to assistance.
-_Assistance_ in the form of an addition to the annuity may be made
-_contingent_; the annuity which the premiums provide must be absolute:
-most of the vices tend to shorten life, that is, to diminish the number
-of annual payments, so that the fund would not be likely to incur
-losses through them.
-
-8. Private and monthly nurses, and midwives, to produce, before being
-allowed to join the Fund, a certificate from the Clergyman of the
-parish, stating his belief that the subscriber is a respectable woman,
-unmarried, married, or a widow; and in the latter cases, marriage and
-death certificates. On any after-marriage or re-marriage, certificate
-to be produced and altered name registered, on pain of expulsion from
-the Fund. I should not attempt an annual certificate for this migratory
-and “independent” class.
-
-9. Each nurse, before being allowed to join the Fund, to undergo
-whatever examination is undergone by women before they are allowed
-to effect Life Insurances, as to her being, at the date of joining,
-a healthy woman. (Physicians ought to advise here as to inserting
-provisions technical enough to be effective).
-
-10. Payments to be made weekly, monthly, quarterly, or annually, as
-shall be advised. Amounts to run from 6_d._ or 1_s._ a week upwards.
-For the plan to work, it ought to allow small payments on an ascending
-scale.
-
-Many will only be able to make very small payments.
-
-Few will be able to make other than small payments.
-
-11. Payments made by a subscriber dying before attaining pension to be
-devisable by will, and in case of intestacy, divided among next of kin.
-
-12. All possible safe curtailment of office expenses.
-
-13. Treasurers, or equivalent civil chiefs, of all hospitals that
-subscribe, to be on the committee or council, or by whatever name the
-equivalent may be termed.
-
-
-V. PROSPECTS OF EVENTUAL SUPPORT.
-
-[Sidenote: Support by the Nurses themselves.]
-
-1. I believe that many head-nurses would thoroughly appreciate and
-thankfully avail themselves of such a Fund.
-
-2. I think that many nurses would do the same, and, in time, many more.
-Many cannot contribute to it; many will not.
-
-[Sidenote: Support from the Hospitals.]
-
-3. What aid the hospitals might be disposed to give I do not know.
-I rather think none at first. If the thing works and works well, I
-think they would probably contribute. But it must never be forgotten
-that, excepting the endowed hospitals (the financial position of St.
-George’s I do not know) the London hospitals find their income scarcely
-sufficient, often not sufficient, to meet their expenditure. They
-cannot be expected, nor would they perhaps be justified, to curtail
-the number of the sick they relieve, in order to provide for the
-superannuated nurses of those sick. It is true, however, that it might
-enable them to get better nurses, which is surely economy.
-
-[Sidenote: Support from the Public in general.]
-
-4. I do not think that much lasting public interest is likely to attend
-the Fund. The interest the public has, for the last few years, taken in
-hospitals has been fictitious and almost mischievous. The public can
-never really know what hospitals are, nor is it feasible or desirable
-that it should. What eventual good may be done in them must be done
-quietly and with great patience. What good may be done among the nurses
-must be done by infusing, if it may be, a higher and truer spirit of
-duty, by increased discipline and protection, and by ameliorating, in
-some material points, among which the aim contemplated by the Fund
-ranks very high, a condition which, to the end of time, must remain
-severe, rough, dangerous, and in all senses trying. In the details of
-all these things, most especially in all that concerns discipline,
-which involves protection, the public, with the best intentions, will
-only be an obstacle, and John Bull is sadly prone to pull up anything
-he plants or anything he waters, to see how it grows.
-
-I think anything like appeals to or solicited support from the public
-might, in various ways, seriously embarrass the Superintendent of a
-very difficult and a very important though, at the same time, a very
-humble branch of Her Majesty’s Service. I should be very anxious to
-avoid this: it would be perpetuating the evils of publicity, and
-sacrificing the greater good for the lesser.
-
-[Sidenote: Necessity of Advice.]
-
-5. In conclusion I again submit that it would be desirable to ascertain
-from the hospital authorities above mentioned, and if possible from
-three or four able and honest men accustomed to business, their opinion
-as to the scope and details of this plan. In matters of spirit and of
-discipline we should probably rely on other judgment; but these are
-matters of business; and in which, without binding ourselves to follow,
-it seems most important to obtain and to weigh, the opinions of men
-long conversant with business.
-
-_January 23, 1858._
-
-
-
-
-NOTE AS TO THE NUMBER OF WOMEN EMPLOYED AS NURSES IN GREAT BRITAIN.
-
-
-To show the importance of an Institute for Nurses, it must be stated
-that 25,466 were returned, at the census of 1851, as nurses by
-profession, exclusive of 39,139 nurses in domestic service,[24] and
-2,882 midwives. The numbers of different ages are shown in table A, and
-in table B their distribution over Great Britain.
-
-To increase the efficiency of this class, and to make as many of them
-as possible the disciples of the true doctrines of health, would be a
-great national work.
-
-
-
-
-TABLES OF AGE AND DISTRIBUTION.
-
-
-TABLE A.
-
-GREAT BRITAIN.
-
- AGES.
-
-
- | NURSES. | Nurse (not | Nurse
- | |Domestic Servant)|(Domestic Servant)|
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | All Ages. | 25,466 | 39,139 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- |Under 5 Years.| ... | ... |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | 5 — | ... | 508 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | 10 — | ... | 7259 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | 15 — | ... | 10,355 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | 20 — | 624 | 6537 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | 25 — | 817 | 4174 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | 30 — | 1118 | 2495 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | 35 — | 1359 | 1681 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | 40 — | 2223 | 1468 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | 45 — | 2748 | 1206 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | 50 — | 3982 | 1196 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | 55 — | 3456 | 833 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | 60 — | 3825 | 712 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | 65 — | 2542 | 369 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | 70 — | 1568 | 204 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | 75 — | 746 | 101 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- | 80 — | 311 | 25 |
- +--------------+-----------------+------------------+
- |85 and Upwards| 147 | 16 |
-
-
-TABLE B.
-
-AGED 20 YEARS OF AGE, AND UPWARDS.
-
-
- | | Nurse | Nurse |
- | | (not | |
- | | Domestic |(Domestic |
- | | Servant) | Servant) |
- +----------------------------+----------+----------+
- |Great Britain and Islands in| | |
- | the British Seas. | 25,466 | 21,017 |
- +----------------------------+----------+----------+
- | | | |
- |England and Wales. | 23,751 | 18,945 |
- +----------------------------+----------+----------+
- | | | |
- |Scotland. | 1543 | 1922 |
- +----------------------------+----------+----------+
- | | | |
- |Islands in the British Seas. 172 | 150 |
- +----------------------------+----------+----------+
- |1st Division. | | |
- | London. | 7807 | 5061 |
- +----------------------------+----------+----------+
- |2nd Division. | | |
- | South Eastern. | 2878 | 2514 |
- +----------------------------+----------+----------+
- |3rd Division. | | |
- | South Midland. | 2286 | 1252 |
- +----------------------------+----------+----------+
- |4th Division. | | |
- | Eastern Counties. | 2408 | 959 |
- +----------------------------+----------+----------+
- |5th Division. | | |
- | South Western Counties. | 3055 | 1737 |
- +----------------------------+----------+----------+
- |6th Division. | | |
- | West Midland Counties. | 1225 | 2283 |
- +----------------------------+----------+----------+
- |7th Division. | | |
- | North Midland Counties. | 1303 | 957 |
- +----------------------------+----------+----------+
- |8th Division. | | |
- | North Western Counties. | 970 | 2135 |
- +----------------------------+----------+----------+
- |9th Division. | | |
- | Yorkshire. | 1074 | 1023 |
- +----------------------------+----------+----------+
- |10th Division. | | |
- | Northern Counties. | 402 | 410 |
- +----------------------------+----------+----------+
- |11th Division. | | |
- | Monmouth and Wales. | 343 | 614 |
-
-
-
-
-NOTE AS TO TEACHING NURSING.
-
-
-There is, at Madras, an Institution called the Military Female
-Orphan Asylum, which trains 200 orphan girls, daughters of European
-soldiers. They enter in infancy, and, as they attain a proper age,
-they are married to soldiers or others. There is always an abundance
-of applicants for them, and every endeavour is made to train them to
-be useful soldiers’ wives. Dr. MacPherson, the excellent Principal
-Medical Officer of the Turkish Contingent, when at Kertch, who is now
-in charge of this Asylum, was the person, I believe, who introduced
-amongst the senior girls, a system of training, to enable them to
-officiate as nurses, an all-important element in their education. Below
-is a syllabus of the theoretical branches taught, a practical knowledge
-being acquired in the Hospital attached to the Institution. It would be
-well if all women underwent a similar training.
-
-
-_Course of Instruction for the Class of Sick Nurses, at the Military
-Female Orphan Asylum._
-
-Popular and Regional Anatomy and Physiology.
-
-A general knowledge of the human body, its various organs, and their
-uses.
-
-
-Sanitation.
-
-To be made acquainted with every subject relating to health, viz.:
-Food--Exercise--Clothing--Cleanliness--Ventilation, &c.
-
-
-Sick-room Management.
-
-Administration of Medicines, Application of Leeches, Lotions,
-Fomentations, &c. Cleanliness, Darkening of the Apartment, Quietness,
-&c. Cooking for the Sick. Diet for Infants.
-
-
-Household Medicine and Surgery.
-
-To be taught how to act in emergencies, viz.: in cases of
-Fainting--Hysterics--Convulsions of Children--Burns--Stings of
-Insects--Wounds, &c.; and the simplest mode of treating the diseases
-most commonly met with in India, viz.:
-
- External Inflammation,
- Cholera,
- Fever,
- Dysentery,
- Sore Eyes,
- Bowel Complaints,
- Cutaneous Eruptions.
-
-How to prepare Poultices, Fomentations, and Lotions.
- ″ dress Wounds, Sores, and Blisters.
- ″ apply Bandages.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[21] If the sisters and nurses, as a rule, were fed as well as lodged
-at all the Hospitals, &c., the class of women would, in a very short
-time, be entirely changed; this kind of employment would not then, with
-the reduced money payment, be so much an object of desire to widows
-with families, particularly if compelled to subscribe to a pension
-fund, which should be compulsory.
-
-[22] At first it would be unwise to attempt too much. If extended
-to Her Majesty’s dominions or private nurses, it would be almost
-impossible to control abuses.
-
-[23] Every institution ought to provide for its nurses during illness,
-but in fact it is not done.
-
-[24] A curious fact will be shown by Table A, viz., that 18,122 out of
-39,139, or nearly one-half of all the Nurses, in domestic service, are
-between 5 and 20 years of age.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Subsidiary Notes as to the
-Introduction of Female Nur, by Florence Nightingale
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Subsidiary Notes as to the Introduction of
-Female Nursing into Military Hospitals in , by Florence Nightingale
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Subsidiary Notes as to the Introduction of Female Nursing into Military Hospitals in Peace and War
-
-Author: Florence Nightingale
-
-Release Date: August 22, 2016 [EBook #52877]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INTRODUCTION OF FEMALE NURSING ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by MWS, Fay Dunn and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
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-</pre>
-
-
-<h1 class="faux">SUBSIDIARY NOTES AS TO THE INTRODUCTION OF FEMALE NURSING INTO MILITARY HOSPITALS IN PEACE AND IN WAR.</h1>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<h2 class="nopagebreak" title="">Transcriber’s Note</h2>
-
-<p>There are three parts to this book, each starting with page 1.</p>
-
-<p>Footnotes have been moved to the end of each part.</p>
-
-<p>Variant spelling and inconsistent hyphenation are retained, a few
-palpable printing errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>To make some tables easier to read on small screens some words have been repeated, for example each occurence of the word “idem” in the key of the <a href="#plan" title="">plan of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> Hospital</a> has been replaced by the words it represents.</p>
-
-<p>The key for the <a href="#plan" title="">plan of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> Hospital</a> was originally
-handwritten. No changes have been made to this for missing or
-irregular use of accents or cedillas.</p>
-
-<p>The <a href="#TABLES_OF_AGE_AND_DISTRIBUTION" title="">tables of numbers of nurses</a> near the end of the book were originally
-printed in landscape, with some sideways printing. The columns and rows
-have been swapped to make these tables easier to read on small screens.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="cover">
- <img width="374" height="600" src="images/cover_small.jpg" alt="Cover" />
- <hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="title title1 gap">SUBSIDIARY NOTES</p>
-<p class="title gap">AS TO THE</p>
-<p class="title title2 gap">INTRODUCTION OF FEMALE NURSING</p>
-<p class="title gap">INTO</p>
-<p class="title title3 gap_less">MILITARY HOSPITALS</p>
-<p class="title title4 gap">IN PEACE AND IN WAR.</p>
-<hr class="short gap_more gap_none_under" />
-<p class="title title4 gothic">Presented by request to the Secretary of State for War.</p>
-<hr class="short gap_none_under" />
-<p class="title title5 gap">LONDON:</p>
-<p class="title title6">PRINTED BY HARRISON AND SONS, <abbr title="SAINT">ST.</abbr> MARTIN’S LANE, W.C.</p>
-<p class="title title6">1858.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<table class="toc" summary="Contents">
-<tr><th colspan="3" class="pages">PAGES</th></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="content"><span class="smcap">Digest</span></td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_v" title="Page v">v–x</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="3" class="content">Thoughts submitted by Order, concerning&mdash;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">I.</td><td class="content">Hospital Nurses</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_1a" title="Page 1">1–9</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">II.</td><td class="content">Nurses in Civil Hospitals</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_9a" title="Page 9">9–14</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">III.</td><td class="content">Nurses in Her Majesty’s Hospitals</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_15a" title="Page 15">15–19</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content">Systems of Female Nursing in the War Hospitals of the different Nations engaged in the Crimean War</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_19a" title="Page 19">19–26</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content">Note in regard to the Russian Nurses employed in the War Hospitals of the Crimea</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_26a" title="Page 26">26–28</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="3"><hr class="tb" /></td></tr>
-
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content">Subsidiary Notes as to the Introduction of Female Nursing into Military Hospitals in Peace and in War</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_1" title="Page 1">1–63</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content">Addenda with regard to Female Nursing in a Military Hospital on the Pavilion or <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> Plan</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_63" title="Page 63">63–90</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content">Addenda as to Mixed Nursing, by Nurses and Orderlies, in Military Hospitals, on the Double Pavilion or <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Vincennes</span> Plan</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_91" title="Page 91">91–117</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content">Additional Hints as to Ventilation, Hospital Floors, and Cautions in Ward-building suggested by the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> Hospital</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_118" title="Page 118">118–127</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content">Note on Contagion and Infection</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_128" title="Page 128">128–132</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a></span>Note on Observations by the Principal Medical Officer of the Army in the East</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_132" title="Page 132">132, 133</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="3"><hr class="tb" /></td></tr>
-
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content">Thoughts submitted as to an Eventual Nurses’ Provident Fund</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_1p" title="Page 1">1–19</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content">Note as to the Number of Women employed as Nurses in Great Britain</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_20p" title="Page 20">20, 21</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content">Note as to Teaching Nursing</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_22" title="Page 22p">22, 23</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2>ILLUSTRATION.</h2>
-
-<table summary="Illustrations">
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content">Plan of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> Hospital at Paris</td><td class="pages">p. <a href="#Page_63" title="Page 63">63</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2>DIGEST.</h2>
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></p>
-
-<table class="digest" summary="Digest First Part">
-<tr><th colspan="3" class="pages">PAGES</th></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content">THOUGHTS SUBMITTED BY ORDER</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_1a" title="Page 1">1–28</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="3" class="subtitle">CONCERNING</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">I.</td><td class="content"><span class="smcap">Hospital Nurses.</span></td><td class="pages">&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">II.</td><td class="content"><span class="smcap">Nurses in Civil Hospitals.</span></td><td class="pages">&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">III.</td><td class="content"><span class="smcap">Nurses in Her Majesty’s Hospitals.</span></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">I.</td><td class="content">Hospital Nurses</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_1a" title="Page 1">1–9</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Twenty Observations on how to improve Hospital
- Nursing.</td><td class="pages">&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">II.</td><td class="content">Nurses in Civil Hospitals</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_9a" title="Page 9">9–14</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Twenty-three Heads for Regulations as to Nursing in
- Civil Hospitals.</td><td class="pages">&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">III.</td><td class="content">Nurses in Her Majesty’s Hospitals</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_15a" title="Page 15">15–19</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Twenty-two suggestions in the event of the introduction
- of Female Nursing into Military Hospitals.</td><td class="pages">&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content in">Various systems of Female Nursing during the Crimean War
- in the Military Hospitals</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_19a" title="Page 19">19–28</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="content in2">Of the French and Sardinians</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_19a" title="Page 19">19–22</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="content in3">Russians</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_22a" title="Page 22">22, 23</a>, <a href="#Page_26a" title="Page 26">26–28</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="content in3">English</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_23a" title="Page 23">23</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content in">Proposed Duties of Female Nurses in Military General
- Hospitals</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_23a" title="Page 23">23, 24</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="content in">The Hospital Serjeant, or Ward Master will not be
- superseded&mdash;he will still have too much to do for any
- one man properly to perform, and part of his duties must
- be given to another officer</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_24a" title="Page 24">24–26</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content in"><span class="smcap">Note in regard to the Russian Nurses employed in
- the War-Hospitals of the Crimea</span></td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_26a" title="Page 26">26–28</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></p>
-
-<table class="digest continued" summary="Digest Second Part">
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content">SUBSIDIARY NOTES AS TO THE INTRODUCTION OF FEMALE NURSING
- INTO MILITARY HOSPITALS IN PEACE AND IN WAR</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_1" title="Page 1">1–133</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">I.</td><td class="content">Five Conditions essential to this service</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_1" title="Page 1">1–3</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">II.</td><td class="content">Our Nurses were of four kinds</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_3" title="Page 3">3</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Absolute subordination to the Medical Officer as to
- Medical Orders essential and practised by us</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_4" title="Page 4">4</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">III.</td><td class="content">1. Qualified subordination essential of
- Superintendent-General to Director-General and
- Principal Medical Officer</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_4" title="Page 4">4–6</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">2. Also of Matron and Nurses to Principal Medical
- Officer and Staff-Surgeons</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_6" title="Page 6">6, 7</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">3. Female service can only be introduced gradually,
- and introduction regulated by Director-General</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_7" title="Page 7">7–9</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">IV.</td><td class="content">1. Shall Roman Catholic Sisters be introduced?</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_9" title="Page 9">9, 10</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">2. Or Anglican Sisters?</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_10" title="Page 10">10</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">3. Power of Police in Civil Hospitals</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_11" title="Page 11">11</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1"><span class="ditto">Power of Police in </span>Military <span class="ditto">Hospitals</span></td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_12" title="Page 12">12–15</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">4. Pay and Rations of Nurses</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_15" title="Page 15">15–20</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">On the whole it would seem best, where practicable,
- to board the Nurses, not to “ration” them, nor
- to let them “find themselves.” Community of
- cooking implies economy of nourishment</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_17" title="Page 17">17–20</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">5. Washing to be “put out”</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_20" title="Page 20">20, 21</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">6. Cleaning their own Rooms</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_21" title="Page 21">21–23</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">7. Nurses to keep keys of closet in Wards</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_23" title="Page 23">23</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">8. Pay, dress, and duties of Matrons</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_24" title="Page 24">24–28</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">More properly named Superintendents</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_27" title="Page 27">27</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Lady Volunteers had better begin by being Nurses,
- not Superintendents <i>ex-officio</i></td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_28" title="Page 28">28</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">9. Sundry Regulations as to Nurses</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_29" title="Page 29">29–31</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">10. Have the Patients’ Diets sent hot, and ready
- divided, from kitchen</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_31" title="Page 31">31</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">11. What Ward duties the Nurses should do themselves</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_31" title="Page 31">31</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">And why</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_32" title="Page 32">32, 33</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Patients should not be made quasi Orderlies</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_34" title="Page 34">34</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Visitors in Military Hospitals</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_35" title="Page 35">35</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">12. Regulation-Number of Orderlies&mdash;depends on the
- size of wards whether sufficient</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_35" title="Page 35">35–41</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">What is the regulation-attendance in Naval
- Hospitals</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_37" title="Page 37">37</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">What in Civil Hospitals</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_38" title="Page 38">38</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Comparative Cost of Nursing in larger and smaller
- wards</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_39" title="Page 39">39–41</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">13. Hospital floors
- <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_42" title="Page 42">42–51</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Sanitary necessities</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_42" title="Page 42">42</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Trial of Hospital floors, oiled and polished with
- “<i>laque</i>” as in Berlin Hospitals, recommended on
- sanitary grounds and for ease of cleaning</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_43" title="Page 43">43–51</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">14. Ventilation of Wards</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_51" title="Page 51">51–52</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">15. Special Wards, whether desirable or not</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_53" title="Page 53">53–54</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">16. Opinion as to Superintendent-General paying
- Nurses’ wages, and as to Governor’s jurisdiction
- over Nurses</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_54" title="Page 54">54–56</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">17. Wages and Pensions of Nurses</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_56" title="Page 56">56–60</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Three rules in raising Wages</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_56" title="Page 56">56</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Five general principles as to Wages and Pensions</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_58" title="Page 58">58</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Six applications of the foregoing principles</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_58" title="Page 58">58, 59</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Seven heads for Regulations as to Nurses’ Wages
- and Pensions</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_59" title="Page 59">59, 60</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">18. Proportion of Nurses to Patients</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_61" title="Page 61">61, 62</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">19. Precautions in sending Nurses on Foreign Service</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_62" title="Page 62">62</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Hospital Laundries</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_63" title="Page 63">63</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content"><span class="smcap">Addenda, with regard to Female Nursing in a Military
- Hospital on the Pavilion, or <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> Plan</span></td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_63" title="Page 63">63–90</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">I.</td><td class="content">Four conditions to be considered in adopting the
- Pavilion Plan</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_63" title="Page 63">63</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">1. Economy of attendance</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_64" title="Page 64">64</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">2. Facility of supervision</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_65" title="Page 65">65</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">3. Desirableness of <em>doubling</em> the Pavilion,
- in a Military Hospital, in order to give to each
- Nurse but one floor to serve</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_65" title="Page 65">65</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">4. Nurse to sleep near her Ward</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_66" title="Page 66">66</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Importance of lighting by gas</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_67" title="Page 67">67</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">II.</td><td class="content">1. One Nurse must serve the whole Pavilion, in a
- Military Hospital, if <em>single</em> Pavilions be
- adopted</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_68" title="Page 68">68</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">2. Nurses’ day in such a Pavilion</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_68" title="Page 68">68, 69</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">3. What the responsibility of Nurses is for</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">discipline of Ward or Pavilion</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_70" title="Page 70">70, 71</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">4. Importance of Lifts</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_71" title="Page 71">71</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">III.</td><td class="content">1. “Casualty” Cases should be in a completely
- appointed set of Wards, apart</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_72" title="Page 72">72</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">And why</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_73" title="Page 73">73</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">2. Restraint or non-restraint in Violent Cases</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_74" title="Page 74">74</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">IV.</td><td class="content">Simplicity of Construction essential to Discipline<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span></td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_75" title="Page 75">75</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Polished impervious Walls.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Covered Exercising Place.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Reserve Wards</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_76" title="Page 76">76</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">V.</td><td class="content">Nurses’ Meals to be sent them Cooked</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_76" title="Page 76">76</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">VI.</td><td class="content">Arrangements for a Pavilion and its Wards</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_77" title="Page 77">77–90</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">2. Where should Wardmaster sleep?</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_77" title="Page 77">77</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">3. And Orderlies sleep?</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_77" title="Page 77">77</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">4. And dine?</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_78" title="Page 78">78</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out1">7, 8, Scullery to each Ward, and what to be done in it</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_79" title="Page 79">79</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Poultice-making</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_79" title="Page 79">79</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">9. Presses in Ward</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_80" title="Page 80">80, 81</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">10. Nurses’ Room</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_82" title="Page 82">82</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Lavatory, Water-Closet, Sink</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_83" title="Page 83">83</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Baths</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_84" title="Page 84">84</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">11. Summary of arrangements</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_85" title="Page 85">85</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Scullery Appurtenances</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_86" title="Page 86">86</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">12. Nurses’ Sleeping Quarters</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_86" title="Page 86">86</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Ward for Sick Nurses</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_87" title="Page 87">87</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">13. Classification of Patients</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_88" title="Page 88">88</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">14. Nurses to be called by their Wards</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_88" title="Page 88">88</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">15. Foul Linen</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_88" title="Page 88">88</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">16. Washing Bandages</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_89" title="Page 89">89</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">17. Splints, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, where to be kept</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_89" title="Page 89">89</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Cotton Lint never to be used</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_89" title="Page 89">89</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">18. Classification of Nurses</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_90" title="Page 90">90</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Superintendent’s Store Room</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_90" title="Page 90">90</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content"><span class="smcap">Addenda as to Mixed Nursing by Nurses and Orderlies
- in Military Hospitals on the Double Pavilion
- Plan</span></td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_91" title="Page 91">91–117</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">I.</td><td class="content"><span class="smcap">Orderlies’ Duties</span></td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_91" title="Page 91">91–108</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Proportion of Nurses, Ward Masters, and Orderlies to
- Sick</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_91" title="Page 91">91–93</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Wine to be always administered by Nurse</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_93" title="Page 93">93</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Orderlies&mdash;their Duties vary according to
- appurtenances of Ward</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_94" title="Page 94">94</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">If Hot and Cold Water are laid on, and there are
- Lifts, one Orderly’s Service saved to each 30 Sick</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_94" title="Page 94">94, 95</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Night-Duty of Orderlies</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_95" title="Page 95">95–108</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Scheme of Night-Service for three Orderlies watching
- by turns</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_96" title="Page 96">96, 97</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span>Exercise for Orderlies</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_97" title="Page 97">97</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Night Refreshment for Orderlies</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_98" title="Page 98">98, 99</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Where are the Night Orderlies to sleep?</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_100" title="Page 100">100</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Comparative Merits of different Systems of Night
- Nursing in Home and in Foreign Hospitals</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_101" title="Page 101">101–3</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">An Assistant Ward Master should go round the Wards
- at Night</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_104" title="Page 104">104</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Extraordinary System of Night-Nursing in the Army
- at present</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_105" title="Page 105">105–8</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">II.</td><td class="content"><span class="smcap">Twelve Sundries in organizing a Military
- Hospital</span></td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_108" title="Page 108">108–114</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">1. Nurses’ Room</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_108" title="Page 108">108</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">2. Medical Officer’s Room</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_108" title="Page 108">108</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">3. Water-Closets</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_109" title="Page 109">109</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">4. Warm and Cold Water Supply</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_109" title="Page 109">109</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">5. Corridors</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_109" title="Page 109">109</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">6. Lobby</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_110" title="Page 110">110</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">7. Material of Ward Utensils</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_110" title="Page 110">110</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">8. Reserve Wards</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_111" title="Page 111">111–112</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Necessity of Annual Cleansing of the whole of a
- Hospital</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">9. Occasional Revision of Rules</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_113" title="Page 113">113</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">10. Defect in German Organization of Nursing</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_113" title="Page 113">113</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">11. Nurses’ Exercise</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_113" title="Page 113">113</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="out">12. Number of Ward Masters</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_114" title="Page 114">114</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">III.</td><td class="content"><span class="smcap">Regulations</span></td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_114" title="Page 114">114–117</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">1. Deprivation of Visitors salutary in certain Wards</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_114" title="Page 114">114–16</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">2. Numbering Patients saves time</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_117" title="Page 117">117</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">3. Prohibition of Swearing</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_117" title="Page 117">117</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content in-1">Conclusion</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_117" title="Page 117">117</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content"><span class="smcap">Additional Hints as to Pavilion Hospitals suggested by the
- Construction of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> Hospital at Paris</span></td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_118" title="Page 118">118–127</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">I.</td><td class="content">Ventilation</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_118" title="Page 118">118–120</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Artificial Ventilation never freshens a Ward</td><td class="pages">&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">II.</td><td class="content">Oiled Boards versus Parquets</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_120" title="Page 120">120–124</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Cleaning polished and oiled Boards much less
- laborious, and freshens the Ward much more than
- the <i>frottage</i> of <i>Parquets</i>.</td><td class="pages">&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Mode of Cleaning them at Berlin</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_122" title="Page 122">122–124</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td class="no pad">III.</td><td class="content"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span>Ten Cautions in Building Hospital Pavilions</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_124" title="Page 124">124–127</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Size of Wards. Our own Regimental Hospitals
- extraordinary for their many holes and corners</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_125" title="Page 125">125</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content">Casualty Wards</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_126" title="Page 126">126</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content"><span class="smcap">“Contagion” and “Infection” Defined</span></td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_128" title="Page 128">128–132</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Idea of “Contagion” invented by Men to excuse
- themselves for the neglect of all Sanitary
- arrangements</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_128" title="Page 128">128</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">In the ordinary sense of the word, no such thing
- as “Contagion”</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_129" title="Page 129">129</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Nor as <em>inevitable</em> “Infection”</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_130" title="Page 130">130</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">“Infection” and Incapable Management, or Bad
- Construction, convertible terms</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_131" title="Page 131">131</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">“Epidemics” do not <em>spread</em>&mdash;they develop
- themselves in Constitutions made ripe for them
- by Sanitary neglects</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_131" title="Page 131">131</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Note on certain “Observations” by Sir John Hall&nbsp;</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_132" title="Page 132">132, 133</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<table class="digest continued" summary="Digest Third Part">
-
-<tr class="new"><td colspan="2" class="content"><span class="smcap">Thoughts Submitted as to an Eventual Nurses’
- Provident Fund</span></td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_1p" title="Page 1">1–19</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Actual Wages and Prospects of Nurses</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_1p" title="Page 1">1–3</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Some further Provision desirable</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_4p" title="Page 4">4–6</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Of what Nature?</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_6p" title="Page 6">6–15</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">With regard to Kind?</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_6p" title="Page 6">6–8</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">With regard to Persons?</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_8p" title="Page 8">8</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">With regard to Objects?</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_9p" title="Page 9">9–15</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Material Objects?</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_9p" title="Page 9">9–12</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Children, in the case of Nurses, a Temptation to
- Petty Dishonesty and taking Bribes</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_11p" title="Page 11">11, 12</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Sanitary Objects?</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_13p" title="Page 13">13</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Moral Objects?</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_13p" title="Page 13">13–15</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Hospitals not places for Penitents</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_14p" title="Page 14">14, 15</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Rules to be followed in giving Assistance</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_15p" title="Page 15">15–17</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Prospects of Eventual Support</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_18p" title="Page 18">18, 19</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Note as to the Number of Women employed as Nurses
- in Great Britain</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_20p" title="Page 20">20, 21</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Tables of Ages, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr></td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_21p" title="Page 21">21</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">&nbsp;</td><td class="content">Note as to Teaching Nursing&mdash;Institution at Madras</td><td class="pages"><a href="#Page_22p" title="Page 22">22, 23</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1a" id="Page_1a">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="private">PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL.</p>
-
-<h2 title="Thoughts submitted by Order, concerning—"><span class="smcap">Thoughts submitted by order concerning</span></h2>
-<ul class="list_sub_head">
-<li class="pad1"><a href="#I1" title="">I.</a> <span class="smcap">Hospital-Nurses.</span></li>
-<li class="pad2"><a href="#II1" title="">II.</a> <span class="smcap">Nurses in Civil Hospitals.</span></li>
-<li><a href="#III1" title="">III.</a> <span class="smcap">Nurses in Her Majesty’s Hospitals.</span></li>
-</ul>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h3 id="I1">I. <span class="smcap">Hospital-Nurses.</span></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Definite
-Objects: road
-to them to be
-found out.</div>
-
-<p>1. It would appear desirable to consider that definite
-objects are to be attained; and that the road leading to
-them is to a large extent to be found out&mdash;therefore to
-consider all plans and rules, for some time to come, as in
-a great measure tentative and experimental.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Presumed
-Main Object.</div>
-
-<p>2. The main object I conceive to be, to improve
-hospitals, by improving hospital-nursing; and to do this
-by improving, or contributing towards the improvement,
-of the class of hospital-nurses, whether nurses or head-nurses.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Presumed
-Intentions.</div>
-
-<p>3. This I propose doing, not by founding a Religious
-Order; but by training, systematizing, and morally improving
-as far as may be permitted, that section of the
-large class of women supporting themselves by labour, who
-take to hospital-nursing for a livelihood,&mdash;by inducing,
-in the long run, some such women to contemplate usefulness,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2a" id="Page_2a">[2]</a></span>
-and the service of God in the relief of man, as well
-as maintenance, and by incorporating with both these
-classes a certain proportion of gentlewomen who may think
-fit to adopt this occupation without pay, but under the
-same rules, and on the same strict footing of duty performed
-under definite superiors. These two latter
-elements, if efficient (if not, they would be mischievous
-rather than useless), I consider would elevate and leaven
-the mass.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Religious
-Orders.</div>
-
-<p>4. It may or may not be desirable to incorporate into
-the work, either temporarily or permanently, members of
-Religious Orders, whether English or Roman Catholic,
-or both, who may, with the consent of their Superiors,
-enter hospitals nursed under the above system, upon the
-definite understanding of entire obedience to secular
-authorities in secular matters, and of abstinence from
-proselytism.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Their
-Advantages.</div>
-
-<p>5. Great and undoubted advantages as to character,
-decorum, order, absence of scandal, protection against
-calumny, together with, generally speaking, security
-for some amount of religious fear, love, and self-sacrifice,
-are found in the system of female Religious Orders.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Advantages of
-Hired Labour.</div>
-
-<p>6. On the other hand, the majority of women in all
-European countries are, by God’s providence, compelled
-to work for their bread, and are without vocation for
-Orders.</p>
-
-<p>In England the channels of female labour are few,
-narrow, and over-crowded. In London and in all large
-towns, there are accordingly a large number of women
-who avowedly live by their shame; a larger number who
-occupy a hideous border-land, working by day and sinning
-by night; and a large number, whether larger or smaller
-than the latter class is a doubtful problem, who preserve
-their chastity, and struggle through their lives as they
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3a" id="Page_3a">[3]</a></span>can, on precarious work and insufficient wages. Vicious
-propensities are in many cases the cause, remediless by
-the efforts of others, of the two first classes: want of work,
-insufficient wages, the absence of protection and restraint,
-are the cause in many more.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the work most needed now is rather to aim at
-alleviating the misery, and lessening the opportunities and
-the temptations to gross sin, of the many; than at promoting
-the spiritual elevation of the few, always supposing
-that this latter object is best effected in an Order.</p>
-
-<p>At any rate, to promote the honest employment, the
-decent maintenance and provision, to protect and to
-restrain, to elevate in purifying, so far as may be permitted,
-a number, more or less, of poor and virtuous women,
-is a definite and large object of useful aim, whether success
-be granted to it or not.</p>
-
-<p>The Orders remain for the reception of those women
-who either are or believe themselves drawn to enter them,
-or who experience their need of them.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Main Object of
-Hospitals:
-Distinct
-Functions of
-Hospital
-Clergy and
-Hospital
-Nurses.</div>
-
-<p>7. The care of the sick is the main object of hospitals.
-The care of their souls is the great province of the clergy
-of hospitals. The care of their bodies is the duty of the
-nurses. Possibly this duty might be better fulfilled by
-religious nurses than by Sisters of any Order; because
-the careful, skilful, and frequent performance of certain
-coarse, servile, personal offices is of momentous consequence
-in many forms of severe illness and severe injury,
-and prudery, a thing which appears incidental, though
-not necessarily so, to Female Orders, is adverse to or
-incompatible with this.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Objections to
-Amalgamating
-Members of
-Orders with
-Secular Nurses.</div>
-
-<p>8. Grave and peculiar difficulties attend the incorporation
-of members of Orders, especially of Roman Catholic
-Orders, into the work. And, both with reference to the
-Queen’s hospitals, and still more to the civil hospitals, I
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4a" id="Page_4a">[4]</a></span>humbly submit that much thought, and some consultation
-with a few impartial and judicious men, should precede
-the experiment of their introduction. This appears
-to me one of the most important questions for decision.
-Should it be decided in favor of their introduction, I trust
-it may be resolved to do so only tentatively and experimentally.</p>
-
-<p>I confess that, subject to correction or modification
-from further experience or information, my belief, the
-result of much anxious thought and actual experience, is,
-that their introduction is certain to effect far more harm in
-some ways than it can effect good in others; that a great
-part of the advantages of the system of Orders is lost
-when their members are partially incorporated in a secular,
-and therefore, as they consider, an inferior system;
-and that their incorporation, especially as regards the
-Roman Catholic Sisters, will be a constant source of
-confusion, of weakness, of disunion, and of mischief.</p>
-
-<p>Saint Vincent de Paule well knew mankind, when he
-imposed, amongst other things, the rule on the Sisters
-of his Order never to join in any work of charity with the
-Sisters of any other Order. This rule was mentioned to
-me on an occasion which gave it weight, by the Superior
-of the Sisters of Charity of one of the two Sardinian
-Hospitals on the Heights of Balaklava, in the spring of
-1856, and by the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Mère Générale</i> at Paris, October 1854,
-when she was solicited by me, with the assent and sanction,
-both of the English and of the French Governments, to
-grant some of her Sisters to us at Scutari.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Ladies</div>
-
-<p>9. As regards ladies, not members of Orders, peculiar
-difficulties attend their admission: yet their eventual
-admixture to a certain extent in the work is an important
-feature of it. Obedience, discipline, self-control,
-work understood as work, hospital service as implying
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5a" id="Page_5a">[5]</a></span>masters, civil and medical, and a mistress, what service
-means, and abnegation of self, are things not always easy
-to be learnt, understood, and faithfully acted upon, by
-ladies. Yet they cannot fail in efficiency of service or
-propriety of conduct&mdash;propriety is a large word&mdash;without
-damaging the work, and degrading their element. Their
-dismissal (like that of Sisters) must always be more
-troublesome, if not more difficult than that of the other
-nurses.</p>
-
-<p>It might be better not to invite this element; to let it
-come if it will learn, understand, and do what has to be
-learnt, understood, and done: if not, it is better away.</p>
-
-<p>It appears to me, but I may be quite mistaken, that,
-in the beginning, many such persons will offer themselves,
-but few persevere; that in time a sufficient number will
-form an important element of the work; more is not
-desirable.</p>
-
-<p>It seems to me important that ladies, as such, should
-have no separate status; but should be merged among
-the head-nurses, by whatever name these are called.
-Thus efficiency would be promoted, sundry things would
-be checked, and the leaven would circulate.</p>
-
-<p>There are many women, daughters and widows of the
-middle classes, who would become valuable acquisitions to
-the work, but whose circumstances would compel them
-to find their maintenance in it. These persons would be
-far more useful, less troublesome, would blend better and
-more truly with women of the higher orders, who were in
-the work, and would influence better and more easily the
-other nurses, as head-nurses, than as ladies. Whether
-or not the better judgment of others agrees with mine,
-my meaning will be understood.</p>
-
-<p>In truth the only lady in a hospital should be the chief
-of the women, whether called Matron or Superintendent.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6a" id="Page_6a">[6]</a></span>The efficiency of her office requires that she should rank
-as a lady and an officer of the hospital. At the same time,
-I think it important that every Matron and Superintendent,
-(unless during war-service, when the rough-and-ready
-life and work required will probably be best undergone by
-women of a higher class) should be a person of the middle
-classes, and if she requires and receives a salary, so much
-the better. She will thus disarm one source of opposition
-and jealousy, and enough will remain, inseparable from
-her office.</p>
-
-<p>The quasi-spiritual dignity of Sisters of Mercy is a
-thing <i>sui generis</i>. But the real and faithful discharge
-of the duties of the wards of a General Hospital, whether
-with reference to superiors, companions, or patients, is
-incompatible with the status, as such, of ladies. The real
-dignity of a gentlewoman is a very high and unassailable
-thing, which silently encompasses her from her birth to
-her grave. Therefore, I can conceive no woman who
-knows, either from information or from experience, what
-hospital duties are, not feeling as strongly as I do, that
-either the assertion or the reception of the status as such
-of a lady, is against every rule and feeling of common
-sense, of the propriety of things, and of her own dignity.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Religion.</div>
-
-<p>10. The question of the mode of Religion is an all-important
-one, and the choice of a mode bears far more
-directly upon this work than may, at first sight, appear.
-To give up the common ground of membership of
-the National Church is to give up a great source of
-strength.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote"><abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> John’s
-House.</div>
-
-<p><abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> John’s House, if it steers clear of the rock of
-prudery, undoubtedly possesses great advantages over a
-system of hospital nursing by promiscuous instruments.
-Not because it includes a Sisterhood, a system, in which I,
-for one, humbly but entirely disbelieve; but because the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7a" id="Page_7a">[7]</a></span>laborious, servile, anxious, trying drudgery of real hospital
-work (and to be anything but a nuisance it must ever
-remain a very humble and very laborious drudgery),
-requires, like every duty, if it is to be done aright, the fear
-and love of God. And in practice, apart from theory, no
-real union can ever be formed between sects. The work
-now proposed, however, must essentially forbear to avail
-itself of the bond of union of the National Church.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Only Women
-of
-Unblemished
-Character
-should be
-employed.</div>
-
-<p>11. None but women of unblemished character should
-be suffered to enter the work, and any departure from
-chastity should be visited with instant final dismission.
-All applications on behalf of late inmates of penitentiaries,
-reformatories, of all kinds and descriptions, should be
-refused. The first offence of dishonesty, and, at the very
-furthest, the third offence of drunkenness, should ensure
-irreversible dismissal. No nurse dismissed, from whatever
-cause, should be suffered to return.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Provision for
-Old Age.</div>
-
-<p>12. It is very important, if possible, to make provision
-for the disabled age of deserving nurses. It does not seem
-to me, I speak very diffidently, desirable to concentrate
-them in one or more large buildings. I believe half the
-inmates of half the alms-houses, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, are not on speaking
-terms with each other. John Bull is of a peculiar idiosyncrasy:
-nowhere are there such homes as in England,
-but life in community does not seem congenial here. A
-pension and the option of ending their days in solitary
-quiet, or with some friend or relation, would probably
-be the most comfortable arrangement for nurses.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Progressive
-Increase of
-Wages.</div>
-
-<p>13. Many women are valuable as nurses, who are yet
-unfit for promotion to head-nurses. It appears to me that
-it would be very desirable to have an intermediate recompense:
-say, after ten years’ good service, to raise nurses’
-wages; after a second ten years, to raise them further.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Fixed Age for
-Admission and
-Retirement.</div>
-
-<p>14. There should be an age for the reception and for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8a" id="Page_8a">[8]</a></span>the retirement both of nurses and head-nurses. I think no
-head-nurse should be under thirty.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Simplicity of
-Rules,
-Definition of
-Authorities.</div>
-
-<p>15. Simplicity of rules, placing the nurses, in some
-respects, absolutely under the Medical man, and, in others,
-absolutely under the Female Superintendent, is very important;
-also, at the outset, to have a clear and recorded
-definition of these respective limits.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Economy.</div>
-
-<p>16. Economy is very important, with regard to the
-eventual extension of the work.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Commencement:
-Training.</div>
-
-<p>17. In the event of the nurses not being trained in Her
-Majesty’s service, advantage, it seems to me, would attend
-their beginning in a great established hospital; unless
-indeed it should be judged best to select and train a staff
-of nurses first in a smaller and quieter one. Yet much
-that would be unpleasant in the larger place would probably
-be beneficial. The restraint, control, contact with
-the masters, work, and order of things of a great and
-settled place, would materially help with reference to the
-nurses.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Limits.</div>
-
-<p>18. Common sense will assuredly make the fixed
-resolve; both to fulfil one’s duty, and to keep within it.
-It is as essential to do the latter as the former, and often
-more difficult, especially for women; most especially for
-hospital-nurses.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Encumbrance
-of Public
-Support or
-Patronage.</div>
-
-<p>19. It appears to me most important to be free, once
-and for ever, from the injurious, untrue, and derogatory
-appendage of public patronage: what is called support
-in these days always ends in patronage. This work,
-truly understood, never has been, never will be, never can be,
-a popular work; for many reasons, one of which is that the
-public, of all orders, never can know anything of the real
-nature of hospital-work. With the best intentions, it
-will therefore make perpetual and impeding mistakes in
-“supporting” or patronizing it. Its support and patronage
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9a" id="Page_9a">[9]</a></span>are equally injurious in different ways as regards our
-masters the medical men, ourselves the nurses, and people
-who are neither medical men nor nurses.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Caution, Non-expectation,
-and Trust.</div>
-
-<p>20. I end as I began. Let nothing be done rashly.
-Let us not be fettered with many rules at first. Let us
-take time to see how things work; what is found to answer
-best; how the work proceeds; how far it pleases God to
-accept and bless it. Let us be prepared, as I know well
-we must be, for disappointments of every sort and kind.
-What can any of us do in anything, what are any of us
-meant to do in anything, but our duty, leaving the
-event to God? His Will be done in earth, as it is in
-Heaven.</p>
-
-<h3 id="II1">II. <span class="smcap">Nurses in Civil Hospitals.</span></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Isolation of
-each Head
-Nurse and her
-Nurses.</div>
-
-<p>1. The isolation of each head-nurse and her nurses
-appears to me very important. The head-nurse should
-be within reach and view of her ward both day and night.
-Associating the nurses in large dormitories tends to corrupt
-the good, and make the bad worse. Small airy rooms
-contiguous to the ward are best. The ward should have
-but one entrance, and the head-nurse’s room should be
-close to it, so that neither nurse nor patient can leave, nor
-any one enter the ward, without her knowledge.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">All to Rank
-and be Paid
-alike, with
-Progressive
-Increase of
-Wages.</div>
-
-<p>2. All the nurses should rank and be paid alike, with
-progressive increase of wages after each ten years’ good
-service, or a slow annual rise, which is better.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Night Nurses.</div>
-
-<p>3. The night-nurses should be on duty 12 hours, with
-instant dismissal if found asleep; 8 hours should be allowed
-for sleep, and 4 hours for daily exercise, private occupation,
-or recreation. If they have no time to themselves for
-their mending, making, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, they do it at night, sometimes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10a" id="Page_10a">[10]</a></span>
-innocently, sometimes to the injury of the patients. I
-would not however prohibit occupation at night; as sometimes
-the ward-duty is slight; and doing something is
-far better and more awakening than doing nothing. This
-is one of the matters the head-nurse should constantly
-look to. I do not fancy, but at present am not positive
-about, cleaning or scrubbing at night. The night-nurse
-should have a reversible lamp, or something that without
-disturbing the patient, gives her light, brighter than the
-dim fire or gas-light properly maintained in the wards at
-night. She should have a room to herself.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Day Nurses.</div>
-
-<p>4. The day-nurses should have eight hours’ sleep, and if
-it be possible, 4 hours daily for exercise, private occupation
-or recreation. They may have one room.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Nurses to
-fetch nothing.</div>
-
-<p>5. All provisions, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, should be as much as
-possible brought into the wards, or to the ward-doors,
-by lifts. Nothing should be fetched by the nurses. This
-would save much time; would enable the nurses to do
-more work, and yet have more leisure; and above all,
-would obviate the great demoralization consequent on the
-nurses, patients, and men-servants congregating in numbers
-several times daily.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Patients to
-fetch nothing.</div>
-
-<p>6. The patients should be made as useful as possible,
-consistently with their capacities, inside the ward; but
-should be permitted to fetch nothing to it.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Scrubbing.</div>
-
-<p>7. I strongly incline to have the scrubbing done in each
-ward, by a nurse assigned for that purpose, and for general
-attendance when the scrubbing is done. There should be
-hours for the scrubbing, before and after which it should
-not be done. This whole matter is one on which I am not
-positive at present.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Distribution of
-Ward Work.</div>
-
-<p>8. At present, I incline to something of the following
-scale. Two wards, single are best, but it might be one
-double ward, with 40 beds, served by 1 head-nurse and 3<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11a" id="Page_11a">[11]</a></span>
-nurses. The head-nurse to superintend all things, and to
-do the dressings not done by the surgeons and dressers,
-assisted mainly by one nurse, whom she thus instructs in
-nursing. Another nurse to do the scrubbing, and mainly
-the cleaning, and when these are over to mind the ward
-during the remaining hours in turn or in conjunction
-with the first nurse. The third to be night-nurse. In
-the morning, before dressing begins, and before the night-nurse
-goes off duty, all three nurses to clean the ward,
-make the beds, wash the helpless patients, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Hours of
-Dressing and
-Poulticing,</div>
-
-<p>9. Hours of morning and evening poulticing and
-dressing to be fixed.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">and of
-Medicine.</div>
-
-<p>10. Hours of administration of medicine, always except
-at night given by head-nurse, to be fixed.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Hours of
-Exercise, and
-Holidays.</div>
-
-<p>11. Hours of exercise of head-nurse and nurses to be
-fixed, and arranged with reference to the ward-duties.
-A fixed occasional holiday given in turn to the nurses is
-good. An annual longer holiday for them and for the
-head-nurses is good; a fortnight is, I think, a good limit.
-The holidays cause inconvenience, no doubt, but on the
-whole do, I think, far more good than harm. The holidays
-should be distributed in rotation during a fixed time of
-year, and comprehended in two or three months, or four
-at the very outside; and no woman declining her holiday
-at the proper time should be allowed it at any other.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Permission of
-Matron for
-extra time out.</div>
-
-<p>12. No head-nurse or nurse should be out of the hospital
-before or after the limit of her daily exercise time, two
-hours, without written permission of the Matron. The
-Matron, I think, should put the cause and amount of the
-extension in writing, and report the same to the Treasurer
-or Chief Officer, at the next general meeting, whenever it
-is called, of the Officers of the Hospital. She will find
-this a great protection against petitions. There is not a
-doubt that the fewer extraordinary absences, the better.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12a" id="Page_12a">[12]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Place of
-Exercise.</div>
-
-<p>13. Were it possible to have a small garden (in college
-gardens much effect and much refreshment is produced by
-a green sward, a few trees, some shrubs, a fountain, and
-some seats), in this, at strictly separated hours, the men-patients,
-the women patients, the head-nurses and nurses,
-the men-servants, if they choose, which perhaps is not
-likely, could walk or sit down. This arrangement would
-little interfere with its enjoyment by the dignitaries and
-their children, who require it quite as much, and would be
-found in its results practically and not poetically useful.
-Hospitals are, and perhaps must be, in or near crowded
-thoroughfares. Streets are miserable places to walk in
-during great part of the year. Nurses want and unconsciously
-crave for fresh air, and often half-an-hour is better
-than more, given them close to their work&mdash;and away from
-the streets, it would be often a great preservative.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Caution.</div>
-
-<p>14. I should, however, be very cautious as to introducing
-music or anything of that sort. Hospitals are not
-tea-gardens, nor homes, nor meant to be either. Great
-quiet and some severity of discipline are necessary, and
-ought to be exacted.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Dress.</div>
-
-<p>15. I think the head-nurses should wear a regulation
-dress, and the nurses another; if we adopt the honest
-word livery, in use in the hospitals, it will perhaps do no
-harm. Caps, dresses, aprons, should be prescribed:
-whether or not out-of-door dress should be prescribed is
-to be considered apart. Each should have three dresses
-yearly. Better, I think, avoid washing stuffs; they require
-endless change to look decent. Head-nurses and
-nurses might wear the same dress, and some difference in
-the cap would be quite distinction enough.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Wages.</div>
-
-<p>16. I incline towards giving the head-nurses <abbr title="50 pounds">£50</abbr>
-a-year, one or two rooms (one room with an alcove and
-curtain would be best), fuel and light. The nurses<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13a" id="Page_13a">[13]</a></span>
-lodging; the night-nurse a room to herself, the others
-together; entire board, fuel, light, and good wages to be
-decided upon.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Furniture.</div>
-
-<p>17. The nurses’ rooms should be supplied with plain comfortable
-furniture. In the large Hospitals the head-nurse
-furnishes her own room or rooms, which doubtless promotes
-her comfort and her care of the furniture, both desirable
-things; yet the tendency of many to accumulate decorations,
-which take time to clean, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, is a drawback. I
-should be inclined, as an experiment, to try the furnishing
-plan, or at least to have some scale as to furniture allowed.
-A bed, arm-chair, and sofa; a chest of drawers, wash-hand
-table or shelf; book-case or shelves; a little table, and
-a larger one, a couple of chairs, a footstool, and a cupboard
-with broad shelves, are the utmost that can be
-required.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Visitors.</div>
-
-<p>18. A difficult and important point to settle is the
-amount of liberty allowed as to receiving visits. It is
-desirable on all accounts to make head-nurses and nurses
-feel comfortable, and, as it were, at home: it is also better
-they should not be unnecessarily out; also London distances
-are great, and even omnibus-fare is a consideration;
-also it is important to remember that these women are
-apt to feel and say: “We are not in a nunnery,” nor
-should they be. Still upon the whole, considering the
-nuisance of ordinary visitors, and the greater nuisance of
-extraordinary (<i>e.&nbsp;g.</i>, visitors to some head-nurses, kind
-friends come to see how we are getting on, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>),
-I think if it were possible to make the rule that no
-visitors are allowed, it would be a great gain. I am not
-sure, at present, whether it is possible or not&mdash;still less
-whether it is possible to keep such a rule, if made. But,
-at all events, nurses and head-nurses should only be permitted
-to receive visitors on certain days and hours of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14a" id="Page_14a">[14]</a></span>
-week; and those hours and days should be strictly kept to.
-In Military Hospitals a still more rigid rule will be necessary.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Discharged
-Patients.</div>
-
-<p>19. No discharged patients, however previously well-conducted,
-should be allowed to visit the wards.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Graduated
-scale of
-Pensions.</div>
-
-<p>20. Apart from raising the wages of good nurses after
-every ten years’ service, I think it would well answer to
-establish a graduated scale of pensions, for both head-nurses
-and nurses; beginning with a small pension after
-ten years’ good service, increasing every five years afterwards.
-Many women are quickly worn out in this life;
-and it is equally undesirable to turn faithful worn-out
-servants adrift without any provision, or to retain them in
-duties for which they are become unfit. It is a question
-whether there should not be a compulsory stoppage from
-wages, in order to entitle the nurses to pension under
-conditions.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">No occasional
-Wards.</div>
-
-<p>21. Have no occasional wards, or wards for accidental
-and peculiar patients.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Head-Nurse to
-each Ward.</div>
-
-<p>22. Every ward, or set of wards, should be under a
-head-nurse. Discipline is always defective under other
-arrangements.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Religious
-Influence.</div>
-
-<p>23. This turns greatly upon a previous question. Every
-endeavour should be used to bring the women under
-the influence of religion, God’s instrument for saving,
-strengthening, and comforting souls. So far as this work
-depends on rule, system, and superintendence, great
-things may be done at any rate&mdash;so far as moral influence
-is concerned, it can only be hoped for in the channels
-appointed by Him who turneth all hearts whithersoever
-He will.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15a" id="Page_15a">[15]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 id="III1">III. <span class="smcap">Nurses in Her Majesty’s Hospitals.</span></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Two kinds of
-Hospital
-Service for
-Females.</div>
-
-<p>1. If their introduction is eventually commanded by
-the Queen’s Government, it will be advisable to consider
-that their service admits of two distinct kinds.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">The one: its
-Advantages;</div>
-
-<p>2. “Their chief duties” may be “taking charge of the
-linen and superintending the issue of extras.”</p>
-
-<p>They will thus contribute materially to the comfort and
-well-being of the sick; the real difficulties which undoubtedly
-beset the introduction of women into ward
-service will be avoided; and, an important consideration,
-not lightly to be discarded, their exclusion from the ward
-service will materially diminish the opposition of adverse
-masters, some of whom are also unscrupulous masters.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">The other: its
-Advantages.</div>
-
-<p>3. On the other hand, I suppose, the experience of every
-woman, admitted to ward service in hospitals where women
-were not before, is that many lives are actually saved by
-such admission, which would otherwise, humanly speaking,
-be lost. In time of war some ciphers may be safely added
-to the many. Any other great emergency, I suppose,
-but do not speak from experience, would give the same result.</p>
-
-<p>That the experience of many surgeons is identical, their
-conduct has proved; no other testimony, under present
-circumstances, can rationally be expected from them.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Both to be
-Weighed.</div>
-
-<p>4. It is often right to begin with the smaller and less-opposed
-good, and to introduce gradually, and, as it pleases
-God, the remainder. It may be our duty to do this, as to
-this matter.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Practical
-Superiority of
-the Second.</div>
-
-<p>5. Practically, it is of little avail to superintend, ever
-so carefully, the issue of extras to the sick, unless there
-is permission and opportunity to pour the nourishment,
-perhaps in continual drops, down the throat of reluctant
-agony, or delirium, or stupor. And it is of little avail to
-have this permission, unless there be also that of raising<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16a" id="Page_16a">[16]</a></span>
-the decent covering under which cholera, erysipelas, or
-the oppression of long recumbency, or the discharging
-wound, or the recent operation lie, and seeing to matters
-within. It is a further question, whether the painful
-cleansing of painful wounds, and the important minor
-dressings, as poulticing, which things, generally speaking,
-never have been done, and never will be done by surgeons,
-are best left to nurses, orderlies, or the patients themselves.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Its real and
-great
-Difficulties.</div>
-
-<p>6. At the same time, nothing is more pernicious than
-to under-rate the objections of opponents. There is no
-doubt that the admission of women to ward service is beset
-with difficulties. These Naval and Military Hospitals are,
-and must ever be, peculiar Hospitals, essentially different
-in important details from the Civil Hospitals.</p>
-
-<p>Sisters of Mercy, as regards the ward service, are decorous
-and kind, and sometimes inefficient and prudish.
-Nurses are careful, efficient, often decorous, and always
-kind, sometimes drunken, sometimes unchaste.</p>
-
-<p>Misconduct of women is far more pernicious in a Military
-or Naval Hospital than in any other, as regards the
-result of things&mdash;the crime is, of course, equally crime
-everywhere.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Condense
-numbers as
-much as
-possible.</div>
-
-<p>7. It appears to me desirable to simplify and condense,
-as much as possible, female service in these Hospitals.
-Let there be as few women, and these few as efficient and
-as respectable as can be. Let all that can really be done
-by men be so done.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Only Head
-Nurses.</div>
-
-<p>8. Head-nurses are alone, I think, desirable to be
-employed; I mean persons of the character, responsibility,
-and efficiency, of head-nurses in other Hospitals.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Classify the
-Patients.</div>
-
-<p>9. The patients should be distinctly classed, though,
-of course, this is not the Female Superintendent’s business.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17a" id="Page_17a">[17]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There are many pros and cons to the formation of convalescent
-wards.</p>
-
-<p>It is a question whether convalescent or chronic patients
-require female nurses at all.</p>
-
-<p>Of such chronic cases, probably 100 would be efficiently
-served by one nurse, having orderlies under her. Of
-acute cases, probably, one nurse should take charge of not
-more than fifty, possibly not more than forty.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Qualification
-of Nurses.</div>
-
-<p>10. The nurses should be strong, active women, of not
-less than thirty, nor, I think, more than sixty years of age,
-of unblemished character, and should be irreversibly dismissed
-for the first offence of unchastity, drunkenness,
-or dishonesty, or proved impropriety of any kind.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Wages.</div>
-
-<p>11. Their wages, I think, the same as those of head-nurses
-in Civil Hospitals&mdash;certainly, not more.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Pensions.</div>
-
-<p>12. Their pension on the same graduated scale.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Rules.</div>
-
-<p>13. Their rules should be simple, very definite, should
-leave them at the absolute disposal of the surgeon as to
-ward matters, and at the absolute disposal of the Female
-Superintendent in all other matters. Their dress should
-be uniform.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Duties.</div>
-
-<p>14. Their duties should be strictly defined, and be
-consistent with the Code of Army Hospital Regulations,
-the revision of which has been announced.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Means of
-Steadying
-them.</div>
-
-<p>15. Give them plenty to do, and great responsibility&mdash;two
-effectual means of steadying women.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Lodging.</div>
-
-<p>16. The nurse’s lodging in view of her ward renders
-her far more efficient; but this requires some special
-arrangement. It would not do to have the chance of the
-nurse’s being suddenly taken ill, with only patients and
-orderlies within immediate reach. Were the nurses’ rooms
-so arranged that two or more were on one floor (as is the
-case in all Hospitals), and so arranged as to be entirely
-separate, and yet, when so desired, easily accessible to each<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18a" id="Page_18a">[18]</a></span>
-other, which might easily be contrived, this would probably
-answer all purposes.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Food.</div>
-
-<p>17. Their food should be sent them cooked with some
-slight variety. With the plainest intentions nature often
-revolts from the perpetual joint of excellent meat in Hospital
-air and life. The occasional “potage,” fish, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, of
-other systems, are in fact, a refreshing and palatable
-change. If, however, avoiding names that shock and
-frighten, some slight change of diet could be contrived,
-the effect would be good. This is practical and not at all
-romantic, though it may look the latter.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Opinion of
-honest
-Military
-Authority
-desirable.</div>
-
-<p>18. Could the honest opinions be had of a few good
-Military and Surgical Authorities before beginning, it
-would be good.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Female Superintendent-General.</div>
-
-<p>19. The Female Superintendent-General’s own powers
-and responsibilities must be absolutely fixed, and so as not
-to clash with those of the Officer (should such an Officer
-be appointed, as has been elsewhere recommended), who
-shall superintend the Hospital attendants.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Confidential
-Reports.</div>
-
-<p>20. Confidential reports must be so modified, as far as
-women are concerned, that the humble boon granted to
-pickpockets, of being informed of accusations laid to their
-charge, must be extended to Her Majesty’s nurses.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Permanency of
-the System.</div>
-
-<p>21. In framing the system and the Superintendent’s
-own office, let it be attempted to secure the permanent
-efficient working, please God, in ordinary hands. To aim
-at the best conceivable may lead to failure. Genius works
-with ordinary materials, but never constructs an edifice
-which it alone can inhabit.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Quietness.</div>
-
-<p>22. “In quietness and in confidence shall be your
-strength.” Quietness has been from the beginning of its
-publicity the one thing wanting in this work. I know the
-fuss, which from its beginning surrounded it, was abhorrent
-to us and was the act of others: but the work, which is all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19a" id="Page_19a">[19]</a></span>
-we care for, has throughout suffered from it. It is equally
-injurious and impeding as regards surgeons, nurses, and
-people, who are neither. External help in this coarse,
-repulsive, servile, noble work, for it is all these things, is
-truly the reed which pierced the hand that leant upon it.
-One hospital, naval, military, or civil, nursed well, and
-gradually training a few nurses, would do more good to
-the cause than an endless amount of meetings, testimonials,
-pounds, and speeches, to say nothing of newspaper
-puffings, which to-morrow might turn into revilings. This
-never will, never can be a popular work. Few good ones
-are, for few are without the stern fructifying element of
-moral restraint and influence; and though the streams of
-this are many, its source is one. Hearts are not touched
-without Religion. Religion was not given us from above in
-impressions and generalities, but in habits of thought and
-action, in love of God and of mankind, carried into action.</p>
-
-<h2 class="faux" title="Various Systems of Female Nursing compared."></h2>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-<div class="sidenote">Various
-Systems of
-Female
-Nursing
-compared.</div>
-
-<p>A very short comparison will here be made between the
-methods of Female Nursing in the Military Hospitals of</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Russia,</li>
-<li>England,</li>
-<li>France, and</li>
-<li>Sardinia,</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p class="noindent">as exemplified in the last War.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">French and
-Sardinian
-Hospital
-Service.</div>
-
-<p>To do this, a sketch must be partly repeated, which has
-been already given, of the organic difference between the
-Hospital Service of each nation.</p>
-
-<p>The essential characteristic of the French is, the importance
-given in the field to the Divisional Hospital
-Service over the Regimental.</p>
-
-<p>The Regimental Medical Service treats only those
-ephemeral cases which are to be exempted from duty for
-a day or two. Cases of wounds or disease likely to last
-for a term of weeks are sent to the Divisional Ambulance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20a" id="Page_20a">[20]</a></span>
-in the field; those, where disease may possibly last for
-months, to the General Hospitals at the base of operations.</p>
-
-<p>The Medical Service of the Sardinians closely resembles
-the above in its formation. In the late War, their General
-Ambulances were at Balaklava; their General Hospitals at
-Jeni Koi on the Bosphorus. They had no Divisional or
-Regimental Hospitals.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">English.</div>
-
-<p>In our Army, as is well known, the Regiment establishes
-its Regimental Hospital wherever it goes. Theoretically,
-it is exclusively a Regimental system of
-Hospitals; however much, practically, it breaks down.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Russian.</div>
-
-<p>The Russian system can scarcely bear a comparison with
-ours; because their Regiments are Divisions. They had
-a regular system of transporting the sick and wounded
-upon the North side of Sebastopol, then upon Mackenzie’s
-Heights, then upon Bakschi-Serai, and lastly upon Simpheropol.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Female
-Nurses.</div>
-
-<p>The adaptation of Female Nursing to the different
-systems in the</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>French,</li>
-<li>Sardinian,</li>
-<li>Russian, and</li>
-<li>English Armies</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p class="noindent">has now to be noticed.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Sardinian and
-French
-Female
-Nurses.</div>
-
-<p>The Sardinians had Sisters of Charity, both in the
-General Ambulances in the Crimea, and in the General
-Hospitals on the Bosphorus.</p>
-
-<p>The principal duties of these admirable women appear
-to have been the care of the linen and small stores, and
-the cooking, much of which they did with their own hands,
-for sick officers and men. These duties were admirably
-performed. They appeared, besides, to have a certain
-charge in the wards, the power of giving “<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">douceurs</i>,” the
-administration of extras, the seeing to the cleanliness of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21a" id="Page_21a">[21]</a></span>
-beds and patients, and something more precise with
-regard to sick Officers; but their duties seemed to be
-somewhat undefined in their relation to the Infirmiers.
-Whether the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sœur</span> or the Infirmier Major were in charge,
-to see the duties about the patient properly executed,
-was rather a problem.</p>
-
-<p>This was still more the case in the French Hospitals,
-where the “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sœur</span>” in the wards appeared more of a
-“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">consolatrice</span>” and an administratrix of extras: although,
-out of the wards, her admirable housekeeping, both in the
-kitchen and the linen-store, was predominant.</p>
-
-<p>The French “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sœurs</span>” were not admitted to the Divisional
-Ambulances in the front: it was whispered, because
-of the corruption of the French <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Intendance</span>, upon whom
-they tacitly exercised a very inconvenient “surveillance.”
-They served in all the General Hospitals at Constantinople;
-and to their admirable services, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><abbr title="Monsieur">M.</abbr> Baudens,
-Inspecteur-Général en Crimée</span>, has rendered an “<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">éclatant
-témoignage</i>” in his “<cite class="plain" lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Mission Médicale en Orient</cite>,” published
-in the numbers of the “<cite class="plain" lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Revue des Deux Mondes</cite>,”
-of February 15, April 1, and June 1, 1857.</p>
-
-<p>In these French Hospitals of Constantinople, the
-“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sœurs</span>” appeared to do all the cooking for the sick
-Officers and that of the extras for the men.</p>
-
-<p>I do not think that, in either French or Sardinian
-Hospitals, the care of bed-sores and such like, which can
-only be done by women, was sufficiently given to the
-“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sœurs</span>.”</p>
-
-<p>I have heard complaints made of this kind both by
-Officers and men; and “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sœurs</span>,” both French and Sardinian,
-have been to me to look at the way in which we
-treated bed-sores, and to borrow air-pillows and water-beds.</p>
-
-<p>There is such a difference however in different Hospitals,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22a" id="Page_22a">[22]</a></span>
-in time of war and of peace, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, that I would not be
-understood to mean that any of these remarks apply
-absolutely or generally, but only to Hospitals I have
-seen.</p>
-
-<p>It may be as well to mention that, talking of “French”
-and “Sardinian” Sisters, they all come from one “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Maison
-Mère</span>,” that of the “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Filles de la Charité de S. Vincent
-de Paule</span>,” at Paris. There is a “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Maison Succursale</span>,”
-at Turin. But all are of the same Order, and under the
-same head.</p>
-
-<p>Let me mention <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sœur Cordero</span>, the excellent Superioress
-of all the Sisters employed in the Sardinian Hospitals
-of the war, with the warmest affection and respect. She
-was a woman of high rank, of the most captivating
-manners, but of the utmost simplicity of character, and
-of unfailing devotion to right and to God.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Russian.</div>
-
-<p>It remains to mention the Russian system, which, as
-regards the organization of the duties of the “Sisters,”
-appeared to me by far the best I have known. I am at a
-loss to conceive what is meant by the following sentence
-in the Report by two of our Army Medical Officers on
-the “Russian Medical Department,” presented to the
-House of Commons. Speaking of the Sisters of Mercy,
-who are generally widows of officers, it is said “their chief
-duties appeared to be in taking charge of the linen and
-superintending the issue of extras.” This is founded on
-error of observation&mdash;as the Russian system seems to be
-the only perfectly organized system of female attendance
-in Military Hospitals, which was developed in the Crimean
-War. In it, the Sister has charge of all that relates to
-the bed-side of the patient; she receives the orders from
-the Medical Officer, attends him in his rounds; he confers
-with her afterwards; she even reports the “felchers” or
-dressers, as also the orderlies, as far as regards their
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23a" id="Page_23a">[23]</a></span>discharge of duties at the bed-side of the patient. The
-orderlies are, of course, under the control of a Non-commissioned
-Officer, in all that pertains to discipline,
-clothing, meals, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> The “felchers” are under a superior
-“felcher,” and under the Medical Officers.</p>
-
-<p>There are female nurses, wives and widows of soldiers,
-under the “Sisters,” who are generally, as has been
-stated, widows of Officers.</p>
-
-<p>This appears the nearest approach to good organization
-I have met with.</p>
-
-<p>But again I say there may be much difference among
-the Russian Military Hospitals. I would not be considered
-as laying down an absolute experience.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">English.</div>
-
-<p>It has been said elsewhere what was the system or no
-system pursued in the English Military Hospitals, as to
-Female Nursing. It was a new thing, and no General
-Order or Warrant was ever issued as to the duties of the
-nurses. Many duties clearly devolved upon the Female
-Superintendent-General, as she was afterwards called in
-“General Orders,” which never should devolve upon her
-again.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Proposed
-Duties of
-Female
-Nurses in
-Military
-Hospitals.</div>
-
-<p>But it may be now clearly enunciated what the duties
-of Female Nurses should be, and many reasons will subsequently
-be given why there never will be discipline in
-Military Hospitals till they are as follow:</p>
-
-<p>Women only of the character, efficiency, and responsibility
-of Head Nurses in other Hospitals should be admitted
-into Military ones. They should have charge and be
-responsible for all that pertains to the bed-side of the
-patient; for his cleanliness, and that of his linen, bed, and
-utensils; for all the minor dressings, not performed by
-Surgeons or Dressers; for the administration of medicines,
-and of the meals; for the obedience of the patient
-and orderlies to the orders of the Medical Officer. They
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24a" id="Page_24a">[24]</a></span>should receive the orders of the latter, and always attend
-him in his visits.</p>
-
-<p>Till the above is done by women, the same want of discipline,
-now to be observed in Military Hospitals, and
-often already noticed, will continue,&mdash;such is my firm
-belief, the result of much experience.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Duties which
-should be left
-to men.</div>
-
-<p>There will be abundance left for the Ward Master or
-Serjeant to do in taking Military charge of the Hospital
-and its inhabitants, in being Office Clerk, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <i>i.&nbsp;e.</i>,
-keeping the Admission books, making States, Returns,
-Accounts, and other documents, without his being Head-Nurse,
-without his superintending the Orderlies at the
-bed-side, his administering medicines, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, which can only
-be satisfactorily done by a woman. And, when done by
-her, there will still be ample work for two men, where
-one does now the work of three.</p>
-
-<p>The first should do the Military part, the second should
-compound, take charge of Medical and Surgical stores, of
-Returns and Accounts connected with these; and, where
-there is no Purveyor, of Purveyor’s and Barrack stores,
-provisions, cooking, washing, diets, and extras, including
-Returns and Accounts connected with these.</p>
-
-<p>As it is, there is one Hospital Serjeant, who is Ward-Master,
-Serjeant, Steward, Clerk, Dispenser, Purveyor’s
-Clerk, and Head-Nurse&mdash;a kind of “Maître Jacques,” as
-in Molière’s “Avare.”</p>
-
-<p>One man cannot do all these things.</p>
-
-<p>A Female should be the Head-Nurse&mdash;a Serjeant should
-be the Serjeant and Clerk&mdash;a Ward-Master the Steward,
-Dispenser, Ward-Master, and Purveyor’s Clerk.</p>
-
-<p>And here I must deplore the confusion unavoidable in
-these definitions of proposed duties, while we have no
-separate system for Regimental and General Hospitals.</p>
-
-<p>What Dr. Menzies declared, in his evidence as to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25a" id="Page_25a">[25]</a></span>General Hospitals at Scutari, is strictly true, and one
-great cause of our failure at Scutari:&mdash;“I have followed
-the general rules for Regimental Hospitals, so far as I
-could.”</p>
-
-<p>While Regimental Hospitals are what they are, females
-never can be admitted there. On the other hand, if
-General Hospitals be established, one happy consequence
-will be that the cooking and washing will be taken out of
-the hands of the Hospital Serjeant, and regularly organized,
-it is hoped under a Captain-Superintendent of
-Orderlies. All Purveyor’s and Barrack stores, that is,
-Hospital stores and furniture will, it is hoped, fall under
-the charge of a Steward; Medical and Surgical stores
-under that of an Apothecary.</p>
-
-<p>It will only remain to place a female Head-Nurse in
-charge of all that concerns the bed-side of a patient, and
-the duties of the Orderlies about the bed-side, and a
-Ward-Master in charge of everything else belonging to
-the Orderlies and Patients.</p>
-
-<p>But, if it should be determined to retain everywhere
-the old Regimental system, it is only just to add this
-very strong testimony and appeal in favour of the old
-Hospital Sergeant, who indeed deserves it:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“I may take this opportunity of stating my conviction that,
-from the very arduous, constant, and responsible duties of the
-Hospital Sergeant, and his influence for good or ill among the
-non-commissioned officers and men of the regiment, it is particularly
-required for the good of the service that he should be
-put at least on the same footing in rank and pay as a first-class
-staff sergeant. He ought to pass an examination by a Board of
-Medical Officers as to his fitness for compounding medicines on
-the same footing as a druggist in England. My Hospital Sergeant,
-who has been eight years a sergeant, three of which as
-Hospital Sergeant, receives at present 1<i><abbr title="shilling">s.</abbr></i> 10<i><abbr title="pence">d.</abbr></i> pay per diem, and
-an allowance of 4<i><abbr title="pence">d.</abbr></i> per diem as Hospital Orderly; at the same
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26a" id="Page_26a">[26]</a></span>time that there are sergeants in the ranks of the regiment four
-years junior to him as a non-commissioned officer who are
-receiving 2<i><abbr title="shillings">s.</abbr></i> 10<i><abbr title="pence">d.</abbr></i> pay per diem.</p>
-
-<p>“My experience leads me to consider that the regimental
-bandsmen are not, as a body, likely to be sufficiently strong or
-able men for the duty of carrying the wounded to be consigned
-to them.</p>
-
-<p class="signed">
-“(Signed<span class="spread-out_date">)</span>
-<span class="smcap">Thomas Longmore</span><span class="spread-out_date">,</span><br />
-“<i>Surgeon 19th Regiment</i>.”
-</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-<h2><span class="smcap">Note in Regard to the Russian Nurses Employed
-in the War-Hospitals of the Crimea.</span></h2>
-
-<p>The Russian nurses, in the opinion of their Master, the
-famous surgeon, Pirogoff, did other things besides what
-the Army Medical Director-General told the House of
-Commons they did. But it is to be observed&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, that much allowance is to be made
-for the confusion incident to Scotch and Russian surgeons
-talking French together, and going over many subjects in
-a very short time.</p>
-
-<p>And in the second, that very likely some extra confusion
-arose in the minds of our Army Medical Officers from
-the fact of two entirely different sets of women having
-served in the Russian War Hospitals, viz.:</p>
-
-<p>(1.) The Sisters of the Elevation of the Cross.</p>
-
-<p>(2.) The “Frauen des Barmherzigen Wittwen Instituts,”
-(mentioned in a very cold manner in pages 4, 26, and
-implicitly, 27, of Professor Pirogoff’s pamphlet, “Die
-Gemeinschaft der Schwestern zur Kreuz-erhöhung. Berlin:
-1856”); who are those spoken of at <a href="#Page_22a" title="Page 22"><abbr title="pages">pp.</abbr> 22, 23,
-above</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27a" id="Page_27a">[27]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Widows were so instituted, about forty years or
-more ago, by Mary of Wirtemberg, during so many years
-the venerated Empress-Mother. It is quite possible that in
-the war-pressure their services proved rather nondescript,
-they being neither sisters nor nurses, strictly speaking; or
-perhaps the sole reason why Professor Pirogoff has not
-one good word for them is, that they were not under his
-orders.</p>
-
-<p>The Sisters of the Elevation of the Cross were a body
-of secular women, with a few Sisters of Mercy, formed by
-the Grand Duchess Helena, and placed by her under the
-orders of the famous civilian Surgeon Pirogoff, to whom
-the supreme surgical command in Sevastopol was virtually
-given. Several things are incidentally mentioned concerning
-them in his pamphlet, quite inconsistent with the
-constitution of an ordinary religious order.</p>
-
-<p>One or two things in the pamphlet are incongruous
-enough to English ideas:&mdash;the narrative given, however
-simply and succinctly, of the performances of the sisters by
-name, the publication of the Professor’s evident disagreement
-with the first “Oberin,” or Superior, who served ten
-months, (the second, whom he so highly praises, had only
-served two when he wrote); the improvement, by which the
-Sisters’ concerns were “sat upon” by the Comité of
-Oberin, Chaplain, Doctor, and elder Sisters, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr></p>
-
-<p>But the division of Professor Pirogoff’s war-nurses into
-three categories is a pregnant hint for future service, please
-God we yield it. These three categories consisted of (1)
-the “Verband-Schwestern,” or those who assisted the
-Surgeon in the dressings, and the “Feld-scherer”
-(Dresser) in preparing them. (2) The “Apothekerinnen,”
-or those who were in charge of all medical appliances for
-immediate use, and who superintended the “Feld-scherer”
-(Dresser) in the administration of medicines. (3) The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28a" id="Page_28a">[28]</a></span>“Wirthinnen,” who looked after the diets, clean linen, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>,
-of the patients, and the order of the hospital. Each
-“category” was responsible for carrying out the orders of
-the medical officers. To every Hospital-<i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Baracke</i> (hut)
-was attached one sister of each of the above descriptions.</p>
-
-<p>In ordinary service the less nurses know of each other’s
-wards the better&mdash;in war service it is essential that as few
-women should serve as many sick as possible; and it is
-impossible to attempt assigning to each nurse the entire
-supervision of a ward. I think the categories, modified,
-of course, and adapted to the Queen’s service, might be
-most useful.</p>
-
-<p>Another point usefully proved by Professor Pirogoff’s
-pamphlet is the extreme importance, if it be possible, of
-placing the nurses clearly under the orders of the Principal
-Medical Officer, though a further point is, if possible, to
-be secured, viz., that of the Principal Medical Officer being
-favourable to their service. As women they should be
-entirely under the control of their female superior, yet the
-Principal Medical Officer should have a certain clear
-amount of power in ordering that Superior as to their
-employment at particular stations and on particular services.</p>
-
-<p>The <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Transport Abtheilung</i> of the Russian sisters seems
-to have been an admirable, though very unpretending
-service. We might take a useful hint from it. Three
-Sisters accompanied the more numerous<a name="Anchor_1" id="Anchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 1.">[1]</a> convoys of Sick
-Transport from Simpheropol to Perekop, and provided the
-sick with tea, sugar, clean linen, medical and surgical
-appliances, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, on the way.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<h3 title="">Footnote:</h3>
-
-<ul>
- <li><p><a name="Footnote_1" id="Footnote_1"></a><a href="#Anchor_1">[1]</a>
-According to Professor Pirogoff sick were almost daily sent from Simpheropol
-to Perekop. They could not, therefore, be always accompanied by
-Sisters.</p></li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 title="Subsidiary Notes as to the Introduction of Female
-Nursing into Military Hospitals in Peace and in
-War"><span class="smcap">Subsidiary Notes as to the Introduction of Female
-Nursing into Military Hospitals in Peace and in
-War.</span></h2>
-
-<p>It is, perhaps, advisable first to speak of some of those
-difficulties met with in the War Hospitals of the East, in
-order that such may be prevented for others who may in
-future be Superintendents-General of Nurses in Military
-Hospitals whether in peace or in war.</p>
-
-<h3 title="">I.</h3>
-
-<p>No one ought to undertake a matter of duty of this
-kind without first obtaining the consent of the War Office to
-five conditions.</p>
-
-<p>1. That every month, each of her sub-Superintendents shall
-furnish her with an abstract of the requisitions made by her
-on the Purveyor, whether for Nurses’ consumption, or for that
-of Patients, and that she furnish the War Office with an
-abstract of these. It is then the part of the Purveyor to
-disprove her accounts, instead of its being, as before, her part
-to disprove his.</p>
-
-<p>2. That it be made a point of honour, not of grace, with the
-War Department, to submit to her any Report, confidential<a name="Anchor_2" id="Anchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 2.">[2]</a> or
-otherwise, made concerning the Female Nursing Staff; a condition,
-without which it would be impossible to have respectable
-women in the Military Service.</p>
-
-<p>3. That the powers of the Superintendent-General shall be
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>strictly defined, and put in “General Orders” in the first place,
-and not in the last, in order that there may not be the useless
-and endless correspondence which there was in the first Superintendent-General’s
-case (and for what?).</p>
-
-<p>4. That the Superintendent-General have the power of communicating
-directly with the War Department; and that her
-Money-Accounts be sent in by her directly to that Department.</p>
-
-<p>5. That it be made a point of honour that the Medical
-Officers communicate to the Superintendent-General, or Local
-Superintendent, any complaint they may have against the
-Nurses for disobedience.</p>
-
-<p>In March 1856 the following appeared in “General Orders.”
-Had it but been seventeen months earlier how much it might
-have saved!<a name="Anchor_3" id="Anchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 3.">[3]</a> The definition of the Superintendent-General’s
-powers and duties, therein contained, is all that is wanted to
-prevent irregularities disastrous to the Service.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">General Orders.</span></p>
-
-<p class="date">
-<i>March 1856.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>“It is notified, by order of the Secretary of State for War, that
-Miss Nightingale is recognized by Her Majesty’s Government
-as the General Superintendent of the Female Nursing
-Establishment of the Military Hospitals of the Army. No lady,
-sister, or nurse is to be transmitted from one Hospital to
-another, or into any Hospital, without previous consultation
-with her. Her instructions, however, require her to have the
-approval of the Principal Medical Officer, in her exercise of the
-responsibility thus vested in her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“The Principal Medical Officer will communicate with Miss
-Nightingale upon all subjects connected with the Female Nursing
-Establishment, and will give his directions through that lady.”</p>
-
-<h3 title="">II.<br /><i>Nurses.</i></h3>
-
-<p>1. Our Nurses were of four sorts.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Nuns.</li>
-<li>Sisters (Anglican).</li>
-<li>Ladies.</li>
-<li>Nurses.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>The Nuns were received not as Nuns, but as Nurses.</p>
-
-<p>Their (so called) training told sometimes against us; sometimes
-for us. The same with the “Sisters” (Anglican).</p>
-
-<p>The Ladies were useful, exactly in proportion as they approached
-the professional, and not the dilettante, mode of thought.</p>
-
-<p>A larger proportion of paid Nurses than of Ladies did
-well, and this under circumstances of peculiar temptation. Paid
-Nurses are always the most useful.</p>
-
-<p>2. There should always be a proportion of Nurses in Army
-Hospitals</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>To preside in Extra Diet Kitchens,<a name="Anchor_4" id="Anchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 4.">[4]</a></li>
-<li><span class="ditto">To preside</span> in Linen Stores.</li>
-<li>To teach the Orderlies to nurse in the Wards.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>The proportion of Roman Catholic “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sœurs</span>,” in French
-Military Hospitals, is as small as this would be; they undertake
-even less duty than this: in Military Hospitals they do
-much less than in Civil Hospitals.</p>
-
-<p>Women in Military Hospitals should all be contracted servants,
-whether Nuns, Ladies, or professional Nurses.</p>
-
-<p>There should be a retiring pension to each woman.</p>
-
-<p>3. Miss Nightingale took service on the ground of being
-under the Principal Medical Officer, and, consequently, of not
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>interfering with him.</p>
-
-<p>There was no <i>imperium in imperio</i> in her case.</p>
-
-<p>This exists in the case of the French “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sœurs de Charité</span>,”
-and existed in individual instances among the “Sisters” under
-Miss Nightingale; <i>i.&nbsp;e.</i>, they gave articles of diet, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, as from
-Sisters, not in obedience to Medical orders. This was immediately
-put a stop to by her. That the Medical Officer is sole
-master of diets, is an axiom of medicine, and of common sense.</p>
-
-<p>This involved our only <em>answering</em> the Extra Diet Rolls in
-our kitchens; not originating either in quantity or quality.</p>
-
-<p>Afterwards, although frequent were the insinuations that we
-transgressed the above maxim, no evidence of the fact was
-ever obtained, except the following, which is given <i>verbatim</i>
-and <i>literatim</i>, as “put into Court” by a First Class Staff-Surgeon,
-in charge of one of the divisions of the Barrack
-Hospital, Scutari. He alleged “that the Nurses were in the
-habit of giving diets without leave;” and when pressed for
-the facts, produced the annexed statement in “W. J. Northcott’s”
-handwriting.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“2447. Pte. John M‘Cormick, L. T. Corps, age twenty, 11 Company,
-admitted into 6 Ward, F. Corridor. Admitted with Febris
-C. C., April 30th, 1856. On or about the 10th of May I was confined
-in the Garrison Cells, Scutari, for allowing food and drink
-to be brought to this Patient, by one of Miss Nightingale’s Nurses;
-and at the time it was brought I were on duty at the Victoria
-Barracks, Scutari, three-quarters of a mile from the Hospital,
-and never saw the Nurse, food, or drink that was administerd to the
-above-named Patient, and I never saw the docter that ordered me to
-be confind. I was confind by order of 1st Class Staff-Surgeon
-Prendergast. About two and a half hours after I were aquanted
-with the case.</p>
-
-<p class="signed">
-“(Signed<span class="spread-out_date">)</span>
-173. <span class="smcap">W. J. Northcott</span><span class="spread-out_date">,</span><br />
-“A.W.M., M S.C.”
-</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<h3 title="">III.</h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">1. Lay down
-distinctly the
-communication
-which is
-to take place
-between
-Director-General
-and
-Superintendent-General,
-and
-(in war and
-abroad)
-Principal
-Medical Officer
-and Superintendent-General,
-and
-the qualified
-subordination
-of the latter.</div>
-
-<p>1. In defining the office and duties of the Superintendent-General
-of Nurses, her direct communication with, and qualified
-subordination to, the Director-General of the Army Medical
-Department, and, abroad and in war, with and to the Principal
-Medical Officer of the district, or equivalent, must be very
-exactly defined. If the formation and government of a body of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-women to serve in the Hospitals of the Army Medical Department,
-and in these alone, is contemplated, the less the Director-General
-and the Superintendent-General have to do with each
-other, in matters of detail, the better, and the less chance of
-collision. For very weighty moral and practical reasons, the
-sole government of the women must belong to the Superintendent-General,
-and to the Matrons, whom she delegates, and
-who are themselves responsible and amenable to her. But it
-will never <em>work</em> to introduce female service into the Army
-Hospitals, and to leave the Director-General of the Army
-Medical Department, which, like everything else in the Army, is
-and must be a hierarchy, no other power in connection with it,
-than to write and encourage confidential reports against it.
-There ought to be a definition of the Superintendent-General’s
-position as regards him, and also, as regards the Principal Medical
-Officer of the district, abroad and in war. It is useless, and
-would be dangerous to evade this; it ought to be deliberately
-settled, and distinctly stated. In the “General Orders” of
-March 1856, the Superintendent-General’s complete power
-over the women, and qualified subordination to the Principal
-Medical Officer, are well and definitively expressed.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible to appoint the work of the Nurses without
-the concurrence of the Director-General. It does not do to
-put a woman into a great ward, or several smaller wards, of
-men, with several orderlies, without clearly defining her position
-there. To put her under the orderlies would be to make
-her being there at all much worse than useless; but she cannot
-have assigned to her the responsibility of the ward or wards,
-and consequently, authority over both orderlies and patients,
-herself being responsible to the Surgeon and Matron, without
-the concurrence of the Chief of the Army Medical Department.</p>
-
-<p>Nor, without such concurrence, can the duties of the Nurses
-be assigned. At this moment there are extant two sets of
-Regulations&mdash;the old Army Hospital Regulations, and those
-of 1855 made for the late Medical Staff Corps. In these
-Regulations, both the former and the latter, every duty a
-Nurse can discharge is assigned to different men. The
-responsibility of the ward, the administration of diets and
-medicines, the application of poultices, fomentations, leeches,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>enemas, and minor dressings, are all in so many words assigned
-as the duties of Assistant-Surgeons, of Hospital-Serjeants, and
-Orderlies; and of Assistant-Surgeons, of Ward-Masters and
-Orderlies of the Medical Staff Corps. The Regulations in
-general are being revised;&mdash;so much the better. But the new
-body of Orderlies, announced in the “Gazette” as the Hospital
-Corps, will, of course, receive rules from the Director-General;
-and if these things are not settled with him, there will be contradictory
-rules in operation, which will most materially thwart
-the working of the Female Service.</p>
-
-<p>We have ourselves experienced this, as to the administration of
-medicines, which one Principal Medical Officer took away from
-the Nurses, saying that it was the duty of the Assistant-Surgeons,
-in which he was borne out by an existing Regulation.
-And it would really seem as if this were the intention of the
-said Regulation, for it is there laid down that the medicines are
-to be administered twice-a-day, as if this were a property of
-medicine.</p>
-
-<p>The existence of these Regulations proved also a great
-stumbling-block in the Castle Hospital, after the war-pressure
-was over.</p>
-
-<p>Unless the Director-General, and in war and abroad, the
-Principal Medical Officer, are brought into regular communication
-with the Superintendent-General of Nurses, by the Rules,
-they will, at every inspection of Hospitals, revert to the procedure
-of giving orders and making alterations, which in fact
-amount to reprimands on the Superintendent-General, and on
-her Matrons, through the medium of some Clerk or Orderly.
-There should be, therefore, a distinct channel of communication
-laid down between the Director-General, and in war and
-abroad, the Principal Medical Officer and the Superintendent-General
-of Nurses.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">2. Also
-between
-Principal
-Medical Officer
-and Matron,
-Staff-Surgeons
-and Matron,
-Staff-Surgeons
-and Nurses,
-and the
-qualified
-subordination
-of the Matron
-and Nurses.</div>
-
-<p>2. Also, and in the same way, there should be distinct rules
-for direct communication between the Principal Medical Officer
-of each Hospital, and the Matron, and between the Staff (or
-equivalent) Surgeons of the Hospital, and the Matron; if not
-also between these latter and the Nurses.</p>
-
-<p>The constitution of a General Hospital is about to be organized
-in England. In the large War Hospitals there was
-the Principal Medical Officer, a Staff-Surgeon in charge o<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>f each
-Division, then the Assistant-Surgeon, who answered to what,
-as is now proposed, is called the Prescribing Medical Officer of
-the Wards. As regards the Matrons and Nurses, it must not
-be proposed to ignore all but these Prescribing Medical Officers.
-Certainly, it would never do to give the Superior Surgeons of
-the Hospital no <em>say</em> as to the nursing. In 999 cases out of
-1,000, the Superior and older Surgeon is the one who understands
-and cares much the most about the men, and who, therefore,
-in the long run, would more appreciate and be fairer to
-Matrons and Nurses who did their duty by them. The Superior
-and older Surgeons too, in general, have far more correct
-ideas of the importance of discipline in a ward, and of the ways
-of maintaining it, than the Assistant-Surgeons. Moreover, as
-far as one can judge on a mysterious subject, generally speaking,
-the older and Superior Surgeon is the honester man. He must
-be brought into direct communication with the Matron; this
-will effect good, and prevent mischief. So also let the Staff-Surgeon
-of the Division, or equivalent, be placed in direct communication
-with the Nurses of the wards of his Division; this
-will effect good and prevent mischief. If the Nurse is to trust
-to receiving the orders of the Staff-Surgeon, through the medium
-of the Assistant-Surgeon, she will often find herself in a false
-position.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">3. All the
-General
-Hospitals
-cannot be
-undertaken at
-once. (The
-material of
-Head-nurses to
-be created.)
-Secretary of
-State should
-be made aware
-that the
-Female Service
-can only be
-introduced
-gradually.
-Director-General
-must
-have a voice in
-the
-introduction.
-Director-General
-and
-Superintendent-General
-differing,
-Secretary of
-State to
-decide.</div>
-
-<p>3. Now, as to the introduction of Nurses into all General
-Hospitals&mdash;this gets rid of many difficulties, but at a fearful
-cost.</p>
-
-<p>For years to come, the difficulty will be not to extend the
-work, but to serve such Hospitals as must be undertaken, with
-respectable and efficient women. The material has, in a great
-degree, to be created; abundance of applications will be received&mdash;the
-prospect of a pension alone will do that&mdash;but the
-real choice will be very limited. In these Military Hospitals
-each Nurse must be a Head Nurse, and a trustworthy woman.
-Many a woman who will make a respectable and efficient
-Assistant-Nurse under the eye of a vigilant Head-Nurse, will
-not do at all when put in a military ward or wards, herself the
-only woman, and Head-Nurse over the Orderlies. As a body,
-the mass of Assistant-Nurses are too low in moral principle,
-and too flighty in manner, to make any use of here. Supposing
-all the Head-Nurses of the great Civil Hospitals<a name="Anchor_5" id="Anchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 5.">[5]</a> offered themselves,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>there are perhaps not many who could be recommended
-for a <em>Military</em> Hospital. Some, who are very highly to be
-thought of, would never bear transplanting into the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>res dura et</i>
-<em class="plain">servitii</em> <i>novitas</i></span> of the Army Hospitals. The class from which
-the Head-Nurses are mainly drawn, tradesmen’s and servants’
-widows, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, will volunteer in numbers, but, in the majority of
-cases, intending only to lead the idle life of many a London
-Head-Nurse&mdash;“mental, not manual labour”&mdash;“Superintendence”&mdash;<i>i.&nbsp;e.</i>,
-standing by while the Orderlies do her work and
-their own. The material has to be created. The rarest powers
-can do nothing effective in this, in 3, 6, or 12 months. To lay
-a solid foundation will take the patient, anxious labour of years.
-To begin with one Hospital would have great advantages.
-Netley, if it is proceeded with, might be the one, though, in
-most respects, a Hospital in an ordinary vulgar seaport would
-be far preferable. Then let the work gradually be extended.
-It is much more to be feared that the line will be taken of
-forcing prematurely than of opposing its extension. If it
-is attempted to occupy all the General Hospitals at once, how
-is the gratuitous repetition to be avoided of the inevitable
-misfortune of Scutari, viz., that of beginning on a large scale,
-with a number of strangers? It certainly should be left to the
-Director-General to regulate the introduction of Nurses into
-the General Hospitals&mdash;and there is far more reason to fear that
-he, if unfavourable to the change, will hurry, than obstruct such
-introduction; indeed it might be better to settle that matter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-beforehand with the Secretary of State, letting the Director-General
-be apprised of it, viz., that time is required to effect
-the gradual introduction of the Female Service with which the
-Superintendent-General has been charged.</p>
-
-<p>To sum up. A rule must be introduced by which the
-Director-General is brought into communication with the
-Superintendent-General, and her qualified subordination to him
-distinctly expressed. Let the Principal Medical Officer in war
-also communicate directly with the Superintendent-General or
-the person performing her functions in the War-Hospitals, and
-her qualified subordination to him be distinctly expressed.
-The same with each Principal Medical Officer of a Hospital,
-and the Matron of that Hospital. No alteration in these
-Regulations can, of course, be made without the consent of the
-Secretary of State. In case the Director-General and Superintendent-General
-finally differ as to any new arrangements,
-the matter should be referred to the Secretary of State.</p>
-
-<p>The Superintendent-General should issue special regulations
-for nurses, after conference with the Director-General, and
-under the sanction of the Secretary of State; also, local regulations
-for the Matrons with the consent of the Principal
-Medical Officer and sanction of the Governor of any General
-Hospital.</p>
-
-<p>If the Matron differ with the Principal Medical Officer, the
-decision should rest with the Governor of the Hospital.</p>
-
-<h3 title="">IV.</h3>
-
-<p>As to some miscellaneous considerations, of no small importance&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">1. Roman-Catholic
-Sisters?</div>
-
-<p>1. It is necessary for a Superintendent-General to have
-counted the cost, and to be prepared or not prepared to include
-Roman Catholic Sisters among the Nurses. This will deprive
-her of some valuable women; of one (speaking for the present
-time,) who is invaluable; of many decorous, not very
-useful women. The question is perhaps settled by the fact,
-that where you have the Roman Catholic Sister, you cannot be
-secure from the Roman Catholic Direction, with all its many
-strings, and machinery of opposition. Abroad the cause of the
-Roman Catholic Church is often the cause of religion; and the
-Romish Priest serves both zealously at the same time, and with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>a pure heart. In England, and in matters of England, the first
-aim of the Direction is too often to damage what is not Roman,
-and the second to promote what is Christian. Upon the
-whole I must think Roman-Catholic Sisters are better out of,
-than in, the Army Hospitals. It would be right to think well
-over how far they could be entirely dispensed with, in the event
-of having soon to undertake a War Service.</p>
-
-<p>In the event of a decision being made to dispense altogether
-with Roman Sisters, it would be as well to be prepared
-(though we never can speculate on the tactics of the
-Roman faction, and after what occurred during the Crimean
-war, it may think it better to take things quietly) for a battle,
-(<i>not</i> confined to the Army Medical Department,) for the production
-of an Inspector-General’s letter assigning “reasons”
-for preferring Nuns to secular Nurses, and for the delivery of
-sundry opinions of similar purport, ranging from that line to
-the one taken in the paper emanating from the Army Medical
-Department, extolling the Russian Nurses, “who were all
-Sisters of Mercy, and mostly widows of officers.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">2. Anglican
-Sisters?</div>
-
-<p>2. The nature of the Service and Rules would, unless in war
-service, perhaps exclude English “Sisters” from the Nurses.
-They supplied us with some valuable women in the last war,
-and their Lady-Superior behaved ever generously, loyally, and
-well towards us.</p>
-
-<p>The principle and detail of most sisterhoods render them
-unsuited for admixture with the secular element; and the
-comfortable belief into which the good women (of both
-branches) practically, if not theoretically, settle, that secular
-women are too bad to be mended or influenced, unfortunately
-makes their usefulness among Nurses nearly null. It would
-never do to unsettle any of the Sisters; but if it so happened
-that any voluntarily offered to serve as bonâ fide Nurses, some
-valuable individuals might thus be acquired; but this should
-not at all be pressed.</p>
-
-<p>It would certainly remove a difficulty in declining Roman
-Catholic Sisters, if the rule should be to decline also English
-Catholic Sisters, forming the Staff entirely of secular women.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">3. Whom is
-the Nurse to
-summon in
-case of
-disorderliness
-in the Ward?</div>
-
-<p>3. In Civil Hospitals there are three distinct elements of
-government. First, the Civil Authority; the chief being the
-Treasurer, or the equivalent civilian, whose subordinate is called
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>diversely Steward, Superintendent, House Governor; second,
-the Physicians and Surgeons (duly represented, in case of
-holidays or illness, by the Assistant Physicians or Surgeons),
-Apothecary and House Surgeon; and third, the chief of the
-Nurses&mdash;the Matron.</p>
-
-<p>It requires of course temper, discretion, forbearance, and
-fortunate circumstances which do not always happen, for these
-authorities not to spend a portion of their time in quarrelling
-with each other; but the ruts are old and deep, and the wheels
-move on, though they often stick. The Civil Authority is a
-very important element, especially when the chief is a man of
-judgment and firmness, who keeps himself paramount over all,
-and does not delegate all to his subordinate the Steward. The
-Steward and the Matron generally find their duties disposed to
-clash.</p>
-
-<p>In some Hospitals the rules are inexplicit in assigning
-power to the Matron over all the women. But this apart. The
-Steward represents and wields the police of the Hospital. He
-progresses through the wards, he perceives, or the Head Nurse
-reports to him, something disorderly. He rectifies it (or not,
-as the case and the man may be). She thus, over and above her
-relation to the Matron, has to appeal to, and to account to, the
-Steward.</p>
-
-<p>This power of police and discipline, wielded by the Civil
-Authority of the Hospital, is of immense moment in regulating
-the good order of the Hospital; it acts in sundry important
-ways which need not be particularized.</p>
-
-<p>Now, in the case of Military Hospitals, there is one important
-simplification of the business, which need not be enlarged
-upon. All the patients are men. But there are two things
-which do not simplify the machinery of the Military Hospital.
-The attendants, in the plan proposed, are not (and cannot be) all
-Nurses, under the Matron; nor all Orderlies, under an Officer;
-there are Nurses under a Matron, and Orderlies under some
-Officer; and there is no Civil element. The Doctors both prescribe,
-and hitherto have governed. An Officer orders flogging,
-<abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>; but the Doctors practically both prescribe, and hitherto
-have governed. And a Military Hospital must, and should ever
-remain, essentially different from a Civil Hospital; both
-different in discipline and detail, and altogether a rougher and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>ruder place. It should never for a moment be forgotten that
-the soldier is a very peculiar individual, old and stern as is his
-trade. A regiment, if one thinks <em>into</em> it, is a curious thing.
-The Hospital which receives these men when ill and wounded,
-whether regimental or general, is, and ought to be, a
-place essentially different in many things from the great
-Civil Hospital. The moral standard of the patients of the
-Military Hospital, their readiness to obey, their good feeling
-to each other, are strikingly higher than in the Civil Hospital;
-but the soldier is what, amidst all his faults, he has been made
-by the habit and spirit of discipline, which has become an
-instinct and a second nature, and which ennobles his own.
-Relax discipline, and in proportion as you do so, there remains
-of the soldier a being with as much or more of the brute than
-the man.</p>
-
-<p>Discipline then being the pivot upon which the good order
-of all military things, Military Hospitals included, turns, it
-follows, that if you set down a few women (they should not be
-many) in a great Military Hospital, unless they can become
-effectually incorporated into the general spirit of discipline of
-the place, they will only injure themselves and the whole.</p>
-
-<p>As women, the more entirely they are under the government
-of the Matron, herself under the government of the Superintendent-General,
-the better. As Ward Nurses, the more
-entirely they are under the orders of their Surgeons, the better;
-but they have not only to obey the Surgeons, they have to
-enforce the Surgeons’ orders among the patients, and both for
-so doing, and for the cleanliness, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, of the ward, they have to
-give orders to the Orderlies.</p>
-
-<p>In the case where a rule will work, by which, if the Nurse
-has to complain of an Orderly, she reports the same to the
-Matron, who lays the complaint before the chief of the
-Orderlies (whatever may be fixed upon as his name); well
-and good; but a more direct procedure will also be found
-necessary.</p>
-
-<p>Every firm and discreet woman (none other is fit for a
-male ward, least of all for a military ward), will avoid collisions,
-reports, and violent outbreaks in the ward as much as possible.
-But still, every now and then these things will happen, and
-though by all means to be avoided if possible, when they do
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>come, they clear the ward-atmosphere like a storm, provided
-the discipline be strict. Every now and then&mdash;and every
-experienced Head Nurse will tell the same story&mdash;some disobedience,
-slovenliness, truculence, or sly impudence, will arise
-in the ward, and she will find she cannot put it down alone.
-If she remain helplessly deprecating or scolding the men, her
-position becomes at once an unseemly and a dangerous one,
-as that of all contemned authority is. In such a case, in the
-Civil Hospital, the Head Nurse goes straight, according to the
-nature of the case, to the House Surgeon or to the Steward,
-unless the visiting hour be at hand, and she judges it best to
-refer to the Surgeon. Discretion is again here required, as in
-everything in Hospitals; but between the Surgeon and the
-Steward, a firm, discreet Head Nurse will generally get the
-ringleader expelled, and two or three others, named or unnamed,
-warned of a similar fate. After this sort of explosion, the
-ward is quiet and orderly for months. The thing is seldom
-done, but the patients know it can be done at any time, and
-that it will be done, in such or such a contingency.</p>
-
-<p>Now the soldier cannot be turned out of Hospital, and he
-knows he cannot. It becomes the more important not to suffer
-an hour’s relaxation of discipline there. If, therefore, such an
-outbreak, either on the part of patients or orderlies, should
-happen in a Military Hospital, the Nurse ought to be able to
-summon at once the proper authority and afterwards to report
-the whole to the Matron, but first to bring direct the proper
-authority into the ward. Whether it be the Captain of Orderlies
-or the Orderly Medical Officer, or, as in case of emergencies,
-is generally preferable, the Staff-Surgeon himself, she ought
-to have power at once to bring the proper authority into the
-ward, to put down confusion and restore discipline at once, and
-then afterwards to report to the Matron what has passed.</p>
-
-<p>It must never be forgotten, that in every Regiment we must
-calculate upon there being two or three thorough scoundrels,
-five or six men who are not far off from being so, and an indeterminate
-number whom discipline saves from ranking after
-them. One year with another, characters no doubt as vile as
-the worst that disgrace our gaols pass through the General
-Hospitals.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span></p>
-<p>Another thing to be remembered is, that whatever classification
-may be carried out, we may be certain beforehand that
-numbers of patients from a vile cause will be in the ordinary
-surgical wards of every General Hospital in time of peace.
-Very severe cases of this sort give heavy work, and little
-trouble. They suffer much generally, alike from disease and
-treatment; are frightened, if not ashamed, about themselves;
-and are generally extra-submissive and quiet. These cases,
-however, generally would belong to the separated wards; which
-latter contain usually a large admixture of patients who suffer
-comparatively little, and who require to be dealt with with
-unswerving firmness. For reasons somewhat too technical to
-write, it is to be hoped, upon the whole, that female service will
-not be, <em>at first, at all events</em>, extended to these wards. The
-disgusting and comparatively painless secondary condition
-will, I fear, find its way into the ordinary surgical wards, as
-it does into the equivalent wards of every Civil Hospital.</p>
-
-<p>All these things would increase the mistake of laying any
-bar between the Staff Surgeon and the Nurse. In all matters
-of discipline, generally speaking, the Staff Surgeon will give
-much more support than the Assistant Surgeon.</p>
-
-<p>A short definite rule should therefore be made, saying whom
-the Nurse is to summon in the event of disorderliness in the
-ward.</p>
-
-<p>One thing more. There is nothing more dangerous than to
-undervalue the objections of opponents. Let us give them their
-full weight, and while firmly holding our course, and trusting
-to God to guide it, draw useful cautions from the objections
-which we quietly and steadily confront.</p>
-
-<p>In the great Military Hospitals, of Roman-Catholic countries,
-intelligent, well-behaved, Army Surgeons, while explaining
-everything with thorough business-like precision, if spoken to
-of the Paris Army Hospitals, before the recently introduced
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sœurs de <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Vincent</span> served there, and asked what they think
-upon the whole of the service of women in Army Hospitals&mdash;after
-a little hesitation, and being urged to speak plainly, will
-generally say that they prefer in Civil Hospitals the service
-of <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sœurs</span> to those of hired nurses&mdash;but they deprecate
-either Sisters or any women in Military Hospitals. 1.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>Because the presence of women, however virtuous and guarded,
-would excite passions and produce unfavourable results in many
-cases. 2. Because they were unnecessary, the Orderlies being
-efficient, faithful, kind, and sufficient.</p>
-
-<p>Of the second reason one can judge nothing by a walk
-through a hospital, as it does not always follow that what the
-master says is enough is so&mdash;though this is one of the
-mysteries it is good to know and not good to reveal. Of the
-first there is no doubt. The question remains, striking
-the balance of good and evil&mdash;Do chaste, guarded, and
-efficient nurses on the whole contribute more to the economy
-of human life, the order, cleanliness, and decency of a Military
-Hospital than they do harm? Possibly the former effects are
-usual and general; the latter exceptional and rare: after all,
-most soldiers are men and not beasts. But it is well and necessary
-to bear in mind both the existence of this danger, and the
-exaggerated fears many Army Surgeons conscientiously as well
-as unconscientiously have of it.</p>
-
-<p>I therefore very earnestly hope that the work will not be
-encumbered, at first at all events, with the charge of the venereal
-wards. And it is most important, for the favourable result
-of the anxious and difficult experiment about to be made, of
-permanently introducing female service into Army Hospitals,
-that we should be quite clear of the convalescent patients,
-and should only attend patients severely ill or severely
-injured.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">4. Pay and
-Rations.</div>
-
-<p>4. <span class="smcap">Pay and Rations.</span>&mdash;In the great Civil Hospitals the
-Head-Nurses have, on an average, 50<i><abbr title="pounds">l.</abbr></i> a-year, no board, an
-allowance of fuel and light, and the use of one or two, generally
-unfurnished, rooms. The Assistant-Nurses, on an average,
-receive about 12<i><abbr title="shillings">s.</abbr></i> a-week, [<abbr title="31 pounds">£31</abbr> per annum] no board, lodging,
-with the use of some furniture, sometimes an allowance of fuel
-and light, apart from the use of both in the wards.</p>
-
-<p>Both Guy’s and <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Bartholomew’s Hospitals now give partial
-board to the Assistant-Nurses, and <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Thomas’s is about
-to adopt the same plan.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Mary’s Hospital gives board to both Head and Assistant-Nurses.</p>
-
-<p>In the last war Her Majesty’s Nurses received, on an
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>average, 18<i><abbr title="shillings">s.</abbr></i> a-week, lodging and board, fuel, light, and partial
-clothing&mdash;18<i><abbr title="shillings">s.</abbr></i> a-week is 46<i><abbr title="pounds">l.</abbr></i> 16<i><abbr title="shillings">s.</abbr></i> yearly. Incorporated into
-a permanent Service, and with a pension, they ought not to
-receive the latter amount until after approved years of Service.</p>
-
-<p>It is certainly a different thing to undertake service in a
-Hospital in Smithfield or the Borough, and to undertake to
-go, at a moment’s notice, to any part of the world. But the
-Army Service involves this; and the pension it involves makes
-a reasonable equivalent for the additional wear and tear of
-climate, travel, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> Going abroad is a regular part of the
-Service undertaken.</p>
-
-<p>Any artificial inducements should be avoided; at the same
-time their condition should be made a comfortable one.
-Wages, say 20<i><abbr title="pounds">l.</abbr></i>, rising to 50<i><abbr title="pounds">l.</abbr></i> a-year, rations, an allowance of
-fuel and light, and a small furnished room, would be enough,
-and not too much. To this should be added a fixed annual gift
-of a few strong articles of regulation dress;<a name="Anchor_6" id="Anchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 6.">[6]</a> avoiding multiplicity,
-and securing the things being all good of their kind. In
-the last war they had too many things, and some were rubbish.
-They ought to be well able to supply themselves with linen,
-shoes, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, whether at home or when ordered abroad. The
-articles to be given annually should be three strong dark
-gowns, six strong aprons, six caps, six collars, one bonnet&mdash;and
-let the things be good&mdash;biennially or triennially, one summer
-and one winter cloak. In India, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, this might be modified.
-Their room should be furnished, because, in removing to and
-fro, it is better to release them from the cares and the pretences
-of furniture; also, because, instead of many gimcracks,
-you can thus furnish their rooms with a few comfortable,
-strong, plain things, presenting a certain military simplicity,
-which ought to pervade a Military Hospital.</p>
-
-<p>Their wages abroad should not be increased. Whether they
-serve at home or abroad concerns the Superintendent-General
-alone, and is no merit or title for additional advantages on their
-part.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p><div class="sidenote">Shall Rations
-be commutable
-for Mess-money
-in the
-United
-Kingdom?</div>
-
-<p>If the principle of rations is considered preferable by the
-War Department, it is important to give no extra trouble that
-can be helped. If not, it is to be considered whether or not
-it would be well to get rid of the rations, in the three kingdoms
-at all events, for these reasons:</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(1.) Because
-such
-commutation
-allows greater
-variety.</div>
-
-<p>(1.) These women are Head-Nurses. They will think
-themselves more comfortable “finding themselves” than
-managing on the substantial and somewhat unvarying provisions
-of the rations. Some take coffee rather than tea; some
-tea rather than coffee; many would rather pay for white sugar
-than not pay for brown. Considering the nature of nursing-work,
-when faithfully done, it is better they should enjoy and
-be refreshed by simple meals to their taste than by unpalatable
-larger portions; especially if <em>the former can be done at no additional
-cost or trouble to the Queen</em>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(2.) Because it
-averts
-complaints.</div>
-
-<p>(2.) You thus relieve the Superintendent and Matrons of
-all communication with the department of the Purveyor-General;
-of all the mistakes, accidental or otherwise, which
-might occur; of all complaints of quantity or quality of provisions;
-of amenities such as those experienced at Balaclava
-General Hospital, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr></p>
-
-<p>Of five London Hospitals, the three endowed Hospitals pay
-all their Head-Nurses in money, and give no board. (This is
-strictly correct, although, to avoid a long unimportant detail, I
-have simplified things in this paragraph, and in the two concerning
-the pay of Head-Nurses and Nurses.) The London Hospital
-gives its Head-Nurses wages, and a fixed quarterly payment
-<i>vice</i> the rations of bread, meat, and vegetables, to which they are
-by the rules entitled. This change was made not very long
-ago, to end the frequent complaints of quantity, quality, and
-price, made, perhaps with foundation, by the Nurses. The
-Westminster Hospital paid its Head-Nurses partly in money,
-partly in rations of cooked provisions, and there were repeated
-and general complaints of the quality, quantity, and cooking
-of the provisions issued to them.</p>
-
-<p>It is therefore to be considered whether the simpler and
-better plan be not to give the Nurses a fixed money payment,
-and let them “find themselves,” unless the War Department
-object to rations not being issued in part payment.</p>
-
-<p>Abroad in many cases, in war in all cases, rations would be
-desirable. A fixed calculation as to expense should be
-made.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span></p>
-<p>Experience and consideration will probably give rise to the
-following conclusion&mdash;except in war and in retired stations
-abroad, not to have Rations; still less to let the Nurses
-“find themselves,” for the following reasons:&mdash;(1.) It
-is important that the Nurses should not have this excuse for
-being absent from their duties&mdash;“that they have been to get
-provisions.” (When absent, it should be in pursuit of health
-and exercise.) (2.) If the Nurse is to cook for herself, greater
-accommodation will be required than the <em>one</em> room recommended,
-otherwise the necessary cleanliness cannot be observed.
-To commute the Rations for mess-money, to put this mess-money
-in charge of the Matron, wherever there is a market;
-wherever there is none, to let her “<em>draw</em>” for such provisions
-on her own indent, as she thinks best, upon the Purveyor, appears
-to me the safest course. For with regard to this question
-of dieting the Nurses it should never be forgotten that, in all
-cases (how much more in those where great physical fatigue
-and mental anxiety are involved) that principle is the best, if
-such can be established, which settles diet with a view to producing
-the highest physical efficiency. Variety and mode of
-cooking are two essential elements in this. And there can be
-no doubt that, if a Matron will take the trouble to consult the
-tastes of her Nurses, together with the above conditions, a
-better diet might be laid down than could be secured by leaving
-them solely to their unassisted vagaries and ignorance of
-what is really the best diet. Community of cooking also implies
-economy. Also the Nurse ought not to be permitted to
-starve herself, to save money. Her time is too valuable to
-allow of her cooking her own dinner; but she should always
-prepare her own breakfast and tea, when and of what she prefers
-herself, if she feels inclined to do so.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">If not
-commutable,</div>
-
-<p>Where, however, the system of rations must be adopted,
-three ways remain of working it:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(1.) Shall the
-Nurse cook
-her own
-Rations?</div>
-
-<p>(1.) Let each Nurse receive, and cook her own rations.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(2.) Shall the
-Matron cook
-and send
-them?</div>
-
-<p>(2.) Let the rations be delivered <i>en masse</i> to the Matron,
-who has them cooked, sending her proportion to each Nurse.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(3.) Shall the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>Matron have
-each Nurse’s
-Dinner cooked
-for her, as she
-likes best?</div>
-
-<p>(3.) Let the Matron, requiring a small payment to cover
-expenses, arrange that each Nurse can receive her dinner
-cooked as she wishes it. There is something of this sort at the
-London Hospital; where the Nurses (and Assistant Nurses)
-have the right of sending their joint to be boiled or baked in
-one of the kitchen stoves.</p>
-
-<p>Of these different ways, the first would be liked best by the
-women&mdash;a thing to be considered, in subordination, and as a
-help to their respectability and their efficiency&mdash;still it is,
-for some reasons stated above, objectionable. However,
-in this, as in far more important things, it is essential to
-consider everything as tentative and experimental for some
-years to come. Do not be fettered by too many rules at first:
-try different things, and see which answers best.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to rations, it is as well to explain that there
-were two ways of drawing them for the nurses during the war.
-In some of the Crimean Hospitals, it was arranged that the
-same ration should be drawn for a Nurse as that appointed by
-Regulation for a Medical Staff Orderly. This answered, as may
-be supposed, exceedingly ill. There was considerably more of
-some articles, such as bread and meat, than the women could
-eat; and the surplus had to be wasted or returned to the Purveyor&mdash;a
-serious complication. Of some articles, such as tea
-and sugar, there was as much too little; and these had to
-be drawn as extras, except such as the Superintendent-General
-found it easier and more simple, as she generally did, to provide
-herself.</p>
-
-<p>The other method was for the Local Superintendent to draw
-daily on the Purveyor for such articles as she judged necessary;
-and by thus drawing <i>en masse</i>, a considerable saving was, of
-course, effected for the Queen, the tastes and health of women
-were consulted, and there was no complication of accounts.</p>
-
-<p>Where rations are to be drawn at all the latter method should
-be always followed; and as the former might be understood by
-the word “rations,” it would be better to call them by some
-other name, as it must be obvious that such a method could
-never answer for women.</p>
-
-<p>The experiment which I should wish to try, by which greater
-variety could be secured, but which could only be practised
-where there was a market at hand, would be for a commutation
-to be made of rations for money. Each nurse to supply
-her quota of “mess money,” the “mess money” to be all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-expended on the “mess,” and the Matron to manage the “mess”
-day by day, and arrange for the cooking to be done in common.
-If each nurse’s dinner is to be cooked separately, it necessarily
-entails great waste of nourishment. The Nurses would not
-like this so well as “finding themselves,” but it would ensure
-them a far better diet.<a name="Anchor_7" id="Anchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 7.">[7]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Wages and
-Mess-money
-must be
-distinct.</div>
-
-<p>It would be a question whether the Queen should pay the
-Superintendent-General so much for each Nurse’s wages, and
-so much for board, the latter to be retained by the Superintendent-General,
-or whether the Superintendent-General or
-each Matron, with the Superintendent-General’s consent,
-should arrange with the Nurses. This is important, as which
-ever way it is settled, there must not be disputes between
-Matron, Nurses, or still less Superintendent-General, as to
-what amount of wages is to be allotted to the board, or what
-savings can be effected in the coals, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr></p>
-
-<p>On the whole it would seem best for the Nurse’s pay to
-be so much in money for herself, and so much in money for
-food into the Superintendent-General’s hands. But the question
-of how much is a serious business.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">5. Washing,
-how to be
-done? Rule
-to compel the
-Nurses to <em>put
-it out</em>.</div>
-
-<p>5. <span class="smcap">Washing.</span>&mdash;Except in war-emergencies, this must not be
-suffered to be done by the Nurses, they must be compelled to
-put it out. I would not trouble the Authorities about this;
-the Nurses can afford it, and the more things are simplified the
-better. In out-of-the-way districts, the Matron might
-arrange with a laundress, the Nurses making a fair payment.
-In war-emergencies, if possible, provide a strong washerwoman,
-but this would have to be settled each case on its merits.
-Except in emergencies they must not wash; it takes up far too
-much time; it takes up strength which is wanted for other
-things; and washing and drying either in wards or nurses’
-rooms is unhealthy and objectionable. There must be a rule
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>as to this: some worthy souls would scrub at every rag, rather
-than pay a few pence weekly. The Nurse ought, however, to
-be compelled to have certain changes of linen weekly, which
-some will not, if they pay for it themselves.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">6. Cleaning
-their own
-Rooms. No
-Orderly, on
-any pretence,
-must enter a
-Nurse’s Room.
-Scrubbing the
-only thing the
-Matron may
-arrange for a
-Soldier’s Wife
-to do. Nurse
-must do
-nothing of her
-own in Ward,
-or Ward-kitchen,
-or
-Orderlies’
-Kitchen.</div>
-
-<p>6. <span class="smcap">Cleaning their own rooms.</span>&mdash;I well foresee sundry
-difficulties in the little rooms at the entrance of their wards,
-where I hope it will be managed to quarter the Nurses. But
-there is no other way of fairly and really working a ward; and
-I trust this plan will receive a fair trial. For efficiency, also
-for comfort, it is most objectionable to make the Nurse sleep
-at a distance from the patients. This is one of the points on
-which theories, and the practical working of things, are very
-divergent. It is an excellent thing when the Head-Nurse’s
-room opens into the ward and when part of the upper part is
-of glass, with a thick curtain, so that she can see into the ward,
-without being seen. Let each Head-Nurse have a small room,
-with a window opening into external air, with a curtain making
-an alcove, behind which there should be a small iron bedstead,
-with good bedding, and a washing table; and in the foreground
-a table, a small one for meals, a chest of drawers, and a comfortable
-arm-chair, two chairs, and I should add a sofa. Each room should
-have a few shelves on the wall, and a large cupboard or small
-closet with broad shelves, and space at the bottom to stow away
-the Nurse’s box. Simplification and avoiding all trouble which
-can be spared to the Departments are very important. I would
-not therefore insist upon a little kitchen for the Nurses, nor
-upon a very capital arrangement in some of the Sisters’ rooms
-in Guy’s Hospital, where, behind a decent little door <em>in</em> the
-sitting-room, there is a sink, with water laid on, a little safe for
-meat, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, at top, and a complete little apparatus of the very few
-utensils required for cooking one woman’s meals; so that a
-Nurse can cook and wash-up, in her own room, without carrying
-things out of it. This is much better than a kitchen, if the
-Nurse is to cook her own meals; but, as above stated, I would
-rather she did not. One room, with a curtain making an alcove,
-is much better than two. The Queen is saved fuel; the Nurse is
-saved cleaning two rooms; and if fuel is only issued for one, she
-sleeps in a warm room, instead of one where there never is a fire,
-and where her things get damp and spoiled. Often, where Head-nurses
-have two rooms, one is built without a fire-place. Condense
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>and simplify all things&mdash;one great object is to form a
-body of useful hard-working women, of simple self-helping
-habits. Two Nurses’ rooms should be together, but separate.
-Sudden illness might occur, and the two women should be at
-each other’s summons. The Quartermaster-General <em>must</em> grant
-a <em>cabinet</em> between the two: this is <em>must</em>, not <em>may</em>. The Superintendent-General
-must see to this herself, at first at all events:
-there <em>is</em> a singular obtuseness in the small officials, by whom
-these things are managed: if not overlooked, they will be sure
-to put the construction in a particularly awkward, exposed place.
-These things do enter into an Englishwoman’s daily comfort or
-misery&mdash;it is worth arranging them decently in the first
-instance.</p>
-
-<p>Now as to the cleaning of these rooms. Head Nurses
-generally are far too much disposed to make servants of their
-nurses; put orderlies for nurses, and this objectionable tendency
-would be a hundred-fold more objectionable. The Matron
-must make it an absolute rule, that the only thing an orderly
-does for a nurse is to carry her box in and out on the two grand
-occasions of her entering and leaving the Hospital. The one
-thing which in a Civil Hospital, an Assistant Nurse should be
-allowed to do for the Head Nurse, is the cleaning her fire-place,
-a thing done in a few minutes, and with satisfaction, by women
-who have done it all their lives; but a dirty tedious messing
-business to those who have not. But never mind: the orderly
-must never enter the Nurse’s room: she must do it, and learn
-to do it. The prosaic little business of black-lead, ashes, and
-mess lying on the threshold of the work will do good rather
-than harm. And even black-lead is unnecessary, as a varnish
-now obtainable looks better. The orderly must never enter the
-Nurse’s room&mdash;a <i>sine quâ non</i>. The Nurses should have, at
-their choice, a carpet, not nailed down, or none. In either
-case the room will require scrubbing, once a week if no carpet,
-(which is best and cleanest in Hospital life), seldomer, if carpet.
-Now the Nurses should not be required to scrub their own rooms&mdash;it
-is useless waste of strength&mdash;it makes their hands coarse
-and hard, and less able to attend to the delicate manipulation
-which they may be called upon to execute&mdash;and with all the
-<em>nursing proper</em> which ought to fall upon them, and not upon
-the orderlies, their time can be better occupied than in cleaning
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>their own rooms. Also, while trying to keep clear, on the
-one hand, of the tribe of “fine ladies,” it will be possible, on
-the other, if such menial offices are to be performed, to fall into
-the opposite mistake and to fail in obtaining the class of women
-desirable to fill such important trusts. Let the Matron consent
-to a charwoman, soldier’s wife, or some one person named and
-defined, and found, to be paid by the Head Nurse, to come for the
-two hours, which, at furthest, this business will take. It would
-be well worth while for the Matron to look out and provide
-two or three strong women to do this, by fixed rotation&mdash;each
-Nurse making a fair payment&mdash;and to ascertain that they are in
-and out of the Hospital by a particular hour, so as to prevent
-these external persons doing other things than scrubbing. But
-do not trouble the Departments as to this&mdash;the more things are
-simplified, and the fewer expenses are in connection with the
-Nurses, by far the better.</p>
-
-<p>Take the trouble to see that a tidy useful fire-place is in
-each Nurse’s one room. Some fire-places will consume thrice
-the fuel of one which can do ten times more work. A compact
-useful little fire-place, to burn as little fuel, and do as much
-business (in a very small way) as possible, is a thing of daily
-use, economy, and comfort.</p>
-
-<p>The nurse should not do anything of her own in the ward,
-or the ward or orderlies’ scullery, if there is such a place.
-This is a matter requiring some decision.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">7. In each
-Ward to be
-Closet, with
-Shelves, Table
-with Drawers,
-Nurse with
-Keys.
-Nothing to be
-kept in Nurse’s
-Room. Linen,
-Dressings,
-Stimulants to
-be kept in
-Ward Closets.</div>
-
-<p>7. Let there be in each ward a closet, or, better still, a
-dresser,<a name="Anchor_8" id="Anchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 8.">[8]</a> with broad shelves, and a large table with large
-drawers, of which closet or dresser, and drawers, the
-nurse has the sole keys. Let the articles of linen which
-are kept in the ward be there; also the bandages, lint,
-old linen, oilsilk, ointments, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, which should always be,
-some at hand, some in reserve; also the wine and brandy
-ordered for the men. Let the nurse never be allowed to deposit
-Hospital property in her room, which, if there is no place for
-it, she <em>must</em> do, and it is much better she should not.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p>
-<div class="sidenote">8. Matrons
-200<i><abbr title="pounds">l.</abbr></i> per
-annum,
-Quarters, and
-a Maid.
-A woman for
-the Linen,
-ranking and
-paid as a
-Nurse, but
-never entering
-the wards.</div>
-
-<p>8. With regard to the Matrons, though as Locke says of
-tutors, there are all kinds of persons to be found, it is certain
-the right persons are not always found; and these officers will
-take time to find, at the outset especially. Let them be (if it
-be possible) of the middle class; if it be possible, middle aged,
-active women, widows of officers or army surgeons. A vast
-deal of struggle is ever going on in professional life; a vast
-deal of silent, decorous misery ever follows on the premature
-deaths, the compelled early retirements, the sundry chances
-and changes which ever abound in the army of England. So
-far as it goes, and <i>cæteris paribus</i>, it would be right, just,
-and expedient to give a preference for these matronships to
-widows of officers and army surgeons. Try to secure thorough
-principle, sense, activity, and steady discreet ways; never mind a
-little vulgarity of manner; that the different orders should have
-their indefinable perpetual distinctions of manner as of other
-things, is perhaps for a long time to come in the essence of
-things. Two or three women of the stamp of the Matrons of
-a few of our Civil Hospitals would be very valuable. If the
-Matron do not get tired of what, unless one keeps one’s
-secret thoughts fixed on the meaning and the end of all things,
-is coarse, thankless, up-hill work enough&mdash;she will in the
-course of years accomplish great good. But she must have
-principle, sense, heart, and a firm cheerful mind. She must be
-not under thirty and, if possible, not over forty, on appointment.
-Should her being without children be made a <i>sine
-quâ non</i>? Children&mdash;poor little things&mdash;are wanted nowhere
-in the way of business, but do not be too strict about
-this: they are sometimes pledges to other things than fortune&mdash;thoughts,
-anxieties, and labours for them, concentrate and
-steady a mother’s heart&mdash;there will be fewer adventurers.
-Maternal <em>nurses</em> must upon the whole be discouraged,
-because upon the whole the disadvantages seem to overweigh
-the advantages.<a name="Anchor_9" id="Anchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 9.">[9]</a> But the Matron’s office and duties are different;
-she is not fixed to a great ward of patients; and
-her having children should not be a bar, especially if they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-did not live with her. Young and grown-up daughters are
-much in a Matron’s way; sons matter much less.</p>
-
-<p>The greatest Civil Hospital gives its Matron 200<i><abbr title="pounds">l.</abbr></i> and a <em>house</em>,
-the other great Hospitals, 150<i><abbr title="pounds">l.</abbr></i>, and a <em>house</em>. The London
-Hospital gives 150<i><abbr title="pounds">l.</abbr></i>, and a couple of good well-furnished
-rooms, and a servant. A <em>house</em> is an impediment to a Matron’s
-duty. She is seen arriving in the wards, and she is more or
-less hindered in entering them. From her rooms she issues
-and re-issues, unexpectedly, and much more efficiently. 200<i><abbr title="pounds">l.</abbr></i>
-and quarters is not at all too much.</p>
-
-<p>The Matron must be responsible for the storing, mending, and
-distribution of the linen, and for returning to the laundry any
-linen not properly washed or dried. Linen ought never to be
-dried in the wards, a process both inconvenient and unwholesome.
-The Matron ought to have a steady, respectable woman, certainly
-not below the rank and pay of a nurse, to be responsible to, and
-under her, for the linen, otherwise the proper care of the linen will
-take up far too much of her time. This is important. If, however,
-a Nurse should be thus set aside for the Laundry, she must not
-be allowed to enter the wards; otherwise she will unconsciously
-become a gossip and mischief-maker. I would term
-her “Linen Nurse,” not Assistant. The Matron should
-also have a steady, properly paid servant. A Matron of
-the proper sort has quite other things to do at a leisure
-moment, than to keep her wardrobe in order. She must
-have a servant; but it seems to be advisable to simplify
-things, and condense payments as much as possible; and I
-would rather consider this in the salary, and let the Matron
-find and pay her own servant. Try to have the servant’s room
-near the Matron’s. These minutiæ, once provided for, enter
-much into the daily working and comfort of things.</p>
-
-<p>The dress of the Matrons is a difficult thing to settle. Sometimes
-a Matron is afflicted with a taste for either gorgeous or
-elegant apparel, which the Nurses are invariably proud of, admire
-and humbly emulate. This sort of thing would be really out of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>place in a Military Hospital, and would moreover sadly discompose
-the Nurses with their plain caps and gowns. How would
-it be to allow the Matrons the choice between a Regulation
-dress and a plain black or brown silk gown?</p>
-
-<p>It will take much thought to decide whether the Matrons
-should all be paid alike, or whether climate and size of Hospital
-enter into this. On the one hand they undertake a service,
-of which almost the first regulation very properly is, that they
-undertake to go to all parts of the world as soon as sent; on
-the other hand, certainly some climates wear health and life
-much quicker than at home.</p>
-
-<p>The Matrons out of the three kingdoms have increased
-responsibility, and can do more mischief, if incompetent or
-untrustworthy.</p>
-
-<p>If the Matron has increased pay abroad, it would not do
-not to augment that of the Nurses. This is an important
-matter; and as it is on all accounts necessary that Matrons
-and Nurses should on their engagement thoroughly understand
-the nature of the service they undertake and, of course, a
-serious part of the service is that it involves sudden and long
-removals, it would be necessary to define upon what terms
-they go abroad. Yet it never would do, for reasons which
-will readily be perceived, to make the foreign stations objects
-of desire to Matrons and Nurses. These stations will always
-be so far the most anxious, that they will always be the most
-removed from the Superintendent-General’s inspection and
-immediate rectification of anything that goes wrong. They will
-also be, in various ways, the most trying to Nurses. The rules
-once settled, every Matron and Nurse refusing to go abroad
-when ordered, ought at once to be discharged, and to forfeit
-all re-admittance into the service and all pensions. On the
-whole, I think the Matrons should all be paid alike. But
-inasmuch as foreign service necessitates more wear and
-tear to the constitution, one year should count as equal
-to two years of service for pension, in case of disability.
-The same should be made applicable to the Nurses. As the
-advantage is distant, it would, in a great measure, do away
-with any desire for foreign service.</p>
-
-<p>Volunteering for foreign or war-serv<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>ice must be the exception&mdash;careful
-selection the rule. The “adventurers” will
-be generally ready to volunteer, and it would be too much to
-hope that we shall always, perhaps ever, be entirely free from
-that tribe; the most we can hope is soon to discover and get
-rid of them. Foreign stations will never do for an untried
-Matron or Nurse. At the same time it is most desirable not
-to change the Executive officers of any Hospital more than
-can be avoided.</p>
-
-<p>But let there not be too many rules at first; see how things
-work, and take one step at a time.</p>
-
-<p>The selection of exclusively middle-class Matrons seems to
-be important.<a name="Anchor_10" id="Anchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 10.">[10]</a> Their order will disarm one source of opposition
-and jealousy; plenty more will remain, inseparable from
-the work; but it is good to get this out of the way.</p>
-
-<p>The name of Matron is the same as in Civil Hospitals. In
-many respects the office and duties are different: <i>e.&nbsp;g.</i>, the
-Matron in Military Hospitals must exercise a far more constant
-supervision in the wards. But this will require great discretion
-on her part. It is the practice of most Civil Hospitals
-for the Matron never to enter the wards till the Nurse’s
-dressings are over. It would be advantageous to modify this.
-But, at the same time, the Matron must understand Hospital
-Nursing, or she may make very serious mistakes in either
-reprimanding or directing the Nurse as to technical matters.
-She must be a person who knows herself what she has to see
-that others know; or she will get herself, with or without the
-Nurse, into very injurious errors. There is much in a name;
-and, in some respects, that of Superintendent would better
-denote her office, as regards the Nurses, would add to her
-authority, which is desirable, and would point her out as acting
-under the Superintendent-General.</p>
-
-<p>Incorporate among the Nurses whatever women of the
-higher orders may be admitted into the Service at first. If
-inefficient and unfit they are far better altogether eliminated.
-If thoroughly efficient as Ward Nurses, if thoroughly obedient
-and respectful to the Matron, if they have sense and heart to
-gradually leaven, not coldly withdraw from occasional companionship
-with the other Nurses, they will, in the course of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>time, effect quietly a great deal of good.</p>
-
-<p>There should be some Rule of this kind&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Any Matron or Nurse who may receive permission to serve
-Her Majesty without pay shall be, in all respects, bound by and
-amenable to the Regulations on pain of dismissal from the service,
-without permission of re-entering it.</p>
-
-<p>If this cannot be done, money can easily be returned in one
-shape or other; but it would have a good moral effect
-on the Nurses to allow of the admixture of unpaid Nurses, provided
-they are strictly bound by the same Regulations, and
-distinguished by no sort of peculiar designation.</p>
-
-<p>The Surgeons will dislike these unpaid Nurses; but, in the long
-run a firm, discreet woman, <em>who is an efficient Nurse</em>, can get on
-with any Surgeon <em>who has his sick at heart</em>. The Matron also will
-not at all like them, at first, but will find that she can rely upon
-them and that they quietly and effectually help her with the other
-Nurses: and, if she has her heart in her work, she will end by
-being just, though, perhaps, always a little extra strict with
-and jealous of them. The other Nurses will have, at the first,
-a strong little touch of republicanism towards them, which will
-gradually wear off, and, with God’s help, a higher and truer
-moral tone, and a simpler and more useful kind of habits
-among them will prevail, than would otherwise be the case.
-As for the patients, with all their faults, trust them&mdash;trust the
-English soldier, and the peasantry from which he springs. What
-these poor fellows are we know, and need not discuss. They
-are worth suffering a good deal for; please God in the long run
-good will be done. If only we can keep clear of the false,
-pernicious, and derogatory system of puffery and fuss which
-others, for their own purposes, and from vague, silly good-feeling
-have wound around this work&mdash;a work essentially unpopular
-the moment we come to details! We have learnt what
-reality is and what its presence or absence in this business
-imports. As for the many and great other difficulties of the
-work, they must be appreciated, they need not be dreaded. The
-purpose is a good and noble one, and God grant it success!
-All we have to do is, to do our utmost, and leave the event to
-Him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p><div class="sidenote">9. Nurses&mdash;begin
-with few
-at first.</div>
-
-<p>9. As for the Nurses the material must be formed. If
-a few respectable soldiers’ widows, including, and all the
-better, non-commissioned officers’ widows, could be found,
-<i>cæteris paribus</i>, a preference should be given to widows
-of the Service.</p>
-
-<p>Except in emergencies Nurses should not be taken under
-thirty, or above forty<a name="Anchor_11" id="Anchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 11.">[11]</a> years of age. These women are Head
-Nurses. Most of the Civil Hospitals take no Head Nurse
-after forty.</p>
-
-<p>One caution in engaging Nurses is perhaps not sufficiently
-attended to. Certificates, without personal inquiry and answers
-to distinct questions, are not worth the paper on which they
-are written.</p>
-
-<p>As to engaging any Nurses out of the great Hospitals, for
-sundry reasons, this should be done as little as may be.</p>
-
-<p>Let us begin, for the sake of God and this His work, with
-few women. Extension is easy&mdash;to occupy too much ground
-at first would be, I do in my conscience believe, an irretrievable
-mistake.</p>
-
-<p>No unnecessary Nurses should be suffered in Hospital; and
-no Nurse in charge of wards should be required to do needlework
-for the Hospital. There should be no superfluous hands;
-and the less a Nurse enters another’s ward the better.</p>
-
-<p>In case of suspension of a Nurse for misconduct, temporary
-assistance must, however, be obtained; and this might be either
-appointing another Nurse, to do, for the time, such duty in the
-suspended ward as she could do in addition to her own, or
-putting in a temporary substitute.</p>
-
-<p>All such dislocation of the Service, necessary and useful for
-emergencies and holidays, should, nevertheless, be made to
-take place as seldom as may be.</p>
-
-<p>No Nurse, during her suspension, should be allowed to enter
-any ward of the hospital.</p>
-
-<p>Any Nurse asking or accepting a present, whether in money
-or in kind, from any patient, or friend of any patient, whether
-during his illness or after his death, recovery, or depar<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>ture,
-must be at once suspended from duty, her pay immediately
-cease, and the Superintendent-General be apprised of it, who,
-if satisfied of the truth of the charge, should immediately
-dismiss her.</p>
-
-<p>Two hours daily for exercise or recreation should be allotted
-to the Nurses, during which two hours they are to be considered
-relieved of the responsibility of their wards. But I would
-not be too absolute in requiring them to go out: sometimes to
-lie down or sit still for an hour or two will do more good than
-a walk. Give them two hours for optional exercise. Head-Nurses
-cannot have more of fixed leisure. They must get
-time for private occupation as they can: very often not at all;
-and no Nurse fit for her place will, of course, in emergent
-states of her ward, leave it. Also the Matron must not worry
-herself or them, if an anxious Nurse sits up part of a night or
-a whole night with bad cases.</p>
-
-<p>To a certain degree the Matron will find it better to allow a
-little liberty and choice, in the matter of times and hours,
-(always excepting after proper hours, <i>i.&nbsp;e.</i>, after dark) to
-the Nurses, who are Head-Nurses, than to attempt making
-them mere machines. An uniform system, as far as possible,
-and a little range to each, will answer best. But do not hurry
-the uniform system too much; take time: this is very
-important.</p>
-
-<p>The Nurse should, every morning, at an hour to be fixed by
-the Chaplain or Matron, read aloud in the ward, the Confession,
-the Lord’s Prayer, the Collect for the Week, the Collect
-for Grace, and the Benediction; and every evening, at an hour
-to be fixed by the Chaplain or Matron, she should read aloud
-in the ward the Confession, the Lord’s Prayer, the Thanksgiving,
-the Collect for Aid, and the Benediction.<a name="Anchor_12" id="Anchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 12.">[12]</a> This
-would Christianize things, instead of heathenizing them;
-and I believe not a soldier would dream that his conscience
-was injured by it. The Roman Catholics and
-Presbyterians might be allowed quite to refrain, if they
-chose, which they would not. It would be necessary for the
-Chaplain-General to approve of and direct in this, and best to
-wait a year or two before beginning it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The prayers should be very short, the whole not more than
-five or six minutes each time, and the Nurse should read them,
-the men joining at the proper times.</p>
-
-<p>In some Civil Hospitals the prayers are far too long and are
-gabbled over by some patient, perhaps the worst character and
-the best scholar in the ward, or are stumbled through by some
-little boy, upon whom the others cast the distasteful office, with
-circumstances of irreverence, partly unintentional and partly
-shocking. At <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Bartholomew’s Hospital the very short
-morning and the very short evening prayers are printed clearly
-on each side of a card, which is affixed to each bed; and each
-morning and evening the Head-Nurse reads them aloud: the
-difference is very great.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">10. Have the
-Diets sent hot
-and ready-divided
-from
-the Kitchen.</div>
-
-<p>10. The Colney-Hatch Lunatic Asylum has a diet system
-worth inquiring into; nothing is fetched by the Nurse, the
-Medical Officer writes the diets on a large slate which is ready
-for him outside the ward.</p>
-
-<p>The great advantage of this seems to be, that the Nurse’s
-time is set free from a good deal of arithmetic and some writing;
-also that each man’s portion is served him <em>hot</em> from the kitchen,
-not cut up laboriously by the Nurse. In most Hospitals the
-Nurse cuts and divides the diets; in the London Hospital she
-moreover weighs them. All this takes a great deal of time.
-If the patients can get the divided portions <em>hot</em> from the
-kitchen, it is far preferable.</p>
-
-<p>At <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> George’s Hospital the portions are sent hot and
-divided from the kitchen.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">11. The less
-any Patient is
-made into an
-Orderly by the
-Surgeon the
-better.
-The Nurse
-should have
-Regulations
-to invoke to
-allow her to do
-her duty.</div>
-
-<p>11. It should be distinctly settled by whom poulticing,
-fomenting, and all minor dressings, applying leeches and
-blisters, and giving enemas,<a name="Anchor_13" id="Anchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 13.">[13]</a> are to be done.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span></p>
-<p>It would be advisable to consider whether the Nurse ought
-not to instruct the Orderlies in some things. This, if it did not
-clash with Orderlies’ Rules, would make these men, especially
-those ordered for foreign service, much more useful than they
-are now, without such teaching.</p>
-
-<p>It will, however, be essential that there should be no clashing
-between the Nurses’ Regulations and those already or to be
-issued to the Orderlies. And for this, among other reasons, it
-is essential to establish a direct channel of communication
-between the Director-General and Superintendent-General of
-Nurses.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Ward Medical
-Officer to give
-Directions to
-Nurse.</div>
-
-<p>I think, upon the whole and with reference to preventing,
-as far as rules can do it, the obstruction of the Nurse’s duty,
-by adverse or inexperienced Medical Officers giving orders to
-Ward or Assistant Ward-Master, Orderlies, or patients, instead
-of to her, that it is better to charge him to give the Nurse
-his orders as to the sick.</p>
-
-<p>All the above-mentioned things should be done by the
-Nurse, <i>i.&nbsp;e.</i>, by her habitually and as a rule; occasionally
-letting an orderly do them, under her own eye, in order that he
-may learn, as well by doing them sometimes himself as by often
-seeing her.</p>
-
-<p>The reasons why all these things must be clearly settled
-beforehand are these:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>I. Adverse Medical Officers will make all use of counter-regulations.</p>
-
-<p>II. Medical Officers who give fair play will find it impossible
-to settle the matter, if, on ordering, <i>e.&nbsp;g.</i>, leeches, the Orderly
-shows Rule so and so by which he does it, and the Nurse Rule
-so and so by which she does it. The existence of the old regulations
-and the arrival of the new ones, about the Medical Staff
-Orderlies, were made great use of against our work, by some of
-the Medical Officers, after the heavy pressure of the war was
-over. So, at Scutari, a Principal Medical Officer took away
-and would not restore the practice of the nurses giving medicines,
-in which he was borne out by an existing rule. Contradictory
-rules are miserable things.</p>
-
-<p>Unless the Matron’s authority is supported by the Principal
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>Medical Officer the Patients always suffer. The Nurse is the
-only proper person to be responsible for the directions of the
-Medical Officers being carried out in a General Hospital.</p>
-
-<p>III. It will enable the Matron to stop all nonsensical prudery,
-on the part of the nurses, and to require that they should
-do what they undertake to do, and not pass off to an Orderly,
-still less to a patient, the duties they should discharge themselves.</p>
-
-<p>As a general rule there is a good deal of this false modesty
-on the part of Nurses, especially of Head Nurses. In individual
-cases it is a serious thing to shake even false ideas of decorum:
-in laying down general Rules it is the more important to lay
-down as duties what are such. Suppose an application of what
-the French call “la petite chirurgie” ordered. The Head Nurse
-“never dreams of doing such things.” The Nurse, following
-her superior’s false shame of duty, transfers the business to an
-ignorant patient. In some cases great harm has arisen thereby
-to the Patient. In other cases, but not the majority, after
-such an order given, the Head Nurse goes quietly to the bed,
-draws the curtain round it, and makes the application
-herself&mdash;saying “she always did that herself, as it was a
-business requiring care, as the patient was often disposed to
-resist, and as she was thus certain that it was properly and
-effectively done.” I have always admired and respected such
-women; but they are not the majority. Very often patients
-are allowed or left to do things for themselves, which they
-cannot do properly, or when they ought not to be trusted to
-inflict the pain on themselves which doing things properly often
-causes.</p>
-
-<p>The practice of allowing some particular patient to become a
-sort of half orderly in the ward, letting him always attend some
-particular case, or give general help in severe cases, is most
-reprehensible. It is never allowed, whether in Civil or
-in Military Hospitals, without very bad consequences to the
-discipline of the ward. Where extra help, in lifting, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, is
-required, let the Nurse require the most convalescent of the
-patients to help, but let her carefully refrain from selecting any
-patient or allowing any patient to put himself forward, as a
-regular help or quasi-Orderly. As an almost invariable rule it
-will be found that the less patients do for each other the better
-for themselves, and for the discipline and the good feeling of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>the ward. Let them be made useful in the wards, as far as
-possible, in such lighter cleaning, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, as a patient can properly
-do (here, again, discretion is required, or a lazy Orderly
-will lay undue burdens on a willing patient); but the less they
-do for each other undoubtedly the better for all parties. I
-would not, however, expressly exempt the patients from being
-made useful in nursing the sick. A lazy or ill-conditioned
-patient might make it a handle to refuse to do or grumble at doing
-things which he ought to do, such as (a thing frequently
-required) giving and emptying a bed-pan to an ordinary
-patient who cannot leave his bed, while the Nurse and Orderlies
-are doing other things in the ward; assisting to move a
-helpless patient, if all the Orderlies are not at hand; sometimes
-watching or attending for an hour or so a critical case, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>,
-<abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> What the Superintendent-General and all Superintendents
-must be especially vigilant against is selecting any
-particular patient or allowing a willing patient constantly or
-often to do these things, and to become a quasi-Orderly to the
-ward or to any patient in it.</p>
-
-<p>Assistant-Surgeons, partly from inexperience and partly from
-spite, sometimes make this sort of quasi-Orderly of a patient.
-The Nurse should have the power of respectfully saying, in
-such a case, “The Regulations order me to do so and so, sir:
-I beg you to let me do my duty.”</p>
-
-<p>It is an important and should be, if possible, an invariable rule
-that no discharged patient is ever to enter any ward. Soldiers
-are, in many respects, on a different footing, as to each other,
-from Civil patients. The above provision is perhaps rendered
-thereby (not the less, but) the more important for the good
-order of the ward. Still this, desirable in (and the rule in
-several) Civil Hospitals, might be considered by Military as well
-as Medical Officers to interfere too much with the feeling of
-comradeship which, in its measure, is so essential a part of the
-soldier’s very peculiar condition. The following rules however
-might, at all events, be carried out. Some of them are actually
-in the “Hospital Regulations.”</p>
-
-<p>As quietness is indispensable in Hospitals, every duty should
-be performed with the least possible noise, more especially at
-night. Every patient must be in bed by 8 o’clock in winter,
-and 9 in summer; and no conversation must be permitted after
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>that time. Patients should be made useful in the wards, as far
-as possible; but should fetch nothing into them. And no discharged
-patient should be permitted to enter any ward, except
-in the fixed visiting hours. The Governor, where there is a
-Governor, or the Principal Medical Officer, will fix the visiting
-hours; which shall not be more than two hours during each of
-three days of the week. [Take proper advice as to whether this
-maximum is too short. It is fully enough for Civil Hospitals, but
-Military Hospitals are in sundry respects essentially different.]</p>
-
-<p>In the discipline of all Military Hospitals, besides the prohibition
-of all swearing and foul language included in the
-Articles of War, is included the non-admission, or if by oversight
-admitted among visitors, the immediate expulsion of all
-disorderly persons. (Query&mdash;whether not to specify prostitutes.)</p>
-
-<p>I very much wish that Hospital Sentries in General Hospitals
-might keep out all visitors, except in the fixed visiting hours.
-And I very much wish that a stringent rule were made as to
-female visitors, both in Regimental and in General Hospitals.
-Proper Military as well as Medical advice should be taken on
-this point. It might not do to exclude them altogether; and,
-if soldiers’ wives come, it might be better to admit also all
-respectable-looking women, for it would be useless attempting
-defining as to sisters, aunts, friends, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>; though, except
-in the case of dying patients, all women, except their wives and
-mothers, are better away. I do not know what amount of
-strictness in practice is shown in enforcing the Regulations in
-English Army Hospitals; but if, at present, equivocal women,
-as well as ascertained prostitutes, are not excluded (which very
-possibly they are) they should be. At the same time, a sentry
-may often be honestly puzzled as to equivocal or non-equivocal
-appearance, in these days of over-dressing. And some mistake,
-made by a stupid or brutal sentry, might lead to endangering
-the rule. This whole matter must be referred to men.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">12. Orderlies’
-Attendance.</div>
-
-<p>12. With regard to the question of the “Regulation” number
-of Orderlies, viz., 1 to every 10 patients, it is to be
-observed,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(1.) 40-Bed
-Ward
-Minimum Size
-for Regulation
-Number of
-1 Attendant to
-10 Patients.</div>
-
-<p>(1.) A ward of 40 patients might be efficiently served (but
-it would be hard work) with</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span></p>
-<ul>
-<li>1 Head Nurse&mdash;Female.</li>
-<li>3 Orderlies.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>With no number under 40 of patients to a ward, can the
-Regulation proportion of 1 attendant to 10 patients be adhered
-to.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(2.) 20-Bed
-Ward requires
-3½ Attendants.</div>
-
-<p>(2.) With a ward of 20 patients (cut, scheme, and arrange
-the hours and duties as you will), you cannot efficiently serve
-it with less than</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>½ Head-Nurse&mdash;Female.</li>
-<li>3 Orderlies.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>And the other ward of this Head Nurse ought to be on the
-same floor.</p>
-
-<p>N. B.&mdash;The same number would quite as efficiently serve a
-ward of 25 or even 30 patients.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(3.) 10-Bed
-Ward cannot
-be served by
-1 Orderly + ⅕
-Nurse.</div>
-
-<p>(3.) The Army system of 1 Orderly to 10 patients, with a
-number not exceeding 10 patients to a ward, is upset as immediately
-by one bad case among the 10, as by 9 to the 10.</p>
-
-<p>For, is the same Orderly to be on duty for the 24 hours?</p>
-
-<p>The difficulty is practically got over by the Army, with a
-permission that any “bad case” may select any one he likes of
-his comrades (out of the Depôt) to be “told off,” to attend
-upon him.</p>
-
-<p>This extraordinary regulation is equivalent to (and affords
-little other practical result, than) granting opportunity for
-any quantity of spirits, and illicit food, to be smuggled into
-Hospital, and it is clear that it would be totally inadmissible in
-a General Hospital, where the whole system of nursing would
-be under the most stringent discipline and supervision.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(4.) Female
-Nurses not to
-be Substitutes
-for Orderlies.</div>
-
-<p>(4.) The introduction of Female Nurses into Military Hospitals
-is not intended to supply the place of Orderlies, but to
-perform a class of duties which never has been performed at all
-in the Army. Few other Hospital duties of those generally
-called such have been hitherto fulfilled, in Military Hospitals,
-except</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>diet-carrying,</li>
-<li>sweeping,</li>
-<li>and writing.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(5.) Naval
-Hospitals
-Regulation
-Number of
-Attendants 1 to
-7 Patients.</div>
-
-<p>(5.) In all Naval Hospitals, the Regulation number of
-attendants is 1 to every 7 patients, or 2 attendants for each
-ward containing more than 7 patients and up to 14. These
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>Attendants or Nurses, in sailor’s language, have charge of the
-linen, bedding, and ward furniture, under the Ward Matron,
-and they are responsible for the proper care of the sick, and
-the due administration of the medicine, wine, and other medical
-comforts. They are on duty all day and watch at night in their
-turn, which is regulated by the Medical Officer in charge of the
-ward, in this or similar fashion:&mdash;a group of three contiguous
-wards is allotted during the night to two nurses, one begins her
-duty at 9 and ends at 1 o’clock, when she is relieved by another,
-who watches till 6. She patrols the three wards, resting in
-that one where there may be a case requiring more than ordinary
-attention. If there should be a case of fever, delirium, or other
-sharp seizure, extra Nurses, both men and women, are assigned
-to the charge of that special case, according to the urgency of
-its wants. The great majority of Naval patients are either
-convalescent, or suffering from trivial complaints, which do not
-impair their activity. They can therefore take care of themselves,
-and assist the Nurse during the day in cleaning the
-wards, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>&mdash;and we know what good housemaids seamen make.
-The Nurses are paid one shilling a night for night watching.
-They have under the most severe circumstances two-and-a-half
-nights in bed for half a night out of bed.</p>
-
-<p>At Haslar Naval Hospital the system of Orderlies, as understood
-from the Principal Medical Officer, is as follows:&mdash;12
-Orderlies are on a floor, to look after, say, 90 patients.
-These are divided for night duty into three divisions of 4 each;
-of these 4&mdash;</p>
-<ul>
-<li>2 are on from 9 to 2, <span class="smcap">A. M.</span></li>
-<li>2 <span class="ditto">are on from</span> 2 to 8.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>The Head-Quarter room or ward is the one which has the
-most severe cases; this ward, then, the Watcher at night sits in,
-and makes the rounds of the others every now and then to see
-if anything is required. This system will of course be modified,
-according to the nature of the cases in Hospital. The other
-attendants do not sleep in the wards. The Nurses are male or
-female according to the discretion of the Principal Medical
-Officer.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Civil Hospitals
-have even 9
-Attendants to
-44 Patients.</div>
-
-<p>In Civil Hospitals the number is as great of attendants to
-patients, and is mainly determined by the size of the ward:</p>
-
-<p><i>E.g.</i>, in one Hospital, where there are quadruple war<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>ds of
-44 patients, 11 in each compartment, though the average
-number of patients is 48, the number of attendants is 7.</p>
-
-<p>In exceptional cases extra Night-Nurses, sometimes extra
-Day-Nurses serve particular patients. The labour, both of
-cleaning and of night-nursing, is much increased by the wards
-being four, separated by a large lobby.</p>
-
-<p>In another of the large London Hospitals, where there are
-to each ward,</p>
-
-<table class="staffing" summary="Staffing Levels">
-<tr><th colspan="3"><span class="smcap">Patients.</span></th><th colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Attendants.</span></th></tr>
-<tr><td class="no">22<br />&nbsp;<br />24</td><td class="cb">⎫<br />⎬<br />⎭</td><td class="ta">there are</td><td class="cb">⎧<br />⎨<br />⎩</td><td>1 Sister.<br />&nbsp;<br />2 Nurses.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="no">30</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="ditto ta">there are</td><td class="cb">⎧<br />⎪<br />⎨<br />⎪<br />⎩</td><td>1 Sister.<br />&nbsp;<br />2 Nurses.<br />&nbsp;<br />1 Scrubber.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="no">34</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="ditto ta">there are</td><td class="cb">⎧<br />⎨<br />⎩</td><td>1 Sister.<br />&nbsp;<br />3 Nurses.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="no">40</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="ditto ta">there are</td><td class="cb">⎧<br />⎪<br />⎨<br />⎪<br />⎩</td><td>1 Sister.<br />&nbsp;<br />3 Nurses.<br />&nbsp;<br />1 Helper.</td></tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>In the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> Hospital at Paris, where the wards hold
-32 beds, 1 Sister, 1 Nurse, and 2 Orderlies on the Men’s side,
-1 Sister, 2 Nurses, and 1 Orderly on the Female side, serve the
-ward efficiently.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(6.) Same
-Number of
-Men will not
-do same
-amount of
-Work as an
-equal Number
-of Women
-would.</div>
-
-<p>(6.) One woman does the work of more than a man in a
-Hospital, speaking of the duties discharged by Under Nurses
-in Civil Hospitals; for men are not accustomed to these
-duties in England, as women are from their childhood.</p>
-
-<p>From this it is by no means to be inferred that women of
-the class of Under Nurses in Civil Hospitals should be
-employed in Military Hospitals, which unquestionably they
-should not. But it is to be inferred that the work will not be
-done efficiently, with a smaller number of men than would be
-employed of women.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(7.) Hospital
-Attendance an
-entirely new
-subject in the
-Army.</div>
-
-<p>(7.) The question of attendance has scarcely been intelligently
-considered in the Army at all. And hardly any practical
-answer has yet been given to such questions as the above.</p>
-
-<p>I conceive it to be practically impossible to serve 4 wards, as
-proposed at Netley, viz., of 9 beds each, with</p>
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></p>
-<ul>
- <li>1 Head Nurse,</li>
- <li>4 Orderlies.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>For, as has been said, one bad case in each ward, makes this
-economy as unmanageable as nine.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(8.) Hospital
-Wards in the
-Army little else
-than Barrack-Rooms
-at
-present.</div>
-
-<p>(8.) A ward in a Military Hospital now may often be little
-else than a barrack-room, with an Inspection by a Medical
-Officer twice a day. It is designed to make it by the new
-Regulations into a place where the sick must be and always
-will be suitably attended. But this cannot be done by such a
-scheme as&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="staffing" summary="Staffing Levels for Netley Wards">
-<tr><td class="longer">1 Female Head Nurse</td><td rowspan="2" class="cb">⎫<br />⎬<br />⎭</td><td rowspan="2" class="to">to</td><td rowspan="2" class="cb">⎧<br />⎨<br />⎩</td><td class="longer">50 Patients, in (say)</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="longer">6 Orderlies</td><td class="longer">6 Netley Wards;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>though this attendance would be more than sufficient for 50
-cases in one ward; but such a ward is considered in a sanitary
-sense too large. Two wards of 30 beds each on the same floor
-would be efficiently served by such a Staff, however; and there
-would be no sanitary objection.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(9.) Regulation
-as to 1 Orderly
-to 10 Patients
-requires
-modifying.</div>
-
-<p>(9.) The Regulation number of one Orderly to ten patients
-therefore requires modifying. Practically it is broken every day
-and in the extraordinary manner above mentioned, which gives
-the most critical cases to be attended by the rawest hands.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(10.) One
-Orderly should
-be the
-<i>Frotteur</i>.</div>
-
-<p>(10.) The question of Hospital floors will be fully discussed
-farther on. An Orderly should be trained to be the <i>frotteur</i>
-to each ward. He should also be the porter to fetch and carry
-every thing to and from the ward.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(11.)
-Comparison of
-Cost of
-Nursing with
-larger and
-smaller Wards.</div>
-
-<p>(11.) The plan of Netley, with its wards for 9 sick, is by far
-the costliest for administration, as the following facts will
-prove:</p>
-
-<p class="pseudo_list">I. It is proposed to provide the Hospital with Orderlies
-and Nurses to conduct the nursing in wards of 9 sick,
-as mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class="pseudo_list">II. On sanitary grounds wards may safely be large enough
-to accommodate 25 to 30 sick.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">We may therefore choose the larger wards, being guided only
-by the cost of the nursing.</p>
-
-<p class="pseudo_list">III. A ward of 9 sick would require 1 day and 1 night Orderly,
-and a-third of a Nurse (that is, a Nurse could
-superintend three such wards.)</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pseudo_list_cont">A ward of 30 sick would require 2 day and 1 night
-Orderlies and 1 Nurse = 4 persons in all.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Or if two such wards were on one floor, 1 Nurse could serve
-both.</p>
-
-<p class="pseudo_list">IV. We cannot count the cost of Orderlies and Nurses, including
-lodging, rations, wages, at less than <abbr title="50 pounds">£50</abbr> a year,
-which when capitalized at 3 per cent. (33 years’ purchase),
-would amount to <abbr title="1,650 pounds">£1,650</abbr> for each.</p>
-
-<p class="pseudo_list">V. A ward of 9 sick would cost in nursing <abbr title="1,650 pounds">£1,650</abbr> × 2⅓ =
-<abbr title="3,850 pounds">£3,850</abbr>, or <abbr title="427 pounds 15 shillings and 6 pence">£427 15<i><abbr title="shillings">s.</abbr></i> 6<i><abbr title="pence">d.</abbr></i></abbr> per bed.</p>
-
-<p class="pseudo_list">VI. A ward of 30 sick would cost for nursing, in perpetuity,
-<abbr title="1,650 pounds">£1,650</abbr> × 4 = <abbr title="6,600 pounds">£6,600</abbr> = <abbr title="220 pounds">£220</abbr> per bed.<br />
-[One Nurse to each ward is here allowed.]</p>
-
-<p class="pseudo_list">VII. The cost of the two plans relatively for a Hospital of
-1,000 sick would stand thus:</p>
-
-<table class="costs" summary="cost of the two plans">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Wards with 9 beds</td>
- <td class="equals">=</td>
- <td class="tdr"><abbr title="427,775 pounds">£427,775</abbr></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td><td>Wards with 30 beds</td>
- <td class="equals">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">220,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr" colspan="2">Capitalized difference of cost in<br />
- favour of large wards</td>
- <td class="equals taller">}</td><td class="tdr total"><abbr title="207,775 pounds">£207,775</abbr></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<table class="costs" summary="Netley costs">
- <tr>
- <td class="netley">Netley has cost already Land</td>
- <td class="equals">=</td>
- <td class="tdr"><abbr title="30,000 pounds">£30,000</abbr></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="netley">Works</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdr">89,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr total"><abbr title="119,000 pounds">£119,000</abbr></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>It hence appears that, if works and site were both sacrificed,
-and fresh land purchased, and wards for 30 sick built on it, the
-country would actually save the difference between the two
-sums of = <abbr title="88,775 pounds">£88,775</abbr>.</p>
-
-<p class="sub">Suppose the sanitary requirement of 25 sick to a ward, which
-is the best number, be combined with the greatest economy
-of administration, the cost would stand thus:</p>
-
-<table class="costs" summary="Cost with 25 to a ward">
- <tr>
- <td class="back">For each ward of 25 sick, 3 Orderlies, at <abbr title="1,650 pounds">£1,650</abbr></td>
- <td class="equals botm">=</td>
- <td class="tdr botm"><abbr title="4,950 pounds">£4,950</abbr></td>
-</tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="back" colspan="2">If two such are built in line, close to each other,
- with the Nurse’s room between them, one
- Nurse could superintend both wards, or half
- a Nurse to a ward. The cost would be for
- the ward</td>
- <td class="tdr botm">825</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr total">5,775</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="back">Or cost for each bed 5775 / 25</td>
- <td class="equals botm">=</td>
- <td class="tdr"><abbr title="231 pounds">£231</abbr></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="sub">The comparative cost of wards with 9 beds and
-25 beds, would stand thus for 1000 sick:</p>
-
-<table class="costs" summary="Cost of 9 and 25 beds compared">
- <tr>
- <td class="netley">Wards with 9 beds</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdr"><abbr title="427,775 pounds">£427,775</abbr></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="netley">Wards with 25 beds</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdr">231,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="netley">Saving</td>
- <td class="tdr total botm"><abbr title="196,775 pounds">£196,775</abbr></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="back">Deduct cost of Netley, already incurred</td>
- <td class="tdr">119,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="back">Saving from abandoning Netley</td>
- <td class="equals">=</td>
- <td class="tdr total botm"><abbr title="77,775 pounds">£77,775</abbr></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="sub">The cost of the administration per 1000 beds at Netley and Aldershot would stand as follows:</p>
-
-<table class="costs" summary="Administration costs">
- <tr>
- <td class="back" colspan="2">Netley</td>
- <td class="tdr"><abbr title="427,775 pounds">£427,775</abbr></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="back" colspan="2">Aldershot, pavilions, with 3 superimposed wards
- and 25 sick in each, would require 3 Orderlies and
- 1 Nurse<a name="Anchor_14" id="Anchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 14.">[14]</a> to each ward, and would cost <abbr title="264 pounds">£264</abbr> per
- bed in perpetuity, or per 1000 sick</td>
- <td class="tdr botm">264,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="back" colspan="2">Difference of cost in favour of Aldershot</td>
- <td class="tdr total botm"><abbr title="163,775 pounds">£163,775</abbr></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>Some abatement would have to be made, as regards the cost
-of Netley, as there are a few wards with 16 or 18 sick.</p>
-
-<p>If we take money at 4 per cent., the calculation will be as
-follows:</p>
-
-<table class="costs" summary="Abatement calculation">
- <tr>
- <td class="back" colspan="2">Small wards, 2 Orderlies and a third of a Nurse,
- at <abbr title="50 pounds">£50</abbr> per annum; money at 4 per cent.,
- per 1000 sick</td>
- <td class="tdr botm"><abbr title="324,000 pounds">£324,000</abbr></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="back" colspan="2">Wards of 30. 3 Orderlies and a Nurse, money
- at 4 per cent., per 1000 sick</td>
- <td class="tdr botm">166,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="netley" colspan="2">Extra cost of small wards</td>
- <td class="tdr total botm">158,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="netley" colspan="2">Cost of Netley</td>
- <td class="tdr botm">119,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="netley" colspan="2">Saving in giving it up</td>
- <td class="tdr total botm"><abbr title="39,000 pounds">£39,000</abbr></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p><div class="sidenote">13. Hospital
-Floors.</div>
-
-<p>13. <span class="smcap">Floors.</span>&mdash;In building a new Hospital or laying a new
-floor we shall hope to see, by degrees, everywhere introduced
-the only safe Hospital floor. In the expense the difference
-between oak and the best white deal ought never to be considered.
-The staircases and passages should always be of stone.
-When once an oak floor is well done with bees’-wax it is no
-longer an absorbing surface. There cannot be a doubt that
-the frequent washing of the floors, in London Hospitals, is one
-main cause of Erysipelas and Hospital Gangrene.</p>
-
-<p>But, with regard to deal flooring,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>(1.) The best way with a pine floor already laid is to
-close the joints, plane the surface quite smooth, and then
-saturate the wood with beeswax and turpentine, either at
-once, or after the wood has been saturated with “drying”
-linseed oil well rubbed in.</p>
-
-<p>(2.) Enough beeswax should be used to fill up the grain of
-the wood, and rubbing with a brush will then smooth the surface.
-It will be polished somewhat, but not slippery. The
-amount of polish depends on the brushing.</p>
-
-<p>(3.) The surface should be kept clean by using a brush with
-a cloth tied over it, and if offensive liquids are spilt, they
-should be immediately removed, the surface washed with soap
-and water, and immediately dried.</p>
-
-<p>(4.) List slippers, which ought to be part of Hospital furniture,
-effectually obviate risk of slipping. It would hardly be
-possible, however, to make deal floors as slippery as oak
-<i>parquet</i>, because the surface (except of very fine deal, such as
-is used for musical instruments) never takes so high a polish.</p>
-
-<p>(5.) Dry rubbing, which is done with sand, or with sandstone,
-is not well adapted for ordinary sick wards, on account
-of the dust; unless it be very carefully done. The rationale
-of it is to remove a certain amount of the surface of the floor.
-It answers very well on board ship. A certain amount of
-surface cleaning may be done by rubbing with a hard short
-brush; it is, however, defective. The wood becomes in time
-saturated with organic matter, and only wants moisture to give
-off noxious effluvia.</p>
-
-<p>(6.) Scrubbing is absolutely objectionable, for this reason.
-In any schoolroom, reading-room, institute, which is much
-inhabited, a smell, while the floor is being scrubbed, is very
-perceptible, quite different from that of soap and water. It is
-the exhalation from the organic matter which has entered the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-floor from the feet and breath of the inhabitants. How much
-more dangerous this in Hospital Wards need hardly be said.</p>
-
-<p>There is at <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethanien</span> Hospital, at Berlin, a very admirable
-flooring, which would be worth trying in England. The floors
-throughout are wood, prepared in the following manner:&mdash;The
-floor is first oiled with linseed oil, and then rubbed over with a
-peculiar “laque” varnish, the technical process of which will
-be found in the note,<a name="Anchor_15" id="Anchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 15.">[15]</a> and polished, so as to resemble French
-polish. Every three years or so the rooms and wards are successively
-emptied for a fortnight, when a new flooring is laid,
-re-oiled, varnished with the laque varnish, and thoroughly
-dried. Every day the floors are wet-rubbed by means
-of a piece of sacking or coarse webbing at the end of
-a long, hard broom, the performer stands for the performance,
-also while immediately afterwards, having wrung
-the sacking completely dry, she goes over the ground
-again with the dry sacking. One, or, in case of the
-weekly extra wet-rubbing, two dry rubbings, dry the floor
-completely in a few minutes from the cessation of the wet-rubbing,
-never more than ten minutes. Three or four times a
-year the ward floors are thoroughly wetted with water thrown
-on, and the floors scrubbed with a long brush. Nei<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>ther soap,
-soda, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, is used.</p>
-
-<p>The great advantages of this are:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>(1.) That it purifies the air exceedingly and freshens the
-wards.</p>
-
-<p>(2.) That it reduces the daily accumulation of dust to a
-minimum.</p>
-
-<p>(3.) That it dries completely within ten minutes from being
-wet-rubbed.</p>
-
-<p>(4.) That a woman, standing, can thoroughly clean a ward
-with some hours less time, and greatly less fatigue, than scrubbing.</p>
-
-<p>(5.) That wet scrubbing is sometimes and ought to be
-always forbidden and dry rubbing substituted, on the score of
-the unhealthiness of scrubbing.</p>
-
-<p>(6.) That it would relieve us of all external scrubbers in the
-Nurses’ own rooms. Each Nurse would sweep, wet-brush and
-dry-brush her bed-room and day-room herself, daily, would
-once-a-week give a little extra wash, and would wash the
-wooden skirting which runs along the bottom of the walls.
-As the bed-room must be tiny and the day-room small (it
-would be better if we could keep to one room, which would
-take a quarter of an hour daily, and the grand weekly purification
-not more than one hour, even to a slow performer) a
-short time daily and a moderate time weekly will do it.</p>
-
-<p>One disadvantage of this very simple, very efficient, and
-excellent flooring is, that it shows scratches. Furniture must
-always be lifted, not dragged. In a Military Hospital where
-men are always at hand, this would matter less as to the
-wards, and the Nurses could help each other once a week in
-their bed-rooms, and manage alone in their day-rooms.</p>
-
-<p>There are four other examples of this flooring in Berlin
-Hospitals.</p>
-
-<p>(1.) <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethesda Siechenhaus</span>, a small old house, about to be
-rebuilt and enlarged, in a suburb of Berlin, where three
-Deaconesses, with a man and woman servant, take excellent
-care of about forty infirm old women and imbecile children.
-These patients, of the class to be found in the infirmary wards
-of our workhouses, move about little, and have few visitors, so
-that the flooring, which is the same as at <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethanien</span>, is less
-used.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>(2.) <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Hedwig’s Hospital, where 250 male and female
-medical and surgical patients are nursed by Roman Catholic
-Sisters of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Charles Borromæus (head quarters at Nancy),
-with female servants and male nurses. The house is new; the
-flooring the same as at <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethanien</span>. The Superior, an intelligent
-German, speaks much of its excellence for hospital purposes;
-it is being introduced, though as yet very partially, into
-France.</p>
-
-<p>(3.) The great <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Charité</span> Hospital, the town-hospital for 1,200
-patients, spite its French name. It consists of two buildings;
-the old one, used in winter; and a splendid new one, into
-which all the patients, except the lunatics and the small-pox
-and the venereal cases, are moved for the six summer months.
-The flooring throughout is of the same wood (deal) as at <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethanien</span>,
-but has much more laque. The more laque is used, the
-brighter the floor shines, but the sooner it requires re-oiling
-and laque varnishing. The <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Charité</span> floors are re-oiled with
-laque every year; they are cleaned in the same way as at <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethanien</span>,
-only with more dry rubbing. On bad days, when the
-numerous students have passed through, the ward floors occasionally
-require to be cleaned; but, in general, even on these
-occasions, it is enough to sweep them, and to clean the next
-morning as usual.</p>
-
-<p>(4.) The principal Military Hospital, the <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Garnison Lazareth</span>
-in the <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Hirsch Allée</span>, for 800 patients, usually not filled. The
-flooring is the same as at <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethanien</span>, except that no laque is
-used. It is oiled generally, not always, yearly.</p>
-
-<p>The <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Ober Inspector</span>, a <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Landwehr</span> civilian, who is supreme
-over the Hospital, and an <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Ober-Stabs-Arzt</span>, both speak very
-strongly as to the superiority of this flooring over all others for
-Hospital use, and in particular over flooring which requires
-scrubbing. It has only been introduced of late years. They
-consider it equal to any amount of hospital wear and
-tear. The military patients, like those of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Charité</span>, <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethanien</span>,
-and <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Hedwig’s, wear hospital slippers, with soles
-thick enough to admit of their walking in the garden, when
-fine; when not fine, they are not allowed to go out. This
-flooring would not stand the constant tread of nailed shoes.
-But often, on bad days as on fine ones, great numbers of
-soldiers come to visit their sick comrades, and leave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-the floor very dirty; generally it is enough to sweep the
-floor after the visitors are gone, and to clean it as usual
-next morning; sometimes it is necessary to clean it the
-same afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>The flooring is cheap. Somewhat more expense attends
-laying it down than the ordinary boards, and a certain
-expense attends the re-oiling, but the constant outlay
-for soap and soda is entirely saved, except a little soda
-in the grand annual purification, with hot water, in addition to
-the daily one with cold; the time and labour attending
-scrubbing is saved, and above all the great gain to the sick
-arising from its use is secured.</p>
-
-<p>The strong, decided way in which the old grey-headed Army
-Surgeon, and the middle-aged business-looking Civilian, spoke
-of the merits of this flooring, and of its capacities, was exceedingly
-satisfactory.</p>
-
-<p>(5.) Two years ago the greater part of the boards in the
-<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Kaiserswerth</span> Institution, which are of deal, were oiled, both on
-sanitary grounds, and to rid the Sisters of the drain on time
-and strength in scrubbing. They are considered far preferable
-to the old ones, and to answer in every respect. Yet the
-<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Kaiserswerth</span> floorings would not answer the English requirement
-of extreme cleanliness. They are substantially clean, but,
-like those of the Military Hospital of Berlin, it takes examination
-to ascertain that they are so, and from the same cause&mdash;there
-is no “laque.” Also the colour is not at all so agreeable
-as the <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethanien</span> colour. These oiled boards last a year
-only. A moderate amount of laque is required to add to their
-durability.</p>
-
-<p>The sum of the information, condensed as much as possible,
-on this subject is;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">I.</span> The boards, which are always of deal, can be prepared in
-three ways:</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="smrom">I.</span>) Laquering, only suitable for reception rooms, or when
-by some chance a ward is wanted to be got ready in a hurry;
-it takes less time; after two or three days, the room or ward
-can be used, and it shines brighter, but it lasts a much shorter
-time than the other procedures, as it stands less the incessant
-treading incident to all ward floors; it is also more expensive.
-Let us consider it wholly unsuitable for wards.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>(<span class="smrom">II.</span>) Oiled boards, with more or less laque.</p>
-
-<p>The <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Charité</span> boards have a great deal of laque.</p>
-
-<p>The <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethanien</span> and <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Hedwig’s boards much less.</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="smrom">III.</span>) Oiled boards without any laque&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>As in the Military Hospital.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">II.</span> Much laque makes the floors shine brighter; requires
-more time to clean them; and earlier re-preparation than
-where less laque is used.</p>
-
-<p>The <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Charité</span> boards would be unmeaningly splendid for an
-English Hospital, and quite out of place in a Military one;
-besides entailing some unnecessary annual expense, and some
-daily finicking care.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">III.</span> A small quantity of laque, as at <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethanien</span>, gives an
-amount of polish to the floors, which enables the eye at once
-to ascertain whether they are clean or not; considerably
-improves the appearance of the floor; and, according to all
-high authority, adds both to the durability of the floor, and the
-healthiness of the Hospital. It renders the whole flooring less
-subject to cracks, to dirt and dust getting into holes and
-corners; and, above all, by filling up the grain of the floor, it
-prevents the saturation, by organic matter, which otherwise
-takes place and which scrubbing only makes more mischievous.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">IV.</span> Where no laque is used, the absence of all polish on
-the dark-brown floors makes examination necessary, to see
-whether they are thoroughly clean or not. This flooring would
-never satisfy the eye or the mind of an English Inspector-General
-or Surgeon. But the main objection to the absence
-of laque certainly consists in the sanitary one above stated.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">V.</span> All the various authorities agree in estimating very
-highly the superiority of this flooring to flooring requiring
-scrubbing. They all agree in their reasons for this preference,
-viz.:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="smrom">I.</span>) The dampness which remains in a ward more or less
-time after it has been scrubbed, is completely avoided.</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="smrom">II.</span>) The tendency to miasma is greatly counteracted, both
-by getting rid of the damp, which encourages and spreads
-the exhalation of the organic saturations; and by making the
-floor impervious, preventing dirt, and with dirt miasma, finding
-its way into holes, chinks, and corners of the floor.</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="smrom">III.</span>) The mode of cleaning this flooring, w<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>hile it avoids
-damp, daily purifies the ward air.</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="smrom">IV.</span>) The floor, and its mode of cleaning, get rid more than
-by any other way of dust, and of the miasma dust often
-conveys.</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="smrom">V.</span>) The time, labour, and expense of scrubbing are saved.</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="smrom">VI.</span>) The Berlin authorities consider that these oiled boards,
-with a small quantity of laque, are, on the whole, decidedly
-cheaper than the common boards; that the boards last rather
-longer; and that the avoidance of scrubbing saves more than
-the extra preparation and its renewal cost, apart from the
-sanitary gain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">VI.</span> Against these advantages, the following disadvantages
-are to be placed:</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="smrom">I.</span>) This flooring shows where most used, instead of the
-uniform appearance of the white scrubbed boards.</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="smrom">II.</span>) Scratches show, and remain upon it; so all furniture
-must be lifted, not dragged over it.</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="smrom">III.</span>) The tread sounds a little more, little, but more, than
-on white boards.</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="smrom">IV.</span>) It would not stand the constant tread of nailed shoes;
-and patients of a ward so floored, ought to wear slippers with
-moderately thick soles. (The German Doctors consider the
-use of slippers preferable to that of shoes, by the patients, as
-keeping a ward much quieter, cleaner, and disturbing the
-severe cases less.)</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="smrom">V.</span>) Carpets could not be nailed on it, as the floor should
-be daily cleaned. Several Hospital authorities whose rooms
-are thus floored, have large pieces of carpet round the furniture
-most used, bed, tables, sofas, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>; these are daily taken
-up and dusted while the floor is being cleaned. To many
-English minds, the sight and feel of a carpet is essential to
-the idea or feeling of comfort; and it might be sound policy,
-in the event of a trial being made of this flooring, to leave the
-Officers, Military and Medical (I do not mean patients), in
-possession of scrubbed rooms and carpets. The Superintendent
-might have one or two pieces of carpet for her rooms;
-and the Nurses should dispense with carpet.</p>
-
-<p>Both in the new part of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Charité</span> and at <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethanien</span>, long
-broad corridors run along the back of the wards which open
-into them. The corridors are floored like the wards. In those
-of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Charité</span> a piece of long carpet is laid in the midst of the
-corridors, where patients walk not a little. At <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethanien</span>, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-long piece of matting is laid in the midst of the corridors,
-where the patients walk freely. Carpet of either kind is not
-considered to benefit the floors, but to diminish the noise.
-In the wards of Guy’s Hospital, for the same reason, a long
-piece of matting is laid along the middle of the floors.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">VII.</span> This flooring is unsuited for stairs, though so used in
-some Hospitals, as, in case of fire, oiled wood would burn
-rather quicker than common wood. Hospital stairs should be
-of stone.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">VIII.</span> It is also unsuitable for kitchens, wash-houses, water-closets,
-and sinks. The floor round a stove or fire-place in a
-ward or room should be protected by a strong plate of lead or tin.</p>
-
-<p>It might also be as well to floor operation-rooms with flooring,
-admitting of scrubbing, because these oiled boards do not
-well stand sand or bran, and our Surgeons might be discomposed
-at missing one or other of these things. Sand or bran
-mixed with blood would make a mess, the traces of which
-would show a little on this flooring. For the rest, it is particularly
-easy to wipe blood off it. After each operation, one
-or two minutes, a wet cloth of the kind here mentioned, and a
-broom, remove the blood that has fallen, and leave a clean floor;
-or if there has been a very great mess, five minutes, a wet
-cloth to lap up the blood, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, another wet cloth, a pail, and a
-broom, do all: after the operations are over, a few minutes’
-whole or partial cleaning, as the case may be, make all tidy
-again. Still, many English Surgeons expect to have sand or
-bran thrown on the floor before, or just after the first blood
-has fallen, and might object to standing some minutes on the
-bloody floor, which spoils boots, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> Red floorcloth, of sufficient
-size, round the operating-table, might answer every
-purpose.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">IX.</span> On laying down the oiled boards for the first time, six
-weeks should pass after the oiling and laquering before the
-ward is inhabited.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">X.</span> After subsequent re-preparation of the floors, the longer
-the wards are left vacant the more the floor both hardens and
-shines; but for practical purposes the interval of a fortnight is
-enough.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">XI.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></span> The flooring, so prepared, or re-prepared, ought, on an
-average, to last about three years. In case of any extra
-miasma, it is often desirable to hasten the re-preparation, and
-to have it done after two years’ use. To do it annually is, unless
-in some emergency, quite unnecessary.</p>
-
-<p>Although the process cannot be said to be by any means
-perfect, on account of the deficient durability of the surface,
-it would be well worth while to try it in England, and, if it
-answers and if it were improved, the sick would gain much,
-and the Hospital staff would gain much&mdash;the latter much more
-even in Civil, than in Military Hospitals.</p>
-
-<p>But it would be incurring a great responsibility to have the
-whole of a large new Hospital floored in this way, because,</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">I.</span> An English climate has made, and makes, so many things
-which are good and suitable abroad, unsuitable and sometimes
-pernicious for England.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">II.</span> Our coal-fires, whether assisting or assisted by our atmosphere,
-certainly give us an amount of soot and dirt unknown
-abroad. At Berlin, all fire-places are stoves, where sometimes
-coal, sometimes coal and wood are burnt.</p>
-
-<p>This flooring might not stand well either the damp climate,
-or the smoky atmosphere and amount of flying soot of
-England: but it would be well worth trying; as also trying to
-improve it.</p>
-
-<p>By all accounts, a great deal depends upon the manner in
-which these boards are prepared; a little more or a little
-less, whether of oil or laque, makes a great and lasting difference.
-It would never answer to make an English carpenter or
-painter do this from written or printed directions.</p>
-
-<p>If we obtain a trial of this floor&mdash;the best course would
-be, to let an English carpenter prepare a number of
-boards and skirtings, of due size, suitable for the new
-flooring of some few wards in one of Her Majesty’s hospitals,
-which requires new flooring; then to desire either
-the proper tradesman, or the Queen’s Minister at Berlin, to
-order the house-painter, <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Schonby</span>, No. 5, <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Michael Kirchplatz</span>,
-Berlin, to send an experienced, trustworthy foreman, with the
-proper tools and materials, and for this man, with a complement
-of English workmen, to prepare the boards.</p>
-
-<p>The mode of cleaning is extremely simple, though of course
-there is a knack to be learnt; and, like everything else, it can
-be done well, indifferently, or ill. Any English man or wo<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>man
-accustomed to cleaning would understand the thing in one
-morning, and would, if he or she opened instead of shutting
-the mind to the outlandish thing, be proficient in it in a week.
-All these things sound abstruse on paper, and are far more
-simple and more easily learnt by seeing done than by reading.
-The foreman ought to give one or two lessons to one or two
-Orderlies, or Nurses, as the case may be.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">14. Ventilation
-of Wards.</div>
-
-<p>14. <span class="smcap">Ventilation.</span>&mdash;The amount of fresh air required for
-ventilation has been hitherto very much underrated, because it
-has been assumed that the quantity of carbonic acid produced
-during respiration was the chief noxious gas to be carried off.
-The total amount of this gas produced by an adult in 24 hours
-is about 40,000 cubic inches, which in a Barrack room of 16
-men would give 370 cubic feet per diem. Allowing 8 hours
-for the night occupation of such a room, when the doors and
-windows may be supposed to be shut, the product of carbonic
-acid would be 123 cubic feet, or about 15½ cubic feet per hour.
-This large quantity if not speedily carried away would undoubtedly
-be injurious to health; but there are other gaseous
-poisons produced with the carbonic acid which have still
-greater power to injure. Every adult exhales by the lungs
-and skin 48 ounces or 3 pints of water in 24 hours. Sixteen
-men in a Barrack-room would therefore exhale in 8 hours 16
-pints of water and 15½ cubic feet of carbonic acid in the atmosphere
-of the room. With the watery vapour there is
-also exhaled a large quantity of organic matter ready to enter
-into the putrefactive condition. This is especially the case
-during the hours of sleep. And as it is a law that all excretions
-are injurious to health if reintroduced into the system it is easy
-to understand how the breathing of damp foul air of this kind,
-and the consequent reintroduction of excrementitious matter
-into the blood through the functions of respiration will tend to
-produce disease.</p>
-
-<p>This will be still more the case in sick wards overcrowded
-with sick, the exhalations from whom are always highly morbid
-and dangerous, as they are nature’s method of eliminating
-noxious matter from the body, in order that it may recover health.</p>
-
-<p>A much larger mass of air is required to dilute and carry
-away these emanations than is generally supposed. And the
-whole art of ventilation resolves itself into applying in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span> any
-specific case the best method of renewing the air sufficiently,
-without producing draughts or occasioning great varieties in
-temperature.</p>
-
-<p>When the question of ventilation first assumed a practical
-shape in this country, it was supposed that 600 cubic feet of air
-per hour were sufficient for a healthy adult, in a room where a
-number of people are congregated together. Subsequent experience
-however has shown that this is by no means enough.
-As much as 1,000 cubic feet have been found insufficient to
-keep the air free from closeness and smell; and it is highly
-probable that the actual quantity required will ultimately be
-found to be at least 1,500 cubic feet per hour per man. In
-sick wards we have more positive experience as to the quantity
-of air required to keep them sweet and healthy. It has been
-found in certain Parisian Hospitals, in which the ventilating
-arrangements were deficient, that pyœmia and Hospital gangrene
-had appeared among the sick in consequence. These
-diseases disappeared on the introduction of ventilating arrangements,
-whereby 2,000 cubic feet of fresh air per bed per hour
-were supplied to the wards. Notwithstanding this large quantity,
-however, the ward atmosphere was found not to possess
-sufficient freshness or purity: and the quantity of air had to be
-increased in subsequent ventilating arrangements. As much as
-4,000 to 5,000 cubic feet per bed per hour have been supplied
-in certain Hospitals. At the rate of 4,000 cubic feet, the ward
-atmosphere is found perfectly fresh.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Night
-Ventilation.</div>
-
-<p>At one of our largest London Hospitals it will be perceived
-that above the one door of each ward is a large
-ventilator, ordered to be open day and night&mdash;that beyond
-this ventilator, which opens into the landing-place, is a
-large window which opens into the external air; and thus
-admits fresh air into the ward at night, diminishing the foul
-night atmosphere. This night ventilation system is good;
-but it requires careful watching, as chilly patients, Nurses, and
-sometimes Sisters, are very apt to give, after they conclude the
-rounds are over for the night, a sly pull at the rope and to
-shut the window, and thus imbibe the foul air directly generated,
-in quiet.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
-<div class="sidenote">Special Wards,
-whether
-desirable or
-not.</div>
-
-<p>15. <span class="smcap">Special Wards.</span>&mdash;It may be laid down as an axiom in
-the management of sick affected with certain zymotic diseases,
-such as fevers, cholera, dysentery, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, that they should be distributed
-over a wide superficial area, and have a large allowance
-of cubic space. Agglomeration of such cases in small ill-ventilated
-wards is quite sufficient of itself to occasion a high proportionate
-mortality among the sick. In mild climates and
-seasons very little protection is necessary from the change of
-temperature; so that the sick from epidemic diseases can be
-camped out and exposed to the full influence of the atmosphere,
-not only without danger, but often with great benefit. It is
-only when the temperature is low and variable, and the season
-inclement, that danger is likely to accrue from this exposure.
-And hence the necessity of inquiring how we can best combine
-the requisite elevation of temperature and the most suitable
-amount of cubic space and ventilation for the treatment of
-these diseases in Hospitals.</p>
-
-<p>Medical Men generally are satisfied that these ends cannot
-be safely arrived at by agglomerating sick in fever wards in Hospitals.
-And hence has arisen a practice, which experience
-appears to have approved, of intermingling a small number of
-fever cases in wards containing a certain number of sick from
-other diseases. The practice appears to be not only perfectly
-safe, but advantageous for the sick. It is known, however, that
-if the proportion of fever cases exceeds a certain number, the
-other cases in the ward are apt to become affected with fever.
-It would appear as if, so far as the fever is concerned, the cubic
-space occupied by other diseases was to a certain extent available
-for the use of the fever cases. But the proportion of such
-cases, that can be advantageously placed among the general
-sick of any ward, will depend upon the size of the ward, the
-means of ventilation, the number of cubic feet per patient, the
-position of the windows, the exposure of the building, and other
-similar circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>Again, it is doubtful whether the preservation of an uniform
-temperature in any Hospital, even in one set apart for chest
-complaints, is beneficial for the sick, or whether it be beneficial
-to agglomerate consumptive cases, without very special precautions,
-under the same roof. Without discussing the validity
-of the opinions held in Southern Europe as to the contagious
-nature of consumption, it may be very fairly doubted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span> whether a
-number of cases placed under a common roof, and breathing a
-common atmosphere, would not yield a higher rate of mortality
-than the same cases would do if distributed through the wards
-of a well-ventilated Hospital, among other diseases.</p>
-
-<p>The subject is worthy of examination. At all events the
-phenomena observed in this disease in the warmer climates of
-Europe have led to the popular belief above stated; and it
-would appear to point to a higher rate of mortality as a not
-unlikely result of the establishment of special Hospitals or
-wards for consumptive diseases, unless extraordinary care were
-taken to ventilate them properly, and to imitate the natural
-variations of temperature which appear to be necessary for
-recovery.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">16. Proposed
-Regulations as
-to Payments,
-by Superintendent-General.</div>
-
-<p>16. All salaries and wages of Matrons and Nurses should be
-paid, on the Superintendent-General’s order, from the Hospital
-chest, to the Matron, who should pay the wages and other
-expenses of the Nurses, and account for all monies received by
-her on such orders. All outfits and travelling expenses, in
-cases of transfer, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, should be provided on the order of the
-Superintendent-General.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Opinion as to
-Superintendent-General
-paying
-Wages and
-Salaries.</div>
-
-<p>There would be considerable difficulty in the way of making
-all payments at a distance to Nurses, direct from the Superintendent-General,
-otherwise than by orders on the Hospital
-chest or Treasury. But there can be no doubt that the Nurses
-ought to be paid by the Matron and by no one else. The
-service of Nurses in Hospital is a peculiar service, and if not
-successfully conducted by influence never can be by coercive
-discipline. It would be a great mistake, therefore, to throw
-away any means of influence which we can command, and the
-“eye of the maid-servant is to the hand of her mistress” now
-as it was 2,000 years ago. The fact of paying and being paid
-helps greatly to establish the proper mutual relations between
-the superior and the subordinate. The Matron would draw
-from the Hospital Treasury, on the orders of the Superintendent-General,
-and would account to her. As a matter of discipline,
-it would make no material difference whether the
-orders of the Superintendent-General, in favour of the
-Matron, for the pay of the Nurses, are cashed by the Hospital
-Treasurer or by a banker, always supposing that the Tr<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>easurer
-is bound to honour those orders, as any other banker would.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Matrons
-abroad may
-dismiss Nurses
-under appeal.</div>
-
-<p>The Matron, in any Hospital out of Great Britain and
-Ireland, should be able, with the concurrence of the Governor of
-the Hospital, to dismiss and send home any Nurse; or the
-Governor himself, on his own responsibility, may direct the
-Matron to do so, under appeal, however, in either case, to the
-Superintendent-General, who shall decide, after the arrival of
-the Nurse, whether she is to be dismissed or whether she may
-be placed in another Hospital.</p>
-
-<p>It should be secured, not left to chance, that the Matron be
-immediately made acquainted with any complaint of the
-Medical Officers against a Nurse.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Matron to
-draw Rations
-and Extras.</div>
-
-<p>The Matron should be able to draw from the Purveyor, on
-her own indent, with the sanction of the Governor of the Hospital,
-such rations and extras as she may consider necessary for
-the Nursing establishment, and make the arrangements for
-cooking. In the United Kingdom the Matron should be able
-to make arrangements, subject to the approval of the Superintendent-General,
-for commuting rations for mess-money, not
-pay.</p>
-
-<p>The Governor is responsible for the sufficiency of all supplies
-and none ought to be expended, without his sanction. This
-might be indispensable, if there were danger that supplies might
-run short.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Opinion as to
-Governor’s
-jurisdiction
-over Nurses.</div>
-
-<p>Upon both these latter points, supposing the Governor of a
-General Hospital to exist, he must have power to maintain the
-discipline of the Hospital, in all its Departments, as a General
-commanding a division has, in regard to every regiment composing
-it. But he ought to exercise it only through the
-Matron, as commanding a corps. He must also have power to
-require the exclusion from the Hospital of any Nurse whose
-conduct he may find to be inconsistent with maintenance of
-discipline, and this power he would enforce, on his own responsibility,
-by directing the Matron to remove the offending Nurse
-from the Hospital. The conduct of the Nurse would become
-the subject of investigation afterwards, in terms of the established
-regulations. But practically such a case could hardly
-occur, unless by the fault of the Matron, who would, of her
-own accord, desire to remove a Nurse, on being satisfied that
-such a measure was necessary or expedient. It would be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-proper, too, both for her own justification and for the maintenance
-of the Governor’s supremacy in the Hospital, that the
-Matron should obtain his concurrence in the removal of a
-Nurse from the Hospital. The proceedings, in all such cases,
-would, of course, be reported by the Matron to the Superintendent-General.</p>
-
-<p>Whether the Governor has the power of removing the
-Matron, who clearly and properly ranks among the officers
-under him, should be settled and not left to be disputed about
-in a distant station. At all events, if he has this power over
-her, it must be guarded, as extending only to suspension from
-office, in cases of alleged flagrant neglect or misconduct, till
-the whole matter can be remitted and decided on by the
-Superintendent-General.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">17. Nurses’
-Wages.</div>
-
-<p>17. Generally, as to the question of wages and pensions,
-a regulation that Nurses shall have a small annual increase of
-wages is better than one giving an increase after five or three
-years.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Efficiency of
-Nurses does
-not increase by
-springs and
-starts, like
-Grasshoppers.</div>
-
-<p>Efficiency does not go by starts and springs, like grasshoppers,
-but makes “a small annual increase,” like the wages
-proposed.</p>
-
-<p>Nay, I appeal to everyone with experience in these matters
-whether the greatest improvement is not made the first year,
-the second year a little less, and so on the third and fourth,
-till, when the fifth year comes, if improvement has not been
-made by that time, it never will be.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">The first five
-years a
-constant
-improvement.
-Afterwards if
-there has not
-been
-improvement
-made before,
-no hope at all.</div>
-
-<p>For trust-worthiness is the true efficiency of a Nurse. And
-it may safely be said that, if by the end of the first year she has
-not improved in trust-worthiness, she had better go; and if she
-have not almost reached her culminating point by the fifth
-year, she certainly will not improve afterwards.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Three
-principles in
-Wages.</div>
-
-<p>The reasonable principle I believe to be, 1, to begin improving
-the wages at as early a period as possible; 2, to let them
-increase till the Nurse reaches her maximum of efficiency; and,
-3, after that to make no more increase.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">By rate of
-Wages to
-retain those
-who are
-efficient.</div>
-
-<p>Because the object is to induce the young and efficient
-women to stay, not the old ones. They will stay long enough,
-because the old ones nobody else will take.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">By rate of
-Pension to
-reward those
-who have been
-efficient.</div>
-
-<p>The rate of pension ought, on the other hand, to increase
-with the number of years’ service, and continue increasing till
-the end. The principle of pensioning is different from that of
-wages. After the woman has reached her maximum of efficiency,
-which certainly will be not later than forty-five, probably
-not later than forty years of age, the inducement to stay should
-be the improvement of pension. This compensates for any
-apparent injustice in the first principle towards an old
-servant.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Civil Service
-an Example.</div>
-
-<p>No other system appears to be founded on common sense; and
-it is one generally acknowledged in the Civil Service, where
-salaries are made to rise as soon as possible. Military Hospitals
-must not be made training schools for Nurses; else it
-would be better to admit them much younger than at the age
-of thirty years.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Opinion as to
-Wages and
-Pensions.</div>
-
-<p>If a Nurse cannot enter the Service till after she is thirty,
-the majority will no doubt be some years above thirty when
-they enter, say an average of thirty-five; and five years
-appear a very long probation for a person at that age before
-increase of wages begins. In most cases, in Civil Departments,
-there is only one year of such probation before increase
-begins, though the persons are much younger when they enter.
-A maximum might be fixed, beyond which the wages should
-not rise, and when the increase of pension would be sufficient
-inducement to remain. Very few Nurses can be expected to
-continue really efficient till sixty years of age; but it is often
-difficult to say that a person is disabled, though she may have
-become less active and efficient. If there is no retiring allowance
-there will be great reluctance to dismiss her, and it
-might, in that case, be cruel. The better plan would be
-to promise a small pension after ten or twelve years’ service,
-on a scale so graduated thereafter as to offer an inducement to
-remain, at the same time that it would afford facility for
-enforcing retirement without injustice. This would be economy.
-The “Nursing Sisters” grant <abbr title="20 pounds">£20</abbr> after twelve years’
-service.</p>
-
-<p>After a time there may probably be difficulty in dismissing
-persons who have done good service for ten years, but have
-declined in efficiency, unless there is a retiring allowance.
-They may be reluctant to retire; and, if so, it would be a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>lmost
-impossible to dismiss them, without some kind of provision.
-This is a difficulty which is encountered in every employment
-in which there is no such provision. Persons who can hardly
-be said to be disabled but who have become less efficient are
-retained, because, if dismissed, they have no means of livelihood.</p>
-
-<p>I have consulted the best authorities upon these points; and
-I find the following general principles admitted:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="neohead"><span class="smcap">General Principles as to Wages and Pensions.</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(1.) Same
-Salary at first.</div>
-
-<p>(1.) At whatever age a Nurse enters the Service she shall
-begin with the same salary.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(2.) Same
-Annual rate of
-increase.</div>
-
-<p>(2.) The annual rate of increase shall be the same for all
-ages of entrance.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(3.) Maximum
-Salary fixed.</div>
-
-<p>(3.) The maximum salary shall not exceed £<span class="spread-out_space">&nbsp;</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(4.) Pension
-for Service
-after Ten
-Years.</div>
-
-<p>(4.) The pension for service shall not begin until ten years
-of completed service.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(5.) Amount
-of Pension a
-certain Percentage
-on
-mean Salary
-of preceding
-year.</div>
-
-<p>(5.) The amount of pension shall be a certain percentage on
-the salary during the year preceding that on which she is pensioned.</p>
-
-<p class="neohead"><span class="smcap">Applications of the foregoing Principles.</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(1.) Annual
-rise of Wages
-till the
-maximum of
-efficiency.</div>
-
-<p>(1.) That the wages of Nurses shall rise annually, for a definite
-number of years, attaining their maximum, on an average,
-at the age forty-five, when the Nurses are found to be most
-efficient.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(2.) After five
-years’ Service
-Pension for
-Disability.</div>
-
-<p>(2.) That, after five years’ service, the Nurse shall, in the
-case of <span class="smcap">ABSOLUTE DISABILITY</span>, become entitled to a pension
-during the period of her disability.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(3.) Pension
-on a Scale
-graduated on
-the Wages.</div>
-
-<p>(3.) The pension will be on a scale graduated on the wages.
-It will be twenty per cent. of the annual wages in the year of
-service, 5–6, and the rate to be granted will rise progressively
-two per cent. per annum, until the rate on the wages becomes
-seventy per cent.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(4.) A<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>ll
-Nurses to
-retire at Sixty.</div>
-
-<p>(4.) All Nurses will be placed on the Retired List at the age
-of sixty.<a name="Anchor_16" id="Anchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 16.">[16]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(5.) Nurses to
-serve again
-who are
-Pensioned for
-Disability,
-when
-Disability
-ceases before
-Sixty.</div>
-
-<p>(5.) Those Nurses who are pensioned at an earlier age, for
-disability, will, if called upon, be liable to serve when that
-disability ceases, or to forfeit their pension. They must
-therefore bring an annual medical certificate of disability to the
-Superintendent-General, in order to receive their pension.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(6.) Nurses
-partially
-Disabled to
-receive partial
-Pension.</div>
-
-<p>(6.) Nurses who are partially disabled will only be
-entitled to a certain proportion of the pension allowed in the
-scale, to be determined, on representation made by the Superintendent-General.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Example.</div>
-
-<p class="center">Example.</p>
-
-<table class="yearsin" summary="pension by completed years">
- <tr><th class="tdc"><span class="smcap">Age.</span></th><th class="tdc"><span class="smcap">Completed Years<br />of Service.</span></th><th class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Wages.</span></th><th class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Pension.</span></th></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdc">30</td><td class="years">0</td><td class="wages_pounds"><abbr title="20 pounds">£20</abbr>?</td><td colspan="2">Gratuity</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdc">31</td><td class="years">1</td><td class="wages">22</td><td colspan="2">Gratuity</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdc">32</td><td class="years">2</td><td class="wages">24</td><td colspan="2">Gratuity</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdc">33</td><td class="years">3</td><td class="wages">26</td><td colspan="2">Gratuity</td></tr>
- <tr class="line"><td class="tdc">34</td><td class="years">4</td><td class="wages">28</td><td colspan="2">Gratuity</td></tr>
- <tr class="postline"><td class="tdc">35</td><td class="years">5</td><td class="wages">30 × ·2 =</td><td class="tdl">£6</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdc">40</td><td class="years tens">10</td><td class="wages">40 <span class="hidden">×</span> ·3</td><td class="tdl">12</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdc">45</td><td class="years tens">15</td><td class="wages">50 <span class="hidden">×</span> ·4</td><td class="tdl">20</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdc">50</td><td class="years tens">20</td><td class="wages">50 <span class="hidden">×</span> ·5</td><td class="tdl">25</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdc">55</td><td class="years tens">25</td><td class="wages">50 <span class="hidden">×</span> ·6</td><td class="tdl">30</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdc">60</td><td class="years tens">30</td><td class="wages">50 <span class="hidden">×</span> ·7</td><td class="tdl">35</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>These principles, if admitted, would suggest the following
-heads for regulations as to Nurses’ wages and pensions:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(1.) Amount
-of Wages, first
-year, £20.</div>
-
-<p>(1.) At whatever age a Nurse enters the service, the amount
-of wages paid to her during her first year of service, will be
-£20.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(2.) Annual
-rate of increase
-up to <abbr title="50 pounds">£50</abbr>,
-when it ceases.</div>
-
-<p>(2.) There will be an annual rate of increase of wages equal
-to 10 per cent, of the first year’s wages, until the yearly wages
-amount to <abbr title="50 pounds">£50</abbr>, beyond which there will be no further
-increase.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(3.) No
-Pension till
-Ten Years’
-Service
-completed, nor
-for Disability
-till Five
-Years.</div>
-
-<p>(3.) A pension will be awarded for service to any Nurse, who
-may retire, on account of age, at the expiry of ten full years’
-service, but in case of disability, a Nurse shall receive a pension
-after five years’ service, or a gratuity, according to circumst<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>ances,
-if discharged for disability, before she has completed
-five years of service.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(4.) Rate of
-Pension.</div>
-
-<p>(4.) Rate of Pension. The pension will be on a scale graduated
-on the wages. It will be 30 per cent. of the wages received
-by the Nurse in her tenth year of service, and the
-pension granted to Nurses who have served more than ten
-years, will rise at the rate of 2 per cent. of the wages for every
-additional year of service, until the pension amounts to 70 per
-cent. of the wages received during the year preceding its
-grant, beyond which no higher pension will be granted, except
-in cases of special devotedness to the public service, when an
-addition to the regulated rate of any pension may be granted
-on special recommendation, made by the Superintendent-General
-of Nurses, setting forth the nature of the service for
-which such augmented pension is to be granted.<a name="Anchor_17" id="Anchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 17.">[17]</a> But no such
-pension shall exceed the amount of £50.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">(5.) Nurses,
-Pensioned for
-Disability,
-whose
-Disability
-ceases, may be
-called on for
-Service.</div>
-
-<p>(5.) Any Nurse pensioned for disability, may be called on
-for service in the event of such disability ceasing before the
-age of sixty, in which case her wages will be the same as they
-would have been, had she not been disabled.</p>
-
-<p>(6.) Every Nurse who has completed her sixtieth year, must
-retire from the service on her rate of pension.</p>
-
-<p>(7.) Any Nurse, temporarily or permanently disabled in the
-service, who has served more than five and under ten years, will
-be entitled to a lower rate of pension, according to the circumstances
-of each case, as represented by the Superintendent-General.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">18. Number of
-Nurses to
-Patients.</div>
-
-<p>18. Nurses should be selected and appointed by the Superintendent-General
-of Nurses for each General Hospital, in a
-proportion not exceeding one nurse for every twenty-five<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-cases.</p>
-
-<p>There is nothing so fatal to discipline as to require by regulations
-what it is known and admitted cannot be performed. Such
-rules are made to be broken. Therefore, is it not better,
-instead of fixing a number to fix a limit, and say “not exceeding
-one to every 25 or 30 patients,” leaving it to the Superintendent-General
-to economize Nurses, and not appoint the
-full number permitted, unless when really necessary? In one
-case she might consider one nurse for fifty or even sixty sufficient;
-in another, one for every twenty-five might be few
-enough. Why tie up her hands against economy as well as
-against extravagance?</p>
-
-<p>At the same time it is necessary to state&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>(1.) That, by all accounts, at home and abroad, in the
-English and in foreign armies, the proportion of severe cases is
-very considerably less, in time of peace, in a Military Hospital
-than in a Civil one, especially in the surgical wards.</p>
-
-<p>(2.) That the Nurse’s time, being relieved of the waste
-incurred by fetching and waiting for things, the cleaning of
-the ward being done by Orderlies, and, an important item, the
-Ward-Master being responsible for the serving the patients’
-food, twenty-five sick are not enough, on an average, to occupy,
-properly, her time.</p>
-
-<p>(3.) That idleness, always pernicious, is never more so than
-to Hospital-Nurses.</p>
-
-<p>(4.) That petting the patients, by way of filling up time,
-would be, of the two, more pernicious than idleness.</p>
-
-<p>(5.) That it is most important, apart from these reasons, to
-train and accustom these Nurses to serve efficiently large
-numbers of patients, so as to make them useful in war-service,
-where every woman who can be spared is better away; and
-where a small efficient staff would, please God, do excellent
-service.</p>
-
-<p>(6.) That it is not in human nature, taking its average, supposing
-the Regulations lay down that the proportion is not to
-exceed 25, for many Nurses not to murmur at having more;
-whereas they ought from the first to understand, that the service
-is a very laborious one, and that none but women able and
-willing to undergo and render laborious service, ought to enter
-it, or be suffered to remain in it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>(7.) Care must be taken therefore that in fixing this minimum,
-no use may be made of it dangerous to the service, either
-in the Hospital work itself, or in provoking adverse criticisms
-upon these Regulations in quite different places. Twenty-five
-cases are not generally enough.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">19.
-Precautions
-in sending
-Nurses abroad.</div>
-
-<p>19. It would be expedient to take the advice of an able and
-honest man of business as to whether the Superintendent-General
-should, on engaging a Matron or Nurse, have her
-signature to a bond or not. On the one hand, we know what
-bonds are to loose consciences, and if the promulgation of the
-Regulations give undoubted power to the Superintendent-General
-and to her Matrons on foreign stations, I should prefer
-having no bond. But this is for a man of business to answer.
-It is important to remember that the power of instant dismissal
-for misconduct, and of sending the Nurse home must be
-retained, which renders the service different from ordinary female
-service. A discharged governess or servant, if she insisted on
-remaining at her own expense at the foreign station, could not
-be sent home forcibly by her late mistress; now it is essential
-that an offending Nurse be forthwith passed on board the
-first returning ship. Also performances similar to those of
-one or two of the women in the War-Hospitals who, on
-hearing of good situations, misbehaved in order to be discharged,
-ought to be effectually prevented. A lawyer must
-advise, first, if it can be; secondly, how it can be done. The
-Superintendent-General, on sending abroad Nurses, ought to
-have some security either that they remain there and do their
-duty, or that they be sent home for her judgment if they fail in
-duty. To have them either going abroad as Nurses by way of
-securing a free passage, and then looking out for lucrative
-situations, or accepting the offers which might, and, occasionally,
-undoubtedly would, be made to them, would be most injurious
-to the Service. Can it be prevented by any stronger measure
-than the instant forfeiture of all claim to the eventual pension?
-If so, it should. Could this power be extended to the washerwomen
-who would probably be sent with the Nurses ordered
-to War or out-of-the-way foreign stations? Perhaps it will
-simplify things not to include them in the Regulations.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Hospital<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-Laundries.</div>
-
-<p>The persons provided by the Officer, whoever he may be,
-to attend to the hospital linen under the orders of the Matron,
-will be pretty sure to give the Matron trouble. But it is much
-better to begin very modestly, and to avoid alarming the
-Attendance Department; and so to be content with the people
-provided in the linen store, and not at all to invade the regions
-of the kitchen. By degrees, please God the work prospers, it
-may be extended. I fear a laundry of men, except in war-service,
-will be a costly and inefficient concern. Yet a laundry
-of women, exempt from the control of the Matron, would be
-probably the worse evil of the two. And it is both right and
-expedient to move very slowly, and to begin with the nursing
-service alone. Ultimately, if we invade both laundry and
-kitchen, I should still wish, in both, to have as few women as
-possible. The fewer women are about an Army Hospital the
-better.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h2><span class="smcap">Addenda with regard to Female Nursing in a Military
-Hospital on the Pavilion or <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> Plan.</span></h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <a title="larger image of plan of Hospital de Lariboisière" class="nodec" href="images/plan_large.jpg" name="plan" id="plan"><img width="450" height="525" src="images/plan.jpg" alt="Hospital de Lariboisière" /></a>
- <p class="caption" lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>PARIS</i></p>
- <p class="caption" lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><a title="larger image of plan of Hospital de Lariboisière" href="images/plan_large.jpg">Hospital de Lariboisière</a></p>
- <p class="caption" lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">612 Lits.</p>
-
-<p class="caption noindent left" lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">
-A. Bureaux.<br />
-B. à rez de chaussée Cuisine. au <abbr title="premier">1ᵉʳ</abbr> Etage Logements d’employés &mdash;au <abbr title="deuxième">2ᵐᵉ</abbr> Etage Dortoirs des Garcons de Service.<br />
-C. <span class="ditto">à rez de chaussée</span> Pharmacie. <span class="ditto">au <abbr title="premier">1ᵉʳ</abbr> Etage Logements d’employés</span> &mdash;<span class="ditto">au <abbr title="deuxième">2ᵐᵉ</abbr> Etage</span> Chambres des Elèves internes.<br />
-D E F G H I J K. Chauffoirs.<br />
-L M N O P Q. Batiments de Malades.<br />
-R. à rez de chaussée Buanderie. au <abbr title="premier">1ᵉʳ</abbr> Etage Lingerie. au <abbr title="deuxième">2ᵉᵐᵉ</abbr> Etage Dortoirs des filles de Service.<br />
-S. Communauté.<br />
-T U. Bains.<br />
-V. Chapelle<br />
-X Y. Amphithèatres.<br />
-Z. Manège et Magasins<br />
-W. Ecurie. Remise et Salle des Morts.<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>1. In considering the Pavilion Plan to be in future received
-as the sanitary necessity for Hospital construction, we must
-look upon it as susceptible of many modifications.</p>
-
-<p>And, particularly in adapting it for a Military Hospital, we
-must ask by what modification can it be made, 1. Most economical
-as to attendance, a greater amount of which is rendered
-necessary than by other plans of construction.</p>
-
-<p>2. Easy as to supervision; and, of course, a Hospital spread
-over the extent of space now proved to be essential by sanitary
-knowledge, whether built on the Pavilion plan or not, must
-multiply the amount of supervision over that required in the
-concentrated over-crowding of the old Hospital system (over-crowding
-not with regard to cubic space in the wards, but to
-the superficial area on the ground).</p>
-
-<p>3. Economical as to the number of sick to be accommodated
-on the same floor, so as to save unnecessary waste of time and
-strength on the stairs to both Ward-Masters and Nurses.
-Each Nurse should have, in time of peace, not less than from
-50–60 patients under her charge.</p>
-
-<p>4. Efficient as to convenient ac<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>commodation for Nurses and
-Ward-Masters, near to the wards of which they are in charge.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">1. Pavilion
-Plan
-indispensable
-on Sanitary
-grounds. Its
-Difficulties, on
-the score of
-Discipline in
-Military
-Hospitals, to
-be openly met
-and guarded
-against.</div>
-
-<p>1. The Pavilion Plan, while it is incontestably superior,
-on sanitary grounds, to any other, while it perhaps may be
-made equally economical, with regard to building, is more
-expensive than the older crowded and badly-constructed Hospitals,
-not only as to ground, but because each separate
-entrance, staircase, set of appurtenances, represents an additional
-cost of materials, and of hands to keep them clean and
-in order. Human life is, however, a more expensive article
-than any other. If human beings, and especially sick human
-beings, are to be spread over as much space as possible, which
-is now known to be an essential to health and more especially
-to recovery, this must be done under any system and can be
-best done under the Pavilion system. It of course necessarily
-entails a greater amount and cost of attendance and of supervision.
-Pure air and light are the prime necessities of a hospital.
-These are best secured by the Pavilion Plan, and therefore
-it is the cheapest in the end. As to the hands, there never
-ought, never will, never can, be a superfluity of hands in a well-regulated
-Hospital. The duty of the hands consists of two parts&mdash;to
-keep the Hospital clean; to attend the sick. I had rather
-not enumerate the instances where I have seen that, often from
-the most various causes, one result arises&mdash;that more time
-and care is given to floors, stairs, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, than to the
-sick. Extreme cleanliness is of vital importance; this
-should be combined with extreme simplicity of detail,
-and with providing for considerable numbers at once. You
-can effectually clean a large ward in much less time than
-two small ones; a long stair than two short ones, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> Extreme,
-<em>not finicking</em>, cleanliness, thorough ventilation, for which an
-ample supply of opposite windows will certainly in the long run
-prove infinitely the best plan, and careful nursing, are probably
-the main conditions, humanly speaking, of a large proportion of
-cures&mdash;subsidiary to the medical or surgical treatment.</p>
-
-<p>Sanitary necessities are never to be rejected, on account of
-the trouble they give or of the means of cleanliness which they
-render necessary. Because the saving of life, not the saving of
-trouble, is the object of all sanitary appliances, Hospitals among
-the number. And the saving of life is the only real economy.
-If you have saved “hands” and trouble, and lost life, you
-have been extravagant. The object is not to banish appliance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>s
-which will cost trouble in keeping them clean, but to discover
-those appliances which can be kept clean, at least cost of
-labour. And this is perfectly possible.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">2. Easy
-Supervision to
-be provided for.</div>
-
-<p>2. The <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Vincennes</span> modification of the Pavilion plan has been
-adopted, among other reasons, for the greater facility of supervision
-it affords. The Military Superior, the Surgeon, the
-Matron, can at any instant pop in upon any ward of a
-Hospital which has one roof. Each pavilion may, unless the
-matter be specially considered with a view to providing this
-effectual supervision, perceive the approach of any inspector.
-The system of scouts, watch, alarm, is well understood
-in many hundred wards, whose patients would be puzzled
-to give the things names. Military patients will know both
-things and names. Remember that Ward-Masters, Orderlies,
-and Nurses require inspection as well as patients. Whatever
-system of Hospital construction is adopted should provide for
-easy supervision, at unexpected times.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">3. If from
-24–30
-Patients be the
-right Number,
-Sanitarily
-speaking, for
-a Ward, the
-Pavilion Plan
-should, in a
-Military
-Hospital,
-be so arranged
-that more than
-one such Ward
-should be on
-the same floor,
-for facility of
-Supervision.</div>
-
-<p>3. The more we see of different systems, the more we see
-the great mistake of giving a Nurse too little to do.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty-four ordinary sick or surgical cases are too few for
-a Head Nurse.</p>
-
-<p>In a Military Hospital, the proportion of heavy cases
-is in ordinary times considerably below the average proportion
-of such cases in a Civil Hospital, open, as the latter
-is, to accidents, and to the cases of dangerous disease always
-more or less rife in low and crowded neighbourhoods.</p>
-
-<p>Upon an average, a third or a fourth of the cases in the
-ordinary surgical wards of a Military Hospital will be ulcers
-from causes honest and dishonest. What these men will require
-is rest (the cleanliness which is often so irksome a novelty
-to the corresponding Civilian patient is routine to the soldier),
-and very simple treatment.</p>
-
-<p>It is most important, if possible, to form a staff of active,
-laborious, useful women, who, if ordered on war-service, can at
-once cope with numbers, and serve efficiently a considerable
-number of heavy cases.</p>
-
-<p>Relieved of all cleaning, and relieved of the great loss of
-time incurred by fetching, waiting, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, none of these
-Nurses, who are, in fact, Head Nurses, should serve less than
-forty men. And, as I before submitted, I had rather she ser<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>ved
-fifty or sixty than forty.</p>
-
-<p>Give them twenty-four patients, and either they will become
-idle, finicking women, or they will take to petting the patients,
-a thing to be sedulously avoided everywhere, most of all in
-Military Hospitals.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">4. Importance
-of the Head
-Nurse
-sleeping close
-to her Ward.</div>
-
-<p>4. The more we see of different systems, the more apparent
-becomes the importance of the Head Nurse (all these are Head
-Nurses) sleeping close to the ward:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>As regards the efficiency of her service:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>As regards the saving her own time, strength, and securing
-her a modicum of comfort in a work where, if she does her
-duty, she will never have a superfluity of comfort. Time,
-strength, and this modicum of comfort, enter much into a
-Nurse’s health&mdash;and health is essential both for efficiency and
-economy.</p>
-
-<p>Where the Nurse sleeps at a distance from her ward, her
-efficiency, both as to superintendence and work, especially at
-night, in dangerous cases, is seriously impaired.</p>
-
-<p>If she sleeps at a distance from her ward, her comfort, also,
-such as it is, is destroyed. Whatever a Nurse does for herself,
-she must do by fits and starts. A really efficient Head Nurse
-is never able to make anything for herself, though she often
-would far rather save the money it costs to “put it
-out.” The most simple mendings, even the feat of stowing
-away the laundress’ supply of a Saturday evening, become,
-when a ward is heavy, or when there are two or three of those
-cases of urgent danger, so many of which, by God’s blessing,
-the assiduous care of these women saves, year by year, in
-our Hospitals, a procedure done in several acts. The misery
-of dividing her small effects (the smaller the better) between
-a day-room and a distant sleeping-room, the unseemliness and
-inconvenience of carrying things backwards and forwards,
-cannot be described.</p>
-
-<p>If it be possible, the Nurses must sleep adjoining their
-wards; and it will not do to give each only 24 patients.</p>
-
-<p>It would be considerably better, if feasible, to have two
-Nurses in contiguous rooms; but in the Pavilion Plan this
-would involve bringing one Nurse away from her ward; and
-rather than this, the next best, though inferior plan is to put
-one Nurse immediately above and below the other, with a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>distinct
-bell which she can in a moment ring from her bed into
-the other Nurse’s room, to summon her if needed.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Importance of
-Lighting
-Hospital
-Wards by Gas,
-with Sanitary
-Precautions.</div>
-
-<p>Some years ago gas was laid on in the Sisters’ rooms in
-Guy’s Hospital. In the other Hospitals there is an allowance
-of candle to each Sister. The disadvantages of gas are
-its alleged unhealthiness and its certainly being disagreeable
-to some eyes. Its advantage is its cheapness. Liberty
-to buy a candle and not use the gas is allowed at Guy’s.
-As it will be a very important thing to conduct the
-Nursing Service as economically as possible, and as there
-must not be any wretched false economy as to essential
-matters, which in the end always proves waste, it will be well
-to save as much as can be in matters not essential. It
-would be worth while to ascertain the average amount of
-saving which the substitution of gas for an allowance of
-candle has effected at Guy’s. Gas is used in the wards of
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Bartholomew’s, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Thomas’s, and Guy’s, day and night.
-It appears, when ventilation is properly attended to, to answer
-well, and to do no harm. At night the gas is lowered so as to
-leave the ward just light enough to see all that is done in it:
-if bleeding, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> occurs, it can in an instant be raised, and the
-ward lighted up. London Hospital burns gas in the evening,
-and throughout the passages at night; but when the night
-watch begins at nine, the wards are dark, except the Nurse’s
-candle. A spare candle, un-lighted, is always at hand.</p>
-
-<p>It is very important for the order of a ward that
-the attendant in charge, and also any inspector suddenly
-entering, should see at once all that is going on in the ward.
-Where there are dangerous cases, this is of great moment;
-and where there are not, it is equally necessary for the police
-of the ward. A candle or a rushlight give insufficient light.
-Properly lowered, gas at night does not disturb the patients.
-After a night or two, those who are accustomed to sleep in the
-dark get used to it. If the Nurse sleeps adjoining the ward,
-there <em>must</em> be sufficient light in the ward at night. If the
-gas-fittings are properly tight and if every gas-burner has a
-ventilator, so that the products of combustion are effectually
-conveyed away, for each gas-jet consumes as much air as eleven
-men, it would be greatly preferable that there should be a low
-gas light in the wards at night.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">II.&mdash;1. Should
-it be necessary
-to serve one
-Pavilion with
-one Nurse
-means by
-which this
-could be
-effected.</div>
-
-<p>II.&mdash;1. Suppose the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> plan retained, as proposed
-at Aldershot, for a Military Hospital, with wards of twenty-four
-beds each&mdash;then, with fear and trembling, but with the
-firm conviction that it is better for human nature, most of
-all, for nursing human nature, to have somewhat too much
-than a great deal too little to do, I respectfully recommend
-that one Nurse serve the three wards of each Pavilion.</p>
-
-<p>One woman cannot sleep alone in the Pavilion. The Nurses
-must sleep together near the Matron’s quarters. If the
-Nurses sleep away from the wards there should be some way
-by which a Nurse can at once be summoned, in case of any
-urgency in her ward, and it would be well to consider this in
-the distribution of quarters. Either the Matron should lock
-the Nurses’ quarters at night, and any summons should be
-brought to her and by her referred to the Nurse; or the
-summons should go straight to the Nurse’s door. There are
-difficulties both ways, even supposing these summons should
-be unfrequent. The Nurse of each Pavilion should inhabit the
-room on the ground-floor ward, where the heaviest surgical
-cases will be probably placed, whence she can better command
-the movements of the Pavilion, and attend the entrance of the
-Surgeon.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">2. Head
-Nurse’s Day in
-a Pavilion
-Hospital.</div>
-
-<p>2. Her day might be something like this (in time, perhaps,
-God will bless us with some Army Chaplain who will get up
-early and give us a very short service morning and evening):&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She should be effective, and enter the Pavilion about 6 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span>,
-go through the wards, read prayers in one by turns at the
-appointed hour, and give out the linen wanted. (Six is the
-nominal hour when the Head Nurses of one great London
-Hospital enter on their duty.) Here must be no nominal
-hours, all must be real, though not overstrained. Then the
-dressings, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, attendance on Surgeons, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> With 72 patients
-on different floors, she must train the Orderlies to do the
-lighter dressings (by training I mean real teaching, not leaving
-the Orderly to find them out himself); she must see all the
-wounds of all her wards which she does not dress herself at
-least every other day (which she can do by seeing some in the
-morning and some in the evening), and she must dress the
-heavy cases of all the wards herself. All this, with method,
-and not losing time by fetching and waiting, an efficien<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>t Head
-Nurse can do.</p>
-
-<p>She must be responsible for the linen of the wards; but this
-must be simplified as much as can be, so as to secure responsibility,
-yet relieve the Nurse of unnecessary time spent over it.</p>
-
-<p>The Nurse should be relieved of all writing and counting,
-on the score of loss of time incurred. It will not do to
-charge a Nurse, with seventy-two patients on three different
-floors, with serving each man his portion of diet; the diets of
-two wards would get cold while she was serving the first. It
-will be better to make the Ward-Master of Pavilion wards
-responsible for the serving the diets. There must, of course,
-be a card at each bed, or some other record, showing the diet
-the man is ordered. The Nurse must know at a moment’s
-glance what each patient is ordered.</p>
-
-<p>The largest London wards are the two male accident
-wards in the London Hospital. Each Head Nurse has charge
-of five wards of 12 beds, separated (and in some respects
-impeded) by two lobbies. Very often there are fifteen beds in
-each ward (not by over crowding), and these Head Nurses are
-often to be seen in charge of seventy-five patients each, including
-many serious, and some urgent cases. The two lobbies,
-the small wards, and the duty of some daily writing and arithmetic
-in settling the diets, with some daily loss of time in
-fetching and waiting for medicine, render a Head-Nurse’s
-service, as regards “manual” labour, less efficient than it
-might be; even where she is most efficient.</p>
-
-<p>Relieve the Nurses as much as possible of all writing and
-arithmetic. If it could be possible to relieve them altogether
-of the “settling” the diets, so much, by a great deal, the
-better. In the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> system, with one Nurse to each
-Pavilion, it is utterly impossible to prevent the Nurse losing
-daily time and strength on the stairs. But, relieved of writing,
-of arithmetic, of losing time by “settling” and fetching, such
-women as it will be our aim to procure can get through the
-duty of seventy-two patients, although with the serious drawback
-of their being in separate wards and on separate floors.</p>
-
-<p>If, however, the Pavilion plan were so modified as to have
-two pavilions end to end, with an intervening staircase, so
-spacious and well ventilated as to cut off the ventilation of the
-two wards on the same plane, then all the conditions as to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-health, and facility of nursing and supervision, would be much
-more easily obtained. Of this more hereafter.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">3.
-Responsibility
-of Nurse for
-Discipline of
-her Ward or
-Wards&mdash;how
-Modified in
-Military
-Hospitals.</div>
-
-<p>3. As to the Nurse’s responsibility for the good order of
-the three wards in a pavilion, supposing the three wards are
-served by one Nurse, there must always be a clear difference
-between this responsibility in the Head Nurse of
-a Civil and a Military Hospital. The Civil Head Nurse,
-whose assistants are all Nurses, who with herself are
-under the Matron, is charged with, and responsible for, the
-good order of the ward, and it becomes her duty, the moment
-she finds herself unable to do this alone, at once to call in the
-Steward, or equivalent Officer, in whose hands is the police
-of the Hospital.</p>
-
-<p>The Military Head-Nurse’s Assistants are Orderlies, <i>i.&nbsp;e.</i>
-men and soldiers, who, with the patients, are under military
-discipline. Of this military discipline, the military power
-from the Commandant down to the Non-Commissioned Officers
-acting as Ward-Masters, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, is in charge; the duty of the
-Military Nurse is, I apprehend, in case of any insubordination
-which she cannot put down at once, to call in the Ward-Master
-or equivalent, before calling in the superior Military or the
-Surgical Officer; it being, however, well understood on all sides,
-that she has the right of direct appeal to the superior Military
-or the Surgical Officer, if the Ward-Master does not do his
-duty, or in the event of a grave irregularity, if he is not at
-hand, besides its being her duty to report such to the Matron,
-if the case admits of being deferred till that can be done. It
-is impossible to settle details until the regulations as to the
-new Hospital Corps are fixed; and whatever regulations, whether
-for Nurses or for Orderlies are made, some difficulty, and
-much discretion will be inevitable and necessary in working
-them. But it is necessary to bear in mind that whereas in
-the Civil Hospital the Head Nurse, under the control of,
-and responsible to, the Officers, including the Matron of the
-Hospital, is solely in charge of both the nursing and the
-discipline of her ward, both as to patients and as to Assistant
-Nurses; in the Military Hospital, she is in charge of the
-nursing, and the Ward-Master of the discipline, both of
-patients and Orderlies. To be in charge of the nursing,
-implies to have power to enforce discipline, but this i<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>s rather,
-in ordinary cases, to call in the military power, beginning
-from the lowest or Ward-Master’s grade and reporting this
-to the Matron, than to invoke herself the military superiors.
-Therefore it would be well worth while trying how far it
-would answer to serve the three wards by one Nurse, who, in
-each ward where she successively is, is bound, on perceiving
-any irregularity, to call in the Ward-Master, and, in contingencies,
-to appeal directly to the Surgeon and the Captain of
-Orderlies, and to make the discipline of the three wards the
-charge of the Ward-Master, who is bound to go through the
-wards when the Nurse is not in them. The Ward-Master, in
-order to fulfil his charge, must enter all the wards, while the
-Nurse is in one of them; so that the patients of one ward, who
-may know that they are safe from the Nurse for half an hour
-or more, as she is in another ward, know that they are not
-safe from the Ward-Master.</p>
-
-<p>In a military Hospital we must bear in mind that it is essential
-that the discipline over patients and orderlies should be exercised
-by men, and that the Ward-Masters must be the lowest
-and immediate deposits of this power of discipline.</p>
-
-<p>All these things must be settled with the concurrence of the
-Director-General.</p>
-
-<p>It is a great comfort that the Hospital staff returns to
-soldiers. We shall get on infinitely better with them than we
-could have done with the late Medical Staff Corps, though,
-after all, in the long run, we should manage with them too. If
-only God helps us with the sort of women required, thoroughly
-efficient Nurses, laborious active women, discreet as well as
-well-conducted, and aware (a little) of the sort of work and
-place, they are in!&mdash;let us trust this to Him, when the time
-comes, and depend upon it, to give each Nurse plenty to do
-will become one great means of forming such women&mdash;provided,
-which must be strenuously kept in view, they are made
-to do it.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">4. Importance
-of Lifts.</div>
-
-<p>4. It is very important to have the system of lifts throughout
-the Hospital, although here, as throughout, the plan of
-Pavilions renders them much more requisite, and makes them
-work less efficiently than the block plan. Lifts, to carry meals
-and medicine, linen, coals, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, to and from the first and
-second floor wards, are very preferable to the Orderlies carryin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>g
-them up and down. One sort of load ought certainly not to be
-brought up and down by lifts, but to be carried up and down by
-men, viz., coffins and the dead. Using the lift for this purpose
-(as is done in one Civil Hospital) is on all and every account
-thoroughly objectionable.</p>
-
-<p>The system of lifts is the more important, because although
-there is no objection to the washing of tea cups, drinking cups,
-and medicine vessels at the sink in the scullery, it is certainly
-neither necessary nor safe to wash the dinner dishes close to
-the sick wards. By a little arrangement, the whole of these
-could be removed by lifts to a scullery beside the kitchen, and
-there cleansed and set aside for next day’s use.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">III.&mdash;1.
-Casualty Wards
-for noisy and
-offensive cases
-should be
-separate from
-the ordinary
-Wards, and
-under a
-completely-appointed
-Staff
-of their own&mdash;both
-for
-Sanitary and
-administrative
-reasons.</div>
-
-<p>III.&mdash;1. Sanitary necessities can never be interfered with.
-The concentrating offensive and noisy cases together, while
-entirely separating them from each other, in a completely
-appointed set of wards, is a far more efficient working thing
-than appending a small ward to each ward.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Thomas’s (a very admirable Hospital in very many things)
-has a casualty ward (for such cases) for men and one, adjoining
-but separate, for women, under the charge of one Sister. Baths
-are in the wards.</p>
-
-<p>Guy’s had the same provision with, however, the drawback
-that there was not a Sister in charge, but a Nurse over other
-Nurses, with higher pay, but not a Sister or Head Nurse.
-However excellent such a Nurse may be, every ward <em>must</em> be
-under the same regular government as is general in the Hospital,
-if discipline and order are not to suffer. Every ward or
-set of wards should be under a completely appointed staff.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Bartholomew’s had a set of casualty wards, including two
-of about ten beds each, several small wards of two and one bed
-each, including two with gratings and other melancholy
-necessary appliances to prevent extremely violent delirious
-patients from becoming suicides. These wards were often
-partially empty, never quite so. They were long served like
-the casualty wards of Guy’s; but some years ago they were
-placed under the charge of the Sister of the male operation
-ward immediately above, who received in consequence a small
-annual increase of wages.</p>
-
-<p>London Hospital sent its <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>noisome, offensive, and extra-infectious
-cases to its other wards&mdash;small wards for one patient
-each, and, like Guy’s, not under the regular management of a
-regular Head Nurse.</p>
-
-<p>It most certainly appears that the plan of concentrating
-these cases together, but with (as at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Bartholomew’s)
-small wards where extra-violent patients can be put separately,
-the whole under one staff of Nurses, is far the best
-working plan.</p>
-
-<p>And for this reason. Occasionally, a very offensive case
-requires little nursing beyond the fixed daily dressings, and
-can lie quietly enough in his bed or ward. But noisy cases
-almost always, and offensive cases generally, require close
-watching. Now the moment we have a patient in a little
-room at the end of the ward, it is our duty to go in and out
-and see after him, and supposing him to be a violent, delirious
-case, he is, unless under strong restraint, unsafe alone; and
-even then the restraint requires looking to. In very many
-cases the frequent inspection of Nurse and Orderlies would not
-be enough, and the man ought to have a watcher.</p>
-
-<p>We can never send one of the Orderlies of the ward, wanted
-for its regular duty, to sit down in one of these little rooms;
-and we can never keep a fixed extra Orderly idling about,
-unless the little ward is inhabited. We must then fall back
-upon extra Orderlies, put in when the case wants close watching&mdash;of
-course not otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>At night, also, the watching which suffices for the ward will
-often not suffice for the extra case&mdash;and he must have a
-watcher apart.</p>
-
-<p>The plan of extra Orderlies or extra Nurses is a very bad
-one, to be avoided as much and as long as possible; it very
-seriously interferes with the discipline of wards.</p>
-
-<p>Recollect that each offensive or extra-infectious case, put into
-the little ward, ought to represent a great amount of separation
-and care, which it will be difficult to secure. His mug,
-utensils of all descriptions, bandages, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, ought to be washed
-separately from those of the patients of the large ward. Is this
-easily secured?</p>
-
-<p>In the two Borough Hospitals they at once remove a case of
-erysipelas or gangrene, occurring in any ward, erysipelas from
-venereal wards included, into the casualty ward. In the two
-other great Hospitals it is only when the erysipelas or gangre<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>ne
-becomes severe that the removal is made. Now at once to
-remove these cases from the ordinary wards is very advantageous.</p>
-
-<p><abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Bartholomew’s larger wards for male and female casualty
-cases, two small wards for two patients each, and two grated
-wards for one each, are very efficient. The wards are all contiguous,
-and, as has been said, under the charge of a remarkably
-efficient Sister, who has charge also of the male operation ward
-immediately above. The little casualty wards, of course, add
-to the work, and greatly to the anxiety of watching; but certainly
-violent delirium tremens’ cases, alone and in a secure
-ward which can be darkened, appear often to quiet much
-sooner than where several of these wretches lie shouting to
-and at each other. Delirium tremens will never be a thing
-unknown in a Military Hospital.</p>
-
-<p>One such case in the little ward adjoining the Pavilion
-Ward would be a heavy infliction on the severe cases in the
-latter; the noise would be heard throughout it. And unless
-the ward were properly secured, or unless the man were under
-strong restraint&mdash;and then that would require constant looking
-to&mdash;he would not be safe a moment alone; while the Orderly
-was emptying slops or bringing in his dinner, something might
-occur.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">2. Restraint or
-Non-restraint
-in Delirium
-Tremens.</div>
-
-<p>2. Restraint is again a thing which must be left to our masters,
-and to them solely&mdash;but an ugly, sorrowful, little truth may
-here be told. Restraining and non-restraining processes, and
-their results may be seen, both where, in the same Hospital,
-one or more of the Surgeons orders restraint never to be used
-to his patients, however violent, and others order it to be used
-in violent cases: and where the rule of the Hospital is to
-restrain violent cases, removing the restraint so soon as the
-paroxysm is over, or as soon as amelioration renders the sudden
-return of paroxysms less likely. I am not speaking of lunatic
-asylums, but of delirium, particularly delirium tremens, in
-hospitals. Lunatics occasionally enter the Civil Hospitals, but,
-of course, as soon as that supreme earthly misery is ascertained,
-they are removed to the proper refuge. It is my humble
-opinion and firm belief that mechanical restraint excites a
-patient much less, and quiets him much sooner, than the
-prolonged struggle with his attendant’s arms and hands, whi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>ch
-<em>must</em> otherwise be resorted to.</p>
-
-<p>The coercion apparatus ought also to be good, not cheap, and
-always in perfect order. The least thing out of order either
-causes pain, which when it can be avoided is cruel, or it endangers
-the efficiency of the whole. The strength and cunning of
-these patients resembles those of madmen, which for the time
-being they are.</p>
-
-<p>Restraint renders the usual complement of ward servants
-able to manage many cases. Non-restraint means that some
-person must stand or sit by or upon the patient’s bed, and hold
-and struggle with him often for hours&mdash;also that generally
-this person must be a stranger to the ward. Extra attendants
-are most injurious to discipline. Could there be a set of
-casualty or equivalent wards, with its own Head-Nurse, the
-sick would gain much.</p>
-
-<p>But if necessary to adopt the little ward with every
-ward&mdash;in that case the Nurse must manage the three additional
-patients&mdash;twenty-four or twenty-five are, indeed, too
-few.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">IV. Simplicity
-of Construction
-essential to
-Discipline.</div>
-
-<p>IV. In all Hospitals, let the construction be as simple as it
-can be. Let its splendour be its lofty airy wards, with plenty of
-windows; water in all due abundance on each floor; an ample,
-not excessive, supply of linen, polished impervious walls and
-ceilings, well-laid and bees-waxed oak floors, and a thorough
-not excessive, supply of good apparatus of the various necessary
-kinds. But every <em>unneeded</em> closet, scullery, sink, lobby,
-represents both a place which must be cleaned, and which
-must take hands and time to clean, and a hiding or skulking
-place for patients or servants disposed to do wrong; and of
-such no Hospital will ever be free. And every cornice, every
-brass lock or handle, which could be replaced by a plain china
-or ebony one; every decoration, or flourish, or ledge, on doors,
-windows, tables, beds, presses, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, represents either a collection
-of dust or a great waste of hands, time, and strength in unnecessary
-cleaning and dusting. These are not crotchets, but
-the result of close observation of the practical working of
-these matters. Every five minutes wasted upon cleaning what
-had better not have been there to be cleaned, is something taken
-from and lost by the sick. Let the appurtenances of the wards
-be simple and complete, but as plain and as undecorated as it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-is possible to be.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Polished
-Walls.</div>
-
-<p>Polished impervious walls and ceilings are of the first consequence
-in Hospitals. It is perhaps hardly necessary to state
-that, if Parian cement be used, it must not and need not be of
-the kind lining the wards and corridors at Guy’s Hospital,
-which is as rough as the roughest plaster, of a dark and dirty
-colour, and which nothing could improve but being lime-washed
-twice a-year; it should be polished like that used at the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span>
-Hospital at Paris, and of a pure white.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Covered
-Exercising
-Place.</div>
-
-<p>In building a new Hospital, some covered arcade or some
-place where the patients might take exercise in wet weather,
-and where inspection could be exercised over them, without
-fuss, is worth contriving. In <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Thomas’s, the patients walk
-under the covered arcades of the court.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Reserve
-Wards.</div>
-
-<p>Both in <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethanien</span> and in the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Charité</span> Hospitals at Berlin there
-are reserve wards,&mdash;or rather in the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Charité</span> there is a reserve
-Hospital, into which most of the sick are moved for six months
-in the year, to change the air alternately of all the wards, which
-during the time receive a thorough cleaning. Great stress is
-laid at Berlin on thus providing, when building a new Hospital,
-a certain reserve space, which obviates the necessity of
-less efficient and far more costly steps afterwards.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">V. Nurses’
-Meals.</div>
-
-<p>V. Let us, by all means, consider as settled, that the
-Nurses’ food is sent them cooked. Possibly, in the long run,
-the undoubted advantages of this plan will be found to be
-over-balanced by its disadvantages; but let us begin by trying
-it. I submit that their dinners, and possibly suppers, should
-alone be sent them cooked, and that each Nurse should receive
-a fixed weekly quantity of groceries, and a daily or two days’
-allowance of bread.</p>
-
-<p>For packing up the Nurse’s meals sent her from the
-kitchen, a Vienna custom might be useful. Each Nurse to
-have a long, strong, straw basket, properly named or numbered.
-Some contain five dishes and covers, but two or three would
-here be sufficient for every purpose, including an occasional
-slice of pudding. The dishes strong tin, with a tin cover, and
-if the Nurse prefers eating her dinner out of it rather than
-the dignity of plates, and the trouble of washing them up, the
-Matron should let her take hers her own way. If taken
-by hand, two baskets of this sort can be carried with ease.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-But if the Matron, as a general procedure, sends each Nurse
-a hot little dinner, of a good well-cooked portion of meat and
-vegetables, one such dish and cover will do for one Nurse, and
-three, five, or six can be accommodated out of the same
-basket, or one large basket, carried by two men, would serve
-all the Nurses round. The dishes should, in either case, be
-numbered or named, not the Nurse’s name, but the ward.</p>
-
-<p>A dish and cover of strong, coarse earthenware is used in
-the Vienna Hospital, as a grander edition of dinner, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> The
-tin ones keep warm without fire for a long time. If the meal
-arrives when the Nurse cannot eat it, put by on the hob, or
-some provision for warming in the scullery, it will keep warm
-and good till she can eat it.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">VI.
-Arrangements
-for a Pavilion
-served by one
-Nurse.</div>
-
-<p>VI. Supposing that we serve each Pavilion by one Nurse,
-I submit that&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">1. Nurse’s
-Day-room.</div>
-
-<p>1. The Nurse’s day-room should be on the ground floor.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">2. Ward-Master’s
-Sleeping-room.</div>
-
-<p>2. The Ward-Master should sleep in his room on the second
-or highest floor; should the Nurses sleep in the Pavilion, the
-Ward-Master should still sleep in it.</p>
-
-<p>In the event of the Pavilions being arranged end to end, as
-already suggested, the difficulty in regard to Nurses’ and Ward-Masters’
-rooms would be materially diminished.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">3. Where
-should
-Orderlies
-Sleep?</div>
-
-<p>3. I think, but am not sure, that the Orderlies had better
-sleep away from their wards, but I would leave this to be
-settled by the Doctors. In cases of sudden outbursts of
-danger, delirium, or drunkenness, from the results of concealed
-spirits, and of the Surgeon being sent for, it is useful to have,
-at once, other than the Night Orderly at hand. And a part of
-what has been said as to the importance of the Head Nurse
-sleeping near her ward, applies to the Orderlies. Yet there are
-important reasons why the Orderlies should not be or feel
-too much at home in their wards; and if the authorities are
-disposed to try the plan of lodging the Orderlies together, away
-from their wards, they are probably right, though I should
-not be surprised if, after a fair trial, it were found better to
-revert to the having them near the ward. The Pavilion Plan,
-which, on the one hand, gives all concerned more liberty of
-doing wrong than the block plan, and which, on the other,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-renders it more difficult to call in help, whether of supervisor
-or of Orderlies, if help is suddenly wanted in the night, makes
-it the more desirable to let the authorities take quite their own
-way, as to this.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">4. Where
-should
-Orderlies
-Dine?</div>
-
-<p>4. I think the Orderlies had better have their cooked meals
-sent them into the wards. Of course, they can only eat together
-in detachments; but in many cases, the absence of even
-one of the Orderlies would be very inconvenient. Perhaps just
-as the bell rings to summon to the common meal, something is
-going on which requires all the ward service; the man either
-goes late to a cold dinner, or goes away just when he is wanted.
-If his dinner is brought to him in one of these emergencies, it
-is put by to keep warm till it is over. Regularity as to meals,
-as far as possible, should be strictly attended to; and is, in all
-well-regulated wards: and it is well, where, as in some Hospitals,
-there is a fixed hour for meals; but it would seem better
-that the meals should come to the ward servants than the ward
-servants go to their meals.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">5. Should
-Orderlies be
-brought
-together?</div>
-
-<p>5. In the case of Civil Hospitals served by women, it is
-very important that each Head-Nurse, and each set of Assistant-Nurses,
-should sleep, eat, and live in the ward and its
-appertaining rooms, and not assemble together more than can
-be avoided. With Orderlies the case is partly different. Still
-I would not unnecessarily bring them all together, any more
-than allow them to be too much at home in their wards.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">6. Should
-Orderlies have
-a Day-room in
-Pavilion?</div>
-
-<p>6. If the Orderlies do not sleep in the Pavilion they should
-not have a day-room.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">7. Scullery to
-each Ward.</div>
-
-<p>7. To each ward should be attached a scullery, small, but not
-too small, which only muddles things and work, well provided
-with cold, and, if possible, with warm water; and it should be
-law that no patient enters the scullery unless sent there by
-the Nurse to help in washing up, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>; and, as a rule, they
-ought not to be sent there. Make them useful in the ward;
-keep the scullery for the Nurse and Orderlies.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">8. What should
-be done in the
-Scullery?</div>
-
-<p>8. From this scullery let the Nurse get the water she requires&mdash;Orderlies
-ditto.</p>
-
-<p>Let the Orderlies eat their meals in it, if they do not eat
-them away from the ward. The food of the Orderlies is generally
-different from that of most of the patients, and it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-answers better for them to eat their meals not under the noses
-of the patients. In emergencies, of no rare occurrence, the
-Orderly must watch a patient and eat his dinner at the same
-time, and so must the Nurse; but, as a rule, it is undoubtedly
-better that ward-servants should not eat under the observation
-of the patients.</p>
-
-<p>In the scullery all the cleaning must take place, which is not
-done in the lavatory.</p>
-
-<p>In the scullery extras are to be warmed, drinks ditto, hot-bricks
-heated, water-bottles filled, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, and none of
-these things are to be done at the ward-fire.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Poultice-making.</div>
-
-<p>On the other hand, there is no way so good of making poultices,
-a thing humble but important, as for the Nurse to stand
-at a small table in front of the ward-fire, to make the poultices
-there, spread them, and forthwith apply them.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes in a large ward, where the Surgeon orders them
-extensively, a large iron pot is filled with poultice, and then
-quickly spread and applied. Sometimes the pot is filled and
-the poultices spread in the scullery or kitchen, to avoid the
-mess in the ward. When a number of poultices are thus
-spread away from the sight of the patients, even by very clever
-Nurses, some arrive too large, or too small, or too broad, or
-too narrow; and either the poultice has to be returned, or, as
-of course usually takes place, to be put on the wound it does
-not fit.</p>
-
-<p>I would not trust any Nurse, including myself, to make a
-number of poultices of the right size, unless within sight of
-the patients. Rather than do this it is better to make the
-poultice-pot (wood does not hold heat, this must be of iron),
-in the scullery, to take it into the ward, and there spread and
-apply the poultices.</p>
-
-<p>But a large iron pot of linseed poultice seldom contains the
-article nearly so well made, as when made in smaller consecutive
-quantities in a wooden bowl. The bowl does not keep warm
-above a certain time. Where the poultice is made in a mass,
-even by very clever Nurses, it never is so well made as when
-the Nurse makes the poultices in the wooden bowl. These
-must be forthwith spread, applied, and the bowl re-filled, if
-more are wanted.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This is another reason why the person who washes the wound
-should also make the poultice, as also why the Orderlies should
-clean the ward, why the Nurse should as far as possible be relieved
-of all “mental labour,” and why kept as much as possible to
-“manual labour.” All severe wounds she should wash and
-dress herself, and many a wound becomes severe, when the
-patient is allowed to fiddle over it himself. Some wounds will
-not bear being left uncovered, and of course in some cases the
-Nurse will wash the wound, and immediately afterwards apply
-the poultice. In general, the Surgeon will consider the wounds
-take no harm from being washed all round, and then poulticed all
-round. This requires not to be over-hurried, and not to lose a
-moment’s time. A careful Nurse will never apply a poultice
-without having first seen the wound: carelessness, haste,
-idleness, over-work, and prudery, each and all produce very
-sorry results as to this.</p>
-
-<p>I think, therefore, poultices should be made in the ward, and
-immediately after the table cleared away, and the slight mess
-also. In some Hospitals they place a straw carpet just round
-the table, and also carry it to any bed which requires an extra
-mess in dressing or cleaning.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">9. Presses in
-Ward.</div>
-
-<p>9. A regular store closet is hardly desirable. A good
-arrangement is this:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the ward, nearest the Nurse’s room, or the
-ward-door, a large press for linen.</p>
-
-<p>By it or opposite it another press, for stimulants, dangerous
-medicines, stock medicines, such as castor oil and one or two
-others which are always to be at hand, though not ordered for
-any particular case, stock lotions (as few as possible), lint, old
-soft linen, stronger but not coarse ditto for pads, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, cotton
-wool, tow, oilskin, splints and pads, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> Of all these
-things, the Nurse should always have a certain reserve on
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>It will be well worth while to see that these presses are made
-commodiously for their purpose. The linen press should have
-broad deep shelves, and the different kinds of things should be
-sorted apart; the other press should have broad deep shelves
-for the heavier things, and separate shelves for the bottles;
-the stimulants by themselves in one row, the stock medicines<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-in another, unless these and the stock laudanum were together,
-but they are better apart, and the dangerous things upon
-the topmost shelf; another row for sweet oil, mustard, stock
-lotions, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, another row for ointments. Each bottle and pot
-to be distinctly labelled in whatever is reckoned the most
-lasting manner; opinions differ as to labels and letters cut
-in the glass. The latter are boring by night, if something is
-suddenly wanted, and it is just then that mistakes are to be
-guarded against. A strong clear <span class="smcap">PRINTED</span> label, securely
-fastened to the bottle, is preferable, to be renewed when necessary,
-as Orderlies’ thumbs even while holding a bottle, if the
-Nurse’s hands are on the bed, wear labels out. There is a
-great saving of time and of chance of mistakes effected by
-clearly printing the directions for the administration of medicine,
-“once,” “twice a day,” “every three hours,” <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, and
-affixing them to each medicine bottle.</p>
-
-<p>Of both these presses the Nurse should have the key or keys.
-One key might do for both, but it may be best to have two
-keys.</p>
-
-<p>It is a very good plan where the shape of all medicine bottles
-and of those for liniments is distinctly different; and where,
-<i>e.&nbsp;g.</i>, square bottles are used for poisons, or blue bottles for
-poisons, and square for lotions.</p>
-
-<p>A small narrow shelf over each patient’s bed, or over his
-locker, solely for his medicines and wine. When these are on
-the locker it is less convenient. Where the medicines are
-not dangerous, it is better to have them thus at each bed,
-than concentrated away from the beds. Dangerous medicines
-should never be left at a patient’s bed.</p>
-
-<p>The two presses will answer all demands. As, however, it
-does not do not to have a supply of everything that may be
-wanted always in readiness, a stand or table in the ward should
-have upon it a small supply of whatever may be suddenly
-wanted&mdash;a little lint, linen, tow, and two or three vessels. The
-supply of lint, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, to be small enough for the Nurse to keep
-account of it, and for the patients to know that account is
-kept of it.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">“<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Apparat</span>” in
-German
-Hospitals.</div>
-
-<p>In constant daily use in the surgical wards of the great
-Vienna Hospital is a thing called in Teutonic style “<span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Apparat</span>.”
-The Nurse carries it round for herself, when preparing a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>nd
-dressing the patients, and carries it after the Surgeon when he
-makes his rounds. The system of both dressing and washing is
-in some respects so different from the English one, that the
-fittings would vary.</p>
-
-<p>This concentration of what is wanted for dressing and
-washing wounds, and for attending the Surgeon in his
-inspection of them, and of what is at once wanted on any
-bleeding, fit, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, is very useful; all the more from its being in
-a compact portable form, which can be thus successively carried
-to each bed. An English carpenter would make a lighter and
-handier thing. Brass basins, which are there used, are not
-desirable. Of course, one must be most especially anxious not
-to introduce any novelty, particularly any foreign novelty, faster
-than can be avoided, and we may consider it better either
-to leave the general system unaltered of rushing on some
-emergency to the dressing table drawer, or closet, and thence
-bringing successively the things wanted, or at all events not to
-extend concentration further than the excellent plan, so far as it
-goes, of the London Hospital, where each Head Nurse attends
-the Surgeons with a large basket in her hand, containing most
-of the dressings required, spunges, and one or two little matters
-also usefully at hand. The <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">apparat</i> has the advantage of carrying
-with itself the basins used for washing. In the Military
-Hospital of Vienna a tray attends each Surgeon, without
-basins.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">10. Nurse’s
-Room.</div>
-
-<p>10. It is important to have the Nurse’s room opening
-at once into the ward, and, upon the whole, I should
-incline to its having but one door, although it may be thought
-better there should be a second, so that she can leave her room
-without being seen to do so by the patients. Also, by all
-means, let the scullery be opposite the Nurse’s room, and not
-between the ward and the room. As an invariable Hospital
-rule, rather more than elsewhere in Military Hospitals, publicity
-may be considered to be a very great police, and a still greater
-protection. It is far better that twenty-four patients should
-see the Nurse’s door than one or none; and that her room
-should open full upon the ward than into an intervening
-scullery.</p>
-
-<p>In contem<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>plating a Military Hospital, we contemplate a
-place through which, one year with another, all characters,
-including a few of the vilest, pass. These are not theoretical
-matters. The more repulsive the subject, the more prevention
-is better than cure. Guard against too many closets, sinks,
-<abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Lavatory.</div>
-
-<p>At the end of the ward there should be a lavatory,
-with a row, or two opposite rows, of white earthenware
-basins fixed in a stand, with outlet tubes and plugs: each basin
-should have a hot and cold water-pipe: and there should be not
-less than one to each four beds. There should also be in the
-lavatory a hot and cold water-pipe, from which a portable
-bath can be filled.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Water-closet.</div>
-
-<p>At the furthest end of the ward should be a water-closet,
-with not less than one soil-pan to each eight beds: and
-white earthen or porcelain urinals in the same proportion.
-In the London Civil Hospitals water-closets are now in
-general use throughout the wards, but not in all of the
-great Hospitals. In all the Civil Hospitals, it is usual that
-the patients’ water-closets have no inside bolt or lock, and that
-there is only accommodation for one inside. In some London
-Civil Hospitals the male patients, able to take exercise, are
-expected to make use of urinals out of doors. These matters
-one, two, or three experienced army surgeons had better
-pronounce upon; other things are to be considered than the
-recommendations of architect, plumber, or even sanitarian.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Sink.</div>
-
-<p>There is in a Berlin Hospital a very useful piece of prosaic
-apparatus&mdash;adjoining the water-closet, a sink, with a high,
-large, deep, round, pierced basin of stone, above a <em>large</em> hole,
-into which the contents of a bed-pan can be at once emptied,
-and from which the bed-pan is at once effectually cleansed.
-Adjoining this is a sink into which all other slops are emptied.
-In mentioning this pierced basin or sink solely for emptying
-and cleansing bed-pans, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, which is used at the <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethanien</span>
-Hospital at Berlin, and is far better than emptying
-the said vessels into the often-occupied water-closet, and
-then cleansing them in an awkward fashion between the
-water-closet and the sink, it is necessary to add that
-the cock ought to extend far enough over the sink for the
-bed-pan, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, to be thoroughly cleansed by a stream of water
-falling directly into it. The Nurse stands at the sink, empties
-the pail, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, in it, without fear of splashing, and rinses <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>and
-fills it, without stirring from the place. Now this absence of
-splashing water and of moving about from sink to pump, or
-cock, saves mess and time. The oblong sink, usual in England,
-has by no means the same advantages.</p>
-
-<p>(The partition containing the sink would be an appropriate
-receptacle for the bed-pans to hang by hooks or nails on the
-wall pending their use.)</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Baths.</div>
-
-<p>In Civil Hospitals, two baths, in an airy closet at
-the end of the ward, to be locked at all times when
-not in actual use, are a very great advantage. Bringing a bath
-into a ward, which in many urgent cases must be done when
-the baths are distant, is a messing discomfort. Still it had
-better be left to surgeons to say whether, in Military Hospitals,
-it would not be preferable to have, in each ward, only a
-portable bath, on wheels, covered with india-rubber, to be
-brought into the ward for any urgent case; and to take
-all the men able to walk, or safely to be carried, to the
-Hospital baths. Of these, some trustworthy, or intended and
-supposed to be trustworthy, man, who ought to rank as a non-commissioned
-officer, should have charge. An intelligent and
-respectable-looking man, a serjeant, has charge of the baths in
-the Garrison Hospital at Vienna.</p>
-
-<p>In a great London Civil Hospital, <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Thomas’s, it is the
-very admirable practice for each patient (of course with necessary
-exceptions) to be bathed on his or her admission. The
-Sisters are responsible for examining each woman in the bath,
-which is within the female wards, and for at once reporting before
-suffering them to go to bed, any case of suspected pregnancy,
-syphilis, or contagious disease. A man does the same for the
-men, who are bathed apart from the wards. This arrangement
-is an excellent one. On the other hand, severe cases, just able
-to be carried to baths, get no good by going through the air,
-and being jolted up and down stairs.</p>
-
-<p>In planning a Military Hospital, in which the service of
-women is to be introduced, it is important to obtain the advice
-of experienced Army Surgeons as to the arrangement of
-appurtenances of the wards to be used by the patients alone.
-Endeavour to prevent the system of holes and corners. It is
-best that the Nurse’s door should command the view of those
-who come in or out of the lavatory, and in or out of the wa<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>ter-closet.
-This whole section is both ugly and important.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">11. Summary.</div>
-
-<p>11. To sum up. I think it would work the best to have no
-store-closet, only two well-appointed presses, by which a certain
-amount of cleaning is saved, and a corner avoided.</p>
-
-<p>Could two cupboards or presses in the wall be arranged for the
-ward linen and the ward stores, it would be preferable to
-presses placed against the walls. Take care, however, that
-the wall is sufficiently thick, so that the presses are not damp,
-and if this cannot be provided against, keep to presses separate
-from the wall.</p>
-
-<p>Believe that all this is neither theory nor fidget&mdash;but
-practice.</p>
-
-<p>The furthest end of the ward should contain a lavatory,
-a water-closet, and the pierced basin for emptying and cleaning
-bed-pans is a very useful thing. At the other end of
-the ward, the Nurse’s little room, her door opening full
-upon the ward. If the upper half were of glass, with a
-curtain before it, allowing the Nurse to see the ward without
-being seen, it would be all the more useful. At <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Thomas’s,
-a window opens into the ward, the Sister drawing a blind
-when she chooses, and a door opens into the passage, just
-within the ward doors, opposite the scullery, so that the
-Sister enters the scullery, in which there is a water-closet, for
-the accommodation of herself and Nurses, without traversing
-her ward. Whether door or window, the Nurse should see
-at once all that is going on in her ward. I prefer a door;
-yet, if there is to be a ward for one, it may be best and
-most central to have the Nurse’s window on the large ward,
-and her door open on the passage. Opposite the Nurse’s
-room should be a scullery, not too small. The scullery should
-be well provided with cold, and, if possible, warm water.</p>
-
-<p>If a supply of hot water can be obtained by turning a cock,
-this is best. Provision should be made in the ward scullery for
-keeping poultices warm which is every now and then wanted.
-It is not right to wash eating-vessels and poultice pans, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, in
-the same sink; and this should be considered in arranging
-the scullery. If each ward washes its own bandages, which
-it ought not to do, the second sink will come in usefully for
-this. It is worth while, in enforcing extreme simplicity,
-to prevent jumbling together eating-vessels and things for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-wounds and sores. Sinks are infinitely most handy when made
-deep, somewhat in the shape of broad round basins, with hole
-at bottom; it saves much splashing and mess; the cock to
-overhang full the middle of the sink. The Wall against the
-sink should have some protection.</p>
-
-<p>Such a scullery, with complete efficient simple apparatus for
-its various purposes, places for washing up and cleaning, and
-for ward purposes and cookery, so that the Nurse can warm
-the drinks, prepare fomentations, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, without jostling the
-Orderlies, who are washing up or cleaning, will be a very
-great comfort, simplification, and promoter of order, cleanliness,
-efficiency, and work. At one corner a decent little table for
-Orderlies’ meals, above it their separate safes for their bread,
-cold rations, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>; each to have and keep his key; each to
-have his locker.</p>
-
-<p>Each floor and ward will require a scullery. It is far
-better for each ward to contain its own appointments&mdash;and
-all the other stores to be together, apart. On the second floor
-might be the Ward-Master’s room; <i>vice</i> the Nurse’s room.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">12. Nurses’
-Sleeping
-Quarters.</div>
-
-<p>12. Nurses’ quarters, if we are driven to their not sleeping
-near their wards, should be adjoining the Matron’s two rooms,
-and separate water-closet, in a part of the Hospital as central as
-can be managed without trespassing on our betters. I would
-simplify these quarters as much as possible&mdash;either a series of
-very small rooms, or one great space partitioned off each into a
-little cell, with a window, bed, washing table, chest of drawers,
-and a very small wardrobe, with space to hang up three or
-four gowns, deep enough for another row for shawl, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, at top
-a shelf for bonnet and caps, at bottom a deep drawer for
-boots and shoes. These things will be a convenient riddance
-to the chest of drawers, and comfort to the women. In each
-cell very strong hooks to hang up and air a little gowns taken
-off at night, and one or two chairs. The nurses must wash
-their hands, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, in the rooms off their wards, and I think it
-must be understood as a rule that they leave their quarters in
-the morning and return to them at night. Optional carpet.</p>
-
-<p>Each cell to be numbered either with number or with name
-of Pavilion. Opposite this space a small lumber room, wherein
-each nurse may deposit her box, thereby hindering dissemination
-of bugs. Opposite also a running open cupboard, with partitio<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>ns
-numbered or named as rooms, containing each Nurse’s
-broom, dustpan, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, each with a key.</p>
-
-<p>Also pump, sink, water closet.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Furnishing.</div>
-
-<p>When furnishing begins, it will be well worth while to see
-that all articles of furniture, whether for wards or Nurse’s
-quarters, admit of being easily swept and scrubbed underneath,
-and swept and dusted at top. Chests of drawers, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, with
-too narrow space between bottom and ground, harbour dust,
-or sadly waste a few precious minutes in the most busy part
-of every day. As few high pieces of furniture as possible, to
-gather dust and be out of easy reach; as few as possible of
-cumbrous articles difficult to move from the wall, to sweep
-and dust behind, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr></p>
-
-<p>There ought to be, near the Superintendent’s quarters,
-one or two small rooms, where, necessity occurring, sick
-Nurses might be lodged. We cannot hope always to escape
-having sick Nurses; and there would be serious objection in a
-Military Hospital, where only one Nurse sleeps on each floor, to
-having the Nurse ill in her room for more than 2 or 3 days at the
-outside. Or there might be one good-sized airy room, with two
-or three dark washable curtains dividing it into little dormitories,
-so that one Nurse, whom the Superintendent must engage and
-watch, could attend them all. And as Her Majesty’s Nurses
-must have allowed them such decent comfort as can be, but no
-fastidiousness, I think the cubicles in one room would be best.
-Not to be called so, however, by any means, as it would sound
-Latin and “Puseyitical.” The Nurse’s ward to be locked and
-key kept by Superintendent, except when tenanted. I should
-hope three beds would answer thoroughly, as well as that the
-ward would be empty eleven months out of the twelve.</p>
-
-<p>Considering the awkwardness of illness among Nurses,
-when it did occur in a Military Hospital, it would be worth while
-that, adjoining the little ward, there should be a little room for
-any one infectious case which might occur; <i>e.&nbsp;g.</i>, supposing one
-Nurse ill in the ward with bronchitis, it would not do to put
-another with small-pox into the ward,&mdash;at least it would be
-very impolitic. The ward should have a water-closet and a
-little sink of its own, and a little cell, but with window and
-fireplace, for the attending Nurse to lie down in. When not
-used, once a month’s, or week’s at the most, cleaning by a cha<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>rwoman
-would be enough. It should be always clean and
-ready for use. In the Civil Hospitals, few years pass without
-sundry Head-Nurses and Nurses dying, not a few Nurses
-being warded, and sundry Head-Nurses ill in their rooms. The
-peculiarity of Military Hospitals makes this little preparation
-for what is certain every now and then to occur seem desirable
-and economical; to hire lodgings in the neighbouring town
-would be in all ways a worse plan.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">13.
-Classification
-of Cases.</div>
-
-<p>13. Endeavour, if possible, to obtain a classification of the
-severe and non-severe cases, and let the Nurses be only
-appointed to the wards of severe cases. The convalescent
-cases to be successively removed to the convalescent pavilions,
-whether they bear or not that name. No convalescent ward
-in any of the floors of the Pavilions to be served by Nurses.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">14. Nurses to
-be called by the
-Names of their
-Wards.</div>
-
-<p>14. It will be found excellent in many respects not to allow
-the Nurses’ names to be used in the ward of the Hospital, or
-among each other, so far as the Matron takes cognizance of.
-In the great London Hospitals the name of a Nurse is never
-heard, except occasionally to each other as a solace, partly very
-natural, partly harmless vanity. She is Sister or Nurse of
-such and such a ward. In hasty parlance she is distinguished
-from the others by the name of the ward only. In it she is
-always addressed as Sister or Nurse.</p>
-
-<p>Thus a Sister of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Thomas’s Hospital, whose services in
-the War Hospitals of the East I can never forget, was always
-at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Thomas’s spoken of out of her ward as Sister of George,
-or, more commonly, Sister George; and spoken to quickly or
-called to in a hurry as George.</p>
-
-<p>All this, the only course of all the great and, I believe, of
-the smaller London Hospitals, works excellently, in many
-ways.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">15. Foul Linen&mdash;how
-to be
-Disposed of.</div>
-
-<p>15. Arrangements should be made that foul linen remains
-for the least possible time out of the laundry. As regards the
-laundry deposits, the best plan is that of the London Hospital,
-where each ward has a bin of its own marked accordingly. To
-similar bins all the foul linen should be, at least, daily carried,
-unless it is judged best to receive and wash all the linen in a
-heap, returning numbers only to each ward. The former plan
-is preferable. In any case the linen of the “foul wards” should
-be received and washed apart. During the time, which ought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-to be as short as possible, between dirty linen leaving the
-patients and reaching the bin or bins, a large box in the scullery
-is making the best of a bad business&mdash;the presence of foul
-Hospital linen always is that&mdash;and is preferable to a closet.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">16. Washing
-Bandages.</div>
-
-<p>16. Washing bandages, a very important thing. Shall a
-washerwoman be told off for that particular purpose? or shall
-the Orderlies of each ward do it <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">alla meglio</i>? The former is
-the better plan; if not adopted, the Nurse must see well to
-the matter.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">17. Splints&mdash;Bandages,
-Lint,
-<abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, where to
-be kept.</div>
-
-<p>17. It would depend upon what sort of work is usually
-going on in the Surgical Wards of a Military Hospital in peace
-whether it will be worth either a press with glass front, in
-which splints, pads, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, are excellently arranged, as at
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Bartholomew’s; or the pad-basket and splint-rack, which
-are also excellent, provided in London Hospital. The splint-rack,
-enabling the Surgeon at once to see and choose of all shapes
-and sizes, is perhaps only suited for an accident ward, and would
-be out of place in a military ward in peace. It may be better
-to have these stores entirely in some dispenser’s or store-keeper’s
-jurisdiction, and to let the Nurse confine herself to
-padding, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, any splint sent by the Surgeon into the ward.
-Let our masters take exactly their own way about this.</p>
-
-<p>Bandages, lint, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> should perhaps rest entirely
-with the Dispenser, otherwise it would be useful in the
-greater Hospitals, to have under the Matron a Nurse
-charged with preparing them and giving them out, writing in
-a book the date, amount of each, and the ward they are given
-to. In a small Hospital the Matron could do this herself.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Cotton Lint
-never to be
-used.</div>
-
-<p>While speaking of lint, it seems a duty to state that, in some
-of the Military Hospitals, in certain County and even London
-Hospitals, and also in Workhouses, and in the practice of private
-Surgeons, a preparation of cotton has been recently substituted
-in the dressing of wounds for <i>charpie</i> or Surgeons’ lint, properly
-so called. So miserable an economy at the expense of the
-sick is not adopted in several, at least, of the London endowed
-Hospitals, probably in none. For all purposes for which lint
-is necessary cotton fibre should be totally disused, in the army
-and everywhere else. It is irritating and injurious to wounds.
-It increases human suffering; it delays patients in Hospital,
-and, in doing so, of course, increases the cost which such a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-substitution has been intended to reduce. Nurses should be
-particularly careful never to use this material, which is easily
-distinguished, even by the touch. Any Surgeon may tell the
-best of it from lint by submitting it to microscopic examination,
-and on doing so he will readily discover that characteristic
-of cotton fibre which renders it so ill adapted for surgical
-dressings. It does not absorb the discharges from wounds, as
-linen lint does. The fibre is ragged instead of being smooth,
-and it is apt to become matted together, and to adhere to the
-surface and edges.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">18.
-Classification
-of Women.</div>
-
-<p>18. It is essential to have as few women as can efficiently do
-their work. Supposing the Hospital were for one thousand
-patients, not taking into account that some wards would probably
-be foul wards, where I earnestly hope female service will
-not be, at present at all events, introduced, and that some
-wards would be for slight or convalescent cases, where I hope
-it never will be&mdash;supposing each Nurse served seventy-five
-patients, supposing one Nurse, at the very least, was told off
-for the linen, fourteen or fifteen Nurses would serve the
-Hospital. I conclude the Matron to have no cognizance of the
-laundry.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Superintendent’s
-Store
-room.</div>
-
-<p>The Superintendent<a name="Anchor_18" id="Anchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 18.">[18]</a> will require a store room, or at least
-a store closet, and hers should be well appointed. It would
-depend upon the other arrangements of the quarters, whether
-the world in general, when sent for to fetch what it wanted,
-enter from the same side as the door of the Superintendent’s
-bed-room, or from the other side. And it would depend upon
-the nature and amount of stores of which she had charge, in the
-larger Military Hospitals, whether or not she should have a
-Nurse told off for this also. Economy is essential; but useless
-fiddling over every duster or scrubbing-flannel given out, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>,
-<abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, sadly hinders the Matron’s time from more important
-things.</p>
-
-<p>Housekeepers must be avoided, and every woman must
-have a distinct and sufficient share of work, and each be distinctly
-and equally under the Matron. Still it would be ad<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>vantageous
-if we could from the first include in the staff of
-Nurses for the larger Hospitals, one or two places which could
-be filled by efficient persons who yet were unfitted for the
-ward work, which calling will be, and ought to be, laborious
-and wearing enough. Many a woman would never do to look
-after a Pavilion and seventy-five men; who yet, in charge of
-linen or stores, would be most valuable, and influence most
-beneficially the Nurses, whom yet she might be unfit to govern.
-The system of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sœurs de <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Vincent</span>, who, in theory and
-fact, subject entirely to the will of the Superiors in general
-practice, are yet selected and trained for <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">spécialités</span>, who remain
-long in these <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">spécialités</span>, which <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">spécialités</span> include such requiring
-more or less of physical strength, seems to be one giving many
-useful hints for us.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h2><span class="smcap">Addenda as to Mixed Nursing by Nurses and Orderlies
-in Military Hospitals on the Double Pavilion Plan.</span></h2>
-<h3 title="" class="faux"><span class="smcap">Orderlies’ Duties</span></h3>
-
-<p>I. After much anxious thought, re-consideration of all
-things, and pondering, I submit&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>1. That three Orderlies will efficiently serve a ward of from
-28 to 30 patients, including night-duty.</p>
-
-<p>2. That each of two wards of 30 each, should there be two
-such under the same Head Nurse, on the same flat, ought to be
-entirely separate in all other respects.</p>
-
-<p>3. That if night-duty be required, each such ward should
-have an Orderly on night-duty.</p>
-
-<p>4. That each such ward should have a scullery.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to these questions, I further submit&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>1. Economy of hands, combined with efficiency of service,
-is an urgent thing in all Hospitals; most of all in Military
-Hospitals,</p>
-
-<p>On the score of expense;</p>
-
-<p>On that of efficiency of inspection;</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="sub">From the nature of Military Hospitals, where the aim should
-be throughout to combine great simplicity with thorough
-efficiency;</p>
-
-<p class="sub">From the importance of training the staff, male and female,
-of Military Hospitals, for service in War Hospitals,
-where every man or woman who can be spared is better
-away.</p>
-
-<p>2. Yet economy of hands, carried too far, becomes, like all
-other such economies, penny wise and pound foolish.</p>
-
-<p>3. Without doubt, large wards can be efficiently served by
-fewer hands than small or moderate wards. But, as sanitary
-considerations limit the size of wards to from 24 to 30 patients,
-let us make this the basis of all calculation.</p>
-
-<p>4. The more it is considered, the more essential it appears,
-to train Nurses, from the first, to do efficiently a great deal of
-work. A small staff of respectable, laborious, and thoroughly
-efficient women seems the thing to be aimed at; whether considering
-Military Hospitals by themselves, or as a training-school
-for Hospital war-service.</p>
-
-<p>5. It would be better to give each Nurse one great ward; but
-wards above a certain size are inadmissible for sanitary reasons.</p>
-
-<p>6. The care of 24 to 30 patients is not sufficient duty, by a
-great deal, for a Nurse.</p>
-
-<p>7. Therefore, upon the whole, and as decidedly the lesser of
-two evils, I recommend assigning to each Nurse two wards.</p>
-
-<p>8. It is less difficult, and less objectionable, that she should
-have charge of two wards on one floor, than of two wards on
-two floors.</p>
-
-<p>9. As regards the Nurse, I recommend therefore, upon the
-whole, to give each Nurse the charge of two wards of 30 men
-each; the wards to be on the same floor; but, except as being
-under the same Head Nurse, entirely separate.</p>
-
-<p>10. It is important to repeat that the Nurse (who is Head
-Nurse), will be set free of two things, which consume much of
-a Civil Head Nurse’s time.</p>
-
-<p>(1). “Settling the diets,” and fetching, besides waiting for,
-portions of those diets (<i>e.&nbsp;g.</i> wine) and medicine.</p>
-
-<p>(2). Distribution of Diets.&mdash;It is quite possible that, in no
-long time, it may be found desirable to assign this duty to the
-Nurse. But it would be better to try to have it efficiently,
-which implies honestly, discharged by the Ward-Master. It
-will relieve the Nurse daily of considerable time; and it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-charges the Ward-Master with a definite duty which he can
-perform. The more he has defined duties, the less he will be
-inclined to fidget and disturb the Nurse. He is pretty certain
-to do this; but definite duties will diminish the tendency.</p>
-
-<p>I should avoid giving the Ward-Masters too few wards.
-Otherwise they will make themselves insufferable obstructions,
-one way or another, to the Nurses. I should say that each
-Ward-Master, in charge of a Pavilion of six wards of 30 each,
-besides the small wards for one, would not have at all too much
-to do. Where there are no Nurses, the Ward-Master should
-have Assistant Ward-Masters in their place.</p>
-
-<p>N.B. Wine might be treated as medicine, and, as such, delivered
-by the Nurse. Wine and medicine are usually, in the
-Civil Hospitals, given from the Apothecary’s shop at the same
-time. Or it might be considered desirable to leave this duty
-to the Ward-Master. In either case, it will never do to serve
-a bad case at once with all his wine, and either to let him
-stupify himself by swallowing it at once to make sure that he
-has it; or to set it by his bed-side for the flies to spoil it, or for
-a dishonest comrade, or here and there an Orderly, to drink
-it. The Nurse should receive, whether directly or from the
-Ward-Master, the wine of such patients, and should administer
-it in successive small fresh portions. The intelligent administration
-of wine ordered to bad cases is one of those momentous
-<i>minutiæ</i> by which, I do believe, and believe more and more,
-many lives are, by God’s blessing, annually saved in English
-Hospitals which would be lost elsewhere. Of course the only
-Regulation about wine should be to specify whether the Ward-Master
-or the Nurse should administer it.</p>
-
-<p>11. Relieved of the loss of time incurred by fetching and
-waiting, and relieved at starting, at all events, and we will hope
-permanently, of the time consumed in distributing the diets,
-I certainly consider that a Nurse of the class of which, please
-God, Her Majesty’s must all be, (strong, laborious, active, and
-conscientious women,) can efficiently serve two wards of 30
-men each.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
-<p class="neohead"><i>Orderlies.</i></p>
-
-<p>12. I should prefer wards of 30 each to wards of 25 each.</p>
-
-<p>13. In forming rules for the proportion of Orderlies to sick,
-it is important to consider that the duty varies extremely
-according to the appurtenances of the ward.</p>
-
-<p>14. I consider extreme plainness and simplicity to be proper
-and indispensable to a Military Hospital. Let us take for
-granted (and may it prove correct to do so), that in none of
-Her Majesty’s Hospitals Orderlies’ time will be wasted in
-cleaning any ornamental things, whether unnecessary furniture,
-flourishes, or cornices, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, on necessary furniture; supernumerary
-shelves, nooks and corners, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> Once provided,
-all these things must be carefully and constantly cleaned, or
-they become receptacles of dust and breeders of fleas; and to
-clean them involves enormous waste of time. A few minutes
-daily wasted on each of many things, make an enormous sum.</p>
-
-<p>15. But it is very true economy to supply, if possible&mdash;which
-in old buildings it often is not&mdash;every ward of every
-hospital with a constant supply of water, (taking care that it
-is not wasted by mischievous or childish patients); and to
-give every ward of every Hospital the use, under proper control,
-of a lift by which, at fixed hours, food, medicine, linen
-and fuel are brought into the wards.</p>
-
-<p>Believe that this is not theory, but the result of practical
-observation, much extended.</p>
-
-<p>16. Now, these two things&mdash;supply of water (if hot and cold
-so much the better, and supply of water imports, of course,
-the appliance for getting rid of it, and of the contents of bed-pans,
-<abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, by one or more sinks) and the use of lifts can
-be applied to a new Hospital; can possibly, not certainly, be
-applied to some of the old Hospitals within the Kingdom,&mdash;can
-certainly not be applied to many of the Army Hospitals
-abroad.</p>
-
-<p>17. Upon an average, these two things make the difference
-of one Orderly’s duty to a ward of 30 men.</p>
-
-<p>18. And a ward of 30 men, so supplied, would be efficiently
-served by half a nurse and three Orderlies, including night-duty.</p>
-
-<p>19. Without these two things (it is a mere comparative
-question as to loss of time and absence of thorough cleanliness,
-whether the water is brought from a pump in the court,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-or a stream some hundred yards off, above or below), and many,
-if not most, Army Hospitals abroad, must always remain
-without these two things, I consider that one Orderly to
-every seven patients will not be too much; while it is certain
-that, other things being equal, the ward with the appliances
-and the three Orderlies will be better served than the ward
-without the appliances and with the four Orderlies. Where
-there is no Nurse, one Orderly for 7 patients will always be
-advisable.</p>
-
-<p>In these memoranda as to Orderlies’ work, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, no notice
-whatever has been taken of the possible abolition of scrubbing,
-because it does not do to count unhatched chickens.
-If, however, that formidable weekly business could be got rid
-of, as well as the bi-weekly or daily washings of bed-head-floors,
-<abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> the labour of the Orderlies would be, without
-underrating that required for keeping oiled floors cleaned, very
-materially lightened.</p>
-
-<p class="neohead"><i>Night-duty of Orderlies.</i></p>
-
-<p>20. Convalescent wards, which will be of great use in many
-ways, will be of use here. With them Nurses will have nothing
-to do. It is possible enough that, in course of time, the
-Medical Officers will desire to have Nurses there, and that it
-may be useful to place there elderly, still efficient Nurses;
-but let this come or not as it will, and let us keep quite
-clear of them, at all events, till the Nursing-service be tried
-and established in Army Hospitals. In these wards, night-duty
-will probably be quite unnecessary, though in that case either
-an Orderly or Assistant Ward-Master ought to sleep at hand;
-and night-duty is a service which must be spared wherever it
-can be spared, and rendered as efficient as possible wherever it
-is really wanted.</p>
-
-<p>I have before submitted that in Paris, Vienna and Berlin, the
-average of severe cases in Army Hospitals, in time of peace,
-is very considerably lower than in Civil Hospitals.</p>
-
-<p>This quite as much applies to English Army Hospitals.
-Whether the ordinary wards would require night-duty I do not
-know. If they often did, I should prefer having a regular
-night-duty in them. If they seldom required it, I would not
-have it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>21. In Civil Hospitals, served by women, I should undoubtedly
-prefer assigning the night-duty to one Assistant Nurse.</p>
-
-<p>22. But Orderlies are in sundry respects different, and,
-upon the whole, I recommend not to have night Orderlies,
-but to let each Orderly in turn do the night-duty.</p>
-
-<p>23. It is important to remember&mdash;the more so as it is often
-forgotten&mdash;that to lay more upon human nature than its
-Maker has made it to bear, is to do a foolish, let alone a
-wicked thing. Upon an average, all men and women can dispense
-with, or abridge sleep for more or less time. Upon an
-average, all men and women, after a laborious day, require a
-good night, in the long run. When they do not have it, either
-health, efficiency, or sobriety, or all go.</p>
-
-<p>Believe, again, that this is not theory, but the result of
-practical observation, much extended.</p>
-
-<p>A strong soldier is no exception to the general rule. In
-the long run, if made to do night-duty after a laborious day,
-he will either go to sleep, or drink to keep awake, or he will
-get knocked up before his time. And this it is part of his
-business to be in time of war; therefore, in peace-service, it
-is economical to let him last his time. It is then sound
-economy to give watchers sufficient sleep.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Scheme of
-Night-Service
-for Three
-Orderlies
-watching by
-turns.</div>
-
-<p>24. Supposing regular night duty required, in a ward of 30
-men, supplied as above, and served by half a Nurse and three
-Orderlies, it might be worked thus: the Principal Medical
-Officer would decide whether the same Orderly should do the
-night duty for a week, or the three on successive nights: probably
-the latter. The Orderly might come on night duty at 9
-<span class="smcap">P.M.</span>, and remain on duty until 9 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span>, thus taking his share in
-the heavy morning work of cleaning the ward, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> In all well-ordered
-Hospitals it is required that this should be done by 10
-<span class="smcap">A.M.</span>, in some by 9 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> Earlier is undesirable in the English
-latitude (in other climates it is different), unless either the
-patients are to be disturbed earlier than English Surgeons
-consider right; or the ward, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> cleaning is hurried through.
-A large ward, got into thorough order by 9 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span>, is in very
-good time. Of course it may happen occasionally to be got
-ready somewhat earlier, but this refers to the average.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
-<p><span class="smcap">Scheme for Three Orderlies A. B. C. Serving Ward X.</span></p>
-
-<p>Monday, 3 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> A goes to bed, after taking his share of
-the morning work, eating his dinner, and helping to clear away
-ward dinner, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> 9 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> A comes on night duty, after 5 hours’
-sleep, and allowing 1 hour for undressing, dressing, and eating
-his supper.</p>
-
-<p>Tuesday, 9 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> A goes off duty, having watched until 6 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span>,
-having breakfasted, having taken his share of the morning
-work, and leaving the ward clean. Let him have the option of
-one or two hours’ fresh air, either now, or before 3 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span>; let
-him sleep full three hours; let him have his hot portion of
-dinner taken to him at the usual hour, unless all the Orderlies
-on night duty are served together at a different hour; and let
-him, 3 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span>, return on duty, washed and shaved. B goes to
-bed, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>; 9 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> B comes on night duty.</p>
-
-<p>Wednesday, 9 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> B goes off duty; 3 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span>, C goes to
-bed, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>; 9 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span>, C comes on night duty, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr></p>
-
-<p>I have reckoned 12 hours for the Orderly to be off duty. It is
-better for him to have eight than seven hours’ sleep, and one or
-two hours’ fresh air are more healthy, and make a man last longer
-than going to and from his bed and his ward. An English
-soldier comes on duty clean, washed, and shaved, a once national
-peculiarity it is highly desirable he at all events should retain&mdash;at
-any rate that of thorough cleanliness&mdash;the shaving is unfortunately
-now not certain; for this and for his meals, some
-little time must be given. I think you will get more, and get
-it longer, out of the man by giving him 12 hours on night duty
-and 12 hours off. Still it will not do to interfere too much with
-analogies, and the proper authorities must decide whether this
-is too much.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Exercise for
-Orderlies.</div>
-
-<p>25. Again, leaving the question for decision to the proper
-authorities, I had rather each Orderly had one hour or two hours
-for exercise each afternoon or each alternate afternoon, care of
-course being taken that he did not exercise himself in some tap.
-He should report himself to the Nurse, or to the Ward-Master,
-or Assistant Ward-Master on going and on his return. So
-should the Night-Orderly when coming on and going off duty.
-Also in many emergencies of no very unfrequent occurrence at
-home, and constantly abroad, the Orderly must dispense with
-recreation time. But as a rule, it is certain that fresh air is
-necessary to preserve health in Hospital duty. Doctors of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>ll
-kinds know and act on this as regards themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The waste of time and strength, at present too often incurred
-by the endless fetching, heavy carrying, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, of many Hospitals
-is in a considerable degree counteracted by its forcing the
-Nurses into other than ward air; the air of a Hospital Court
-is better than that of the best ventilated wards as it is, not as
-it might be. The same applies, in its degree, to Orderlies.
-But it is better, and far more economical, to avoid the fetching
-and carrying as much as possible; to keep the ward attendants
-in the ward to their duty under the supervision of the chief
-and responsible ward-servant; and to give each in turn a short
-daily recreation, if possible.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Night
-Refreshment
-for Orderlies
-necessary.</div>
-
-<p>26. Now comes a thing I am very anxious about concerning
-night duty, the more anxious because it is important, and
-because I am afraid it is an innovation. I have watched the
-night duty with particularly anxious interest, in each Hospital
-I have entered, feeling at once its importance and its difficulties,
-and of the following principle I am thoroughly certain.</p>
-
-<p>The Orderly doing night duty should either be allowed
-refreshment during the night, or the recurrence of this night
-refreshment should be considered in allotting the rations.</p>
-
-<p>In none of the Civil Hospitals, so far as I know, is night
-refreshment given. The Nurses usually on board wages,
-apportion, when they can, some from their food. In one
-Hospital there exists a rule that no Night Nurse is to take
-refreshment during her watch, the intention being to keep her
-more vigilantly to her duty. This is one instance among many
-of the serious and cruel mistakes which men of business or benevolence,
-or both, make, when legislating on matters which they
-do not understand. It is, fortunately for the fine Hospital
-where it is the rule, practically disregarded; the Head Nurses
-knowing well that a Nurse watching and fasting in a ward from
-9 to 9, or even from 9 till the breakfast hour of 6, would either
-soon be unfit for duty, or put drams in her pocket, or doze
-through the night.</p>
-
-<p>A strong soldier, required to watch in a ward and fast from
-9 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> till 9 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span>, or 6 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span>, or shortly before, would stand
-the trial quite as ill as a Nurse. There is an admirable rule at
-two foreign Hospitals where I have served. Sisters watch in
-some wards, Men Nurses in others; and each watcher receives<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-from the house, on going on night duty, a bottle of beer, a can
-with about six or eight cups of coffee, milk and sugar in proportion,
-and three slices of bread and butter. The Sister’s bottle of
-beer is about one pint; the Man-Nurse’s double; his coffee
-can is also a good deal larger. The rule of allowing sufficient
-for three solid refreshments (which of course can if desired be
-made by the watcher two or three) during the night, is an
-excellent one.</p>
-
-<p>I think it would be very sound economy to allow each Orderly
-on night duty, a proportion of beer or porter, of coffee or tea,
-and of bread and butter, or bread and cheese, to take at his
-own time during his watch, besides his supper before going on
-duty, and his breakfast just before 6, (both Nurse and Orderlies
-ought to have breakfasted by 6, and to begin the day duty at 6,
-and I wish it began by opening the windows and repeating the
-short prayers for 5 or 6 reverent minutes). Of course it may
-be considered preferable to reckon this night-ration in the
-Orderly’s rations. Or suppose the bread and beer or porter
-to be reckoned in the rations, and a can of coffee given him
-for the night watch. Settle details as is best, and of course
-analogies must be considered; but in truth hospital watching
-is a very peculiar business; important, unobtrusive, most
-peculiarly trying, and the bright side of very few Hospitals.
-Each watcher should undoubtedly have refreshment for the night.</p>
-
-<p>The Nurse should have her groceries in the lump, and refresh
-herself as she likes out of them. Her watching, if she does her
-duty, will be, when she has bad cases, severe enough; but
-I would not provide her with extra refreshment; as the watching
-is not prescribed and regular duty.</p>
-
-<p>There should be as little extra watching on the part of
-Orderlies as is possible; when it is indispensable the extra
-watcher should have the same night-ration. I submit my
-strong impressions on the subject of this night refreshment
-now, because, small as it may seem, it very largely enters into
-the working of a night watch.</p>
-
-<p>I have suggested the division of the Night Orderly’s sleep,
-because, if A. comes on duty at 6 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span>, and is sent to bed at
-noon or 1 to get ready for his night watch at 9 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span>, he is
-scarcely fit for a long sleep, and supposing the patients dine at
-noon (an excellent hour) he has not, or scarcely, taken his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-share of the clearing away which, got over in time, enables the
-other Orderlies, one or both, to have a short recreation in the
-afternoon. Also if sent to bed at one he has not eight hours’
-sleep, as out of that he has to undress, dress, and sup. Also he
-has to remain on duty from 9 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> to 9 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> next night, which is
-much too long as a rule. If he does not go to bed before his
-watch, and goes off duty at 9 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> next morning, whatever time
-may be then allowed him for sleep, he cannot, as a rule, be
-depended upon for performing his watch duty efficiently.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Where are the
-Night
-Orderlies to
-Sleep by Day?</div>
-
-<p>27. If the Ward Orderlies watch by turns, it should be arranged
-that the men who sleep before and after the watch can do so
-quietly. This is by no means always attended to, as to Nurses
-in Civil Hospitals. Upon the whole, I cannot think it would
-answer to have always the same watchers, as regards Orderlies.
-The other Orderlies, supposing them lodged apart from the
-wards, will certainly go seldom enough to their quarters during
-day, except during their exercise time. It may be thought
-essential to retain soldiers under very primitive notions as to
-quarters. So though in a dormitory of women, I think little
-cells, parted either with a partition or a curtain, the whole
-thoroughly airy, are in all respects preferable to unparted
-rooms, it may be, by some, thought better that the Orderlies
-shall sleep in large airy wards, not parted by curtains or partitions.
-I know, however, one high Military authority, at least;
-who considers the same reasons apply to men as to women in
-this. Soldiers are generally able to go to sleep whenever
-ordered. Indeed their general capacity of doing whatever they
-are bid is one of their many fine points. The Orderlies’ wards
-must be under some sort of inspection, and noise must not
-be suffered in them. Non-Commissioned Officers, either Ward
-or Assistant Ward-Masters, or some special functionary (but
-such I would not multiply) must sleep near, and have general
-charge of the order and quiet of such wards. I conclude that
-one or more Assistant Ward-Masters, at all events, must watch,
-and as they must sleep by day, this will fit in well enough.</p>
-
-<p>I should avoid putting the Orderlies in a too much out of the
-way part of the Hospital; they should know themselves liable
-to inspecting visits any time. I am not sure that Ward or
-Assistant Ward-Masters would not be much better guardians of
-the Orderlies’ wards than any special functionary. Drink <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>is the
-vice of these men, noble fellows as, as a body, they are, and I
-should avoid quartering any man too comfortably and solely in
-one particular post. Cases have been where the duenna of the
-Nurses’ dormitory was herself a determined, disguised drunkard,
-and reported others accordingly as she was bribed or not
-with drink for herself.</p>
-
-<p>The whole question of Orderlies sleeping near or away from
-their wards should be well considered by the proper authority,
-two or three experienced Army-Surgeons. Upon the whole, I
-think it would be well to try the quartering them separately:
-there is much to be said on both sides as usual.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Comparative
-Merits of
-Different
-Systems of
-Night
-Nursing.</div>
-
-<p>28. In several foreign Hospitals a certain number of Night
-Watchers, both Sisters, and Men-Nurses, are told off for night-duty
-for four weeks, during which they are exempted from all
-labour by day, and receive better food than the usual diet.
-They also receive good night-refreshment.</p>
-
-<p>In one Hospital the following is the arrangement. The
-wards usually contain from 10 to 13 beds, and there are many
-small wards for three, two, or one, bad cases or operation cases.
-All the wards open upon a corridor. The Sisters do not watch
-in the men’s wards.</p>
-
-<table class="watchers" summary="watchers">
-<tr>
- <td class="people">
- A Sister watches in the female medical wards
- </td>
- <td class="peudobrace" rowspan="5">&nbsp;
- </td>
- <td class="postbrace" rowspan="5">5 Watchers
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="people">
- <span class="ditto">A Sister watches in the female</span> surgical <span class="ditto">wards</span>
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="people">
- <span class="ditto">A Sister watches in the</span> children’s wards and girls’ ward
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="people">
- A Man-Nurse <span class="ditto">watches in the</span> male medical wards
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="people">
- <span class="ditto">A Man-Nurse watches in the male</span> surgical wards and boys’ ward
- </td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>An operation-case, or an extra bad or anxious case, or a case
-requiring special attendance and put in a single ward, has an
-Extra-Watcher. Often there are no Extra-Watchers: sometimes
-there are several at once. The Extra-Watcher is either a
-Sister or a Man-Nurse, taken from among the other Sisters or
-Men-Nurses, who, after his or her day’s duty, does the extra
-watch.</p>
-
-<p>As regards all English hospitals, civil or military, the
-advantages of this system are these:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>1. It severs certain persons for night-duty, who have full
-time for sleep and refreshment in the air during day, and who
-are allowed to do no other work.</p>
-
-<p>2. It secures these persons good<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span> food and refreshment at
-night.</p>
-
-<p>3. These persons know their sick, and, being told on coming
-on duty, of any change, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, are as much at home in their posts
-by night as others are by day.</p>
-
-<p>4. When it is found that a Sister cannot sleep by day, and,
-therefore, that her health breaks, she is not allowed to finish
-the four weeks and become ill, but is put to another duty and
-another Sister appointed to the watch.</p>
-
-<p>(Many a strong Nurse cannot sleep at day.)</p>
-
-<p>5. The persons so appointed get into the way of it, if they
-stand it at all, and the system is found a great relief to the
-whole house and a great gain to the sick, in the place of
-another system of dividing the night between two Sisters and
-two Men-Nurses, who each watch half of the watch.</p>
-
-<p><i>Per contrà.</i></p>
-
-<p>I. The great London hospitals are places very far from
-perfect: some things may, please God, be, with time, patience,
-and extreme quietness, very much improved; but some things
-will never be perfect and never can be. But they are places
-where I do believe, and so far as I know, the sick are cared for
-in a way that is done nowhere else. The proportion of heavy
-cases in every London ward, cannot, I think, be met except by
-having a watcher in each. An English physician or surgeon
-would not consider that his cases could otherwise receive the
-attendance and the watching, the observation of possible change
-and prevention of possible mischief, which they ought to receive.</p>
-
-<p>It is right to bear in mind,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>1. That small wards multiply exceedingly the demand for
-Watchers: four wards, of 10 patients each, taking the average of
-patients as in London, would not be attended, according to the
-English notion, by one Watcher; 40 patients in one ward
-would be fully attended by one Watcher. The London
-Hospital has two Night-Nurses for its quadruple wards.
-An extra Night-Nurse has frequently to be put on, on account
-of the difficulty the subdivision of the ward gives to the
-watching.</p>
-
-<p>2. That the average of severe cases in each ward of
-London hospitals is very considerably more than the proportionate
-average of severe cases in each ward of the foreign hospitals
-in question. In all foreign hospitals with which I am
-acquainted the proportion of accidents is comparatively small
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>to those of the London hospitals. The docks, the manufactures,
-the crowded and dangerous works, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, with us,
-account for this.</p>
-
-<p>3. That, striking the balance for and against, it is necessary
-that each London ward should be watched by a Nurse;
-at the same time, that without doubt a certain number of
-troublesome, ill-conditioned patients (no ward of any Hospital
-is without such) sleep soundly and let their neighbours sleep
-soundly when the Watcher only looks into the ward at frequent
-intervals, who would, if the Watcher sate in the ward the whole
-night, make it their business to require attendance from the
-Watcher during the whole night, or at least much oftener than
-by the other plan.</p>
-
-<p>II. The second flaw of the above system, as it applies to
-London Hospitals, is, that it renders Extra-Watchers so often
-indispensable.</p>
-
-<p>The employment of Extra Watchers can never be wholly
-prevented, but it should be the endeavour of every Hospital
-to employ such as seldom as can possibly be. Extra watching
-is most injurious to the health of all ward-servants, and to the
-sobriety, and therefore morality, of many paid ward servants.</p>
-
-<p>This is a very important reason, I humbly consider, for
-avoiding as much as possible small wards.</p>
-
-<p>I do consider small wards very objectionable in working a
-Hospital.</p>
-
-<p>But it is right to remember that we have been told of England,
-of Austria and of Prussia that the proportion of severe cases in
-Military Hospitals in time of peace is considerably smaller
-than in Civil Hospitals. Night watching is not done in the
-Military Hospitals either of Vienna or Berlin. Orderlies, or
-an Orderly, sleep in each ward, and watching is only done to
-bad cases.</p>
-
-<p>How far English Army Surgeons consider night watching
-desirable in the Army Hospitals I will presently tell.</p>
-
-<p>I should think the convalescent wards, among many important
-advantages, would receive a number of patients who require
-no night watching. An Orderly ought to be at hand here, but
-not watching.</p>
-
-<p>If night duty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span> is considered requisite in the ordinary wards,
-I do not see how the English standard of things could be met,
-excepting by having one Watcher in each ward where there is
-regular night watching.</p>
-
-<p>I think, however, that the foreign system of night watching
-above detailed might give very useful hints for women in war
-service, and for emergencies of cholera, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, in home
-service; and with regard to supervision in the latter.</p>
-
-<p>I think, with submission to the proper authorities (the two
-or three experienced Army Surgeons I have so often adverted
-to) feeling strongly that awkward mistakes might occur in
-several of these matters without them, as civilians and women
-cannot and ought not to trust their own judgments respecting
-such, that in a large Military Hospital, an Assistant Ward-Master
-ought to go round the wards at night. Not with any
-idea of his rendering assistance to the Watchers over bad cases.
-The Nurses must do their duty of Head-Nurses, and see to this
-themselves. Perambulation through a large Hospital at night
-in point of fact excludes the possibility of doing anything in
-any one ward, unless in some exceptional occurrence which
-only proves the rule. The object is the important one of seeing
-that the Orderlies are awake, sober, alert, and at their duty,
-and that the patients are quiet and in bed. The Nurse would
-hear any noise, but there is such a thing as quiet drinking, as
-well as noisy drinking.</p>
-
-<p>In <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> George’s there is a Night-Matron, chief over the
-Night-Nurses, who goes through the Hospital every hour
-during the night-watch.</p>
-
-<p>I have heard this spoken of by experienced Authorities of
-other Hospitals with approbation and envy, and some idea was
-entertained of introducing it into another great Hospital.
-In Civil Hospitals, I think, but I do not know, that the benefits
-of this Night-Matron may be perhaps more imaginary than
-real. The Head-Nurses at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> George’s sleep away from their
-wards; a great mistake, I humbly consider.</p>
-
-<p>But Military Hospitals are entirely different in sundry essential
-respects. I think a non-commissioned officer, Assistant
-Ward-Master for instance, ought to make his rounds every
-night. When once such a service takes place, every hour is
-better than three or four times a night. He must be “up to”
-sundry things&mdash;taking the wards in uncertain rotation, sometimes
-returning suddenly on his steps, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It will be worth securing, if possible (this parenthesis will
-be understood), that the Nurse’s water-closet should be within
-her room, if not, as close to it as may be.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Present State
-of Night-Nursing
-in
-Military
-Hospitals.</div>
-
-<p>29. The following extraordinary system of Night Nursing is
-that which prevails in the Army at present:</p>
-
-<p>The “nursing is managed” either by means of patients “told
-off in watches” through the night for the purpose of attending
-to other patients, or by means of soldiers sent in from the
-ranks to attend specially upon each bad case; or by Orderlies
-“arranging it among themselves,” without any exemption
-meanwhile from day duty.</p>
-
-<p>Upon each and all of these systems or no-systems it is hardly
-necessary to make any comment. It is difficult to tell which is
-the worst.</p>
-
-<p>In the principal, indeed the only General Hospital in England,
-“Nursing is managed by comrade-patients told off in
-three watches of two hours each for the night.” [<i>sic.</i>]</p>
-
-<p>“Orderlies are likewise warned and often sit up for the purpose.”</p>
-
-<p>These passages are given <i>verbatim et literatim</i>, because they
-are so remarkable.</p>
-
-<p>And it is necessary to add that these patients being the
-relapses among the “Invalids” are nearly the worst cases we
-have.</p>
-
-<p>Were it the report of a Head-Nurse in a Civil Hospital to
-her Resident Medical Officer, it would undoubtedly cost her
-her place. One scarcely knows whether to pity more the
-sick patient or the orderly patient. One scarcely knows how
-to estimate the amount of medical comforts intended to be
-consumed by the sick patient which will actually be consumed
-by the sitting-up patient, and necessarily so. And the expedient
-which turns over the man who is too ill to be left at all to
-the care of men who ought to be recovering themselves, but
-who are pulled out of their beds for two hours to <em>nurse</em> (for
-the first time perhaps in their lives,) and a very “serious” case
-too, is to say the least of it a singular one.</p>
-
-<p>At Woolwich Artillery Hospital the cases which require
-constant attention are about 2 per cent. There are now 545
-patients in Hospital, and 11 cases consequently, each requiring
-one Orderly to itself. The Orderlies, according to Regulation,
-are 55, so that one-fifth part of the Orderly service is requir<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>ed
-for these cases. Yet there is no system or arrangement for
-such. The Orderlies arrange (or do not arrange) among themselves
-to do the reliefs day and night. Of the 11 cases at this
-time in Woolwich Hospital with 11 Orderlies sitting up with
-them, it so happens, as I am informed, that only one would
-require, if such were together in wards where regular night
-nursing was established, an attendant specially to itself.</p>
-
-<p>It is needless to enlarge upon the cruelty of the above practice.
-The one serious case is disturbed in the day by the goings
-to and fro, the noise and bustle of the light cases&mdash;while these
-are disturbed at night by the sitting-up necessary for the one
-bad case, which may be besides, and too often is, a noisy or
-offensive one. The bad economy is as obvious. It often happens
-that 11 cases who might all, if in one ward, be attended
-and as efficiently attended, by one Night Orderly, require each
-an Orderly to itself in as many different wards.</p>
-
-<p>In the “Garrison Hospital” at Chatham, “when any case
-assumes such a character as to require more than the usual care
-and watching, a Requisition is immediately sent to the Commanding
-Officer of the Corps to which the man belongs for a
-steady well-conducted soldier and who generally is the man’s
-own comrade” [so much the worse] “to nurse him, and to attend
-upon him throughout his illness, but who is relieved by
-another as often as the Medical Officer in charge of the case
-considers necessary.”</p>
-
-<p>The following is the average number of sick in Army General
-Hospitals in time of peace at home, for whom night-nursing
-is considered necessary by the Medical Officers. But it is important
-to add that this number would be probably estimated
-as very much higher if proper means of night-nursing were
-at their disposal.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">Of constantly sick mean proportion per cent. requiring night
-nursing:</p>
-
-<table class="staffing" summary="percentage requiring night nursing">
- <tr>
- <td class="longer"> General Hospital, Fort Pitt&nbsp;&nbsp;Medical Division</td>
- <td class="tdr">5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="longer"> General Hospital, Fort Pitt&nbsp;&nbsp;Surgical <span class="ditto">Division</span></td>
- <td class="tdr">1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="longer">Garrison Hospital</td>
- <td class="tdr">2</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>These cases are usually scattered through the wards.</p>
-
-<p>It is but fair to add that the best Medical Officers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span> themselves
-desire another system, or rather are aware that there is at present
-no system at all, and would gladly accept one. “With
-means for good night-nursing,” they say, “arrangements in
-accordance might be introduced. At present we like to have a
-case requiring much attendance amongst cases that require
-little, in order that the patients or comrades may assist.”</p>
-
-<p>What are the consequences of such “assistance” to the
-cases in question has already been fully stated throughout these
-notes.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Poor-Law
-Regulation for
-Nursing in
-Union Workhouses.</div>
-
-<p>“With respect to the use of [the inmates as] servants, they
-require the strictest superintendence on the part of the * *
-officers. The employment of [the inmates] in offices of trust
-is inexpedient, inasmuch as it tends to impair the discipline of
-the house. In offices of mere labour, which can be performed
-under trustworthy superintendence, [the inmates] may be
-useful. Where responsibility is involved, paid servants should
-be engaged.”</p>
-
-<p>The above is one of the regulations of what?&mdash;not of a
-Charitable Institution but of the Poor Law; and the house of
-which it treats so tenderly and wisely is&mdash;a Workhouse!<a name="Anchor_19" id="Anchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 19.">[19]</a> If
-paupers are to be thus cared for, how should it be with our
-soldiers? If any “office” can be called one “of trust,” surely
-it is that of carrying out the orders of the Medical man in a
-critical case, a case of life or death! Can any “responsibility”
-be “involved,” greater than this? Yet these are just the
-cases left to the “Comrade Patients.” For ordinary cases the
-ordinary attendance is given; for serious cases, the untrained
-and unskilled attendance. Yet, if the Hospitals are not for
-these serious cases, what are they for? For these alone, however,
-is no systematic provision made. One would think that
-every bad case took the Hospital by surprise. Imagine the
-orders of the Medical Officers carried out by nurses (?)
-changed “every two hours,” and who are, in fact, sleepy
-patients!</p>
-
-<p>The system of Military nursing and management, as described
-by Army Medical Officers themselves in the above quotations,
-and which is, we are expressly told, to be re-enacted at the Royal
-Victoria Netley Hospital, is precisely the one which led, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span> a
-matter of course, to the calamities, as far as nursing was concerned,
-in the Hospitals in the East, and which will lead to them
-again so long as it is continued. Even in the case of invalids, who
-may not require such careful attendance as sick, the system of
-nursing by comrades is most objectionable; and if the attendance
-at Netley can only be carried out on such a plan, it is
-doubtful whether Netley should be used even for an Invalid
-Hospital.</p>
-
-<p>The question has been asked the Netley Committee, By
-whom are your Invalids to be nursed, when sick? And it has
-been answered, that they are to <em>nurse each other</em>!</p>
-
-<h3 title="">II. <span class="smcap">Nurse’s Room</span>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Nurse’s Room.</div>
-
-<p>It is essential that between every two wards, in a hospital
-where the blocks are built end to end, there should be, as at
-the new Military Hospital of <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Vincennes</span>, a lobby with a
-thorough supply of pure fresh air.</p>
-
-<p>If it were possible, where the Head Nurse, or rather in a
-Military Hospital the Nurse, has charge of two such wards on
-the same floor, to let her have a long, narrow room, with
-screened windows, opening into both wards, the door opening
-into the passage in the midst, it is worth contriving.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Medical
-Officer’s Room.</div>
-
-<p>2. The Medical Officer’s room should be on the ground floor
-at the entrance and apart from everything else.</p>
-
-<p>The servant or whoever cleans the room, should not be a
-Ward-Orderly, (ward-attendance cannot be kept too entirely
-separate from all other concerns).</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Water-Closets.</div>
-
-<p>3. The ward water-closet should have a pane of glass at top,
-so that a faint gas-light in the lavatory at night can light
-sufficiently the closet, and the (bed-pan) sink.</p>
-
-<p>The water-closet should be constructed, as is done often
-in those of English railway stations, so that each visitor
-involuntarily, on rising or on opening the door, purifies the
-concern.</p>
-
-<p>Besides the ward water-closet, there should be general
-water-closets, and urinals separate from the wards, for the use,
-during the day, of those patients who can leave the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-wards.</p>
-
-<p>The latrines at the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> Hospital are a good example,
-both for what should be avoided in construction, and what
-should be imitated in position.</p>
-
-<p>The sort of latrine used there would never do for England.</p>
-
-<p>The men able to go out are expected to use by day an urinal
-in a corner of the little garden belonging to each pavilion.</p>
-
-<p>At night no sick men are allowed to leave the ward on that
-or any other pretence; they must use the latrines.</p>
-
-<p>The latrines are at the furthest end of the ward. Opposite
-the one door is a partially glazed door, beyond this is a large
-window, grated in network as well as with panes and frame.
-On one side opens a space where the men, able to get up, are
-expected to wash, and which, moreover, contains two latrines,
-each separated by a partition and secured by a door. The
-same arrangement prevails on the female side.</p>
-
-<p>The rule of having the water-closet on the furthest side of
-the ward, removing all pretence of leaving the ward by night,
-is excellent.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Warm and
-Cold-Water
-Supply.</div>
-
-<p>4. The importance, immense addition of efficiency, and
-ultimate economy of carrying warm and cold water into every
-ward, and the necessity of intending and contriving this in the
-first construction of a Hospital,&mdash;subsequent additions and
-alterations being generally less effectual, and always more
-expensive&mdash;cannot too frequently be repeated.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Corridors.</div>
-
-<p>5. Corridors as proposed at Netley are useful and objectionable.
-They lie between one side of the wards and air. They
-make oversight of the patients more difficult; and when a
-number of patients are walking up and down them, the serious
-cases in the wards are disturbed. On the other hand, it is
-desirable to have some place of exercise and yet shelter for
-patients, capable of being heated and of being overlooked.
-There ought to be no accumulation of patients at the same time
-suffered.</p>
-
-<p>With regard, however, to corridors inside the building, if
-there are none it is all the better for the sick; that each ward
-should have two rows of large windows opening direct into the
-outer air is indispensable, as has often been said already.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Lobby.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></div>
-
-<p>6. Provided this double range of windows be secured, double
-wards of thirty on the same floor would cause no disadvantage
-to the sick.</p>
-
-<p>But, if such be determined on, let especial care be taken to
-separate the two, not by a showy hall, but by a lobby and an
-ample staircase, extending from top to bottom of the building,
-and communicating freely with the open air at the roof, as well
-as by the stair-windows: admitting a thorough current of
-external air, so that, of a morning especially, the two wards do
-not mutually send the close air into each other.</p>
-
-<p>The lobby should not be turned into a vestibule.
-Thorough air is all that is wanted. Patients should not be
-suffered to remain in it.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Material of
-Ward
-Utensils.</div>
-
-<p>7. The material of the different utensils required for ward
-service should be settled. In the use of glass or earthenware
-for all eating, drinking, and washing vessels there is great superiority
-as to cleanliness, and the saving of time and labour
-in cleaning these materials, to those of tin or other metal.
-Still two things have to be weighed against these great advantages.
-First, if these vessels are cleaned by Ward-Orderlies,
-the amount of breakage would be much greater in proportion
-than as done by Nurses, and it is imperative to have as few
-women as possible in the service of Military Hospitals.
-Secondly, it is very important to avoid even the appearance,
-especially at first, of anything like introducing luxury into
-Army Hospitals; and I can quite understand this appearing
-like luxury.</p>
-
-<p>The material of one description of ward-vessels should in particular
-be left to the Surgeons. In sending to distant foreign
-or war-stations, urinals of tin have one material advantage over
-those of glass or china, that they do not break so easily; but,
-as to home-service, these tin urinals cannot, by any amount of
-cleaning, be freed from an unclean smell. In Vienna General
-Hospital, where economy is exceedingly attended to, all the
-urinals are of glass, as the superior cleanliness is considered
-well worth the additional expense. A damaged or broken glass
-or earthenware urinal is dangerous; and if there is difficulty in
-obtaining the immediate issue of a new for a damaged one, it is
-better to have tin.</p>
-
-<p>In Vienna General Hospitals the patients’ eating vessels
-were formerly of tin; but were some time ago furnished of
-earthenware, for the same reasons as those given above; <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>also
-because the hot tin vessels were found awkward to the patients.
-(I do not think much of this latter reason; in hospitals, there
-is little fear of food reaching the patients too hot). In Vienna
-and Berlin Military Hospitals the eating vessels are all of tin.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Reserve Wards.</div>
-
-<p>8. In building a large new Hospital, the question of whether
-or not reserve wards, or Pavilions, should be provided is an
-important question, to be referred to the proper Authorities.
-In one German Hospital is a Sommer-Lazareth, or separate
-Hospital, which most of the sick occupy during the six summer
-months. This is considered the best plan; but so expensive
-that well-considered arrangements in designing the building
-may render its adoption unnecessary. In another German
-Hospital is a group of wards on each of two floors, into which
-the male and female patients, especially the surgical cases, are
-successively moved; both in order that during this time the
-other wards may be thoroughly cleaned; also to change the air;
-also in case of some sudden epidemic, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr></p>
-
-<p>In every Hospital a thorough cleaning of the wards is essential.
-In three of the great London Hospitals this is done every
-year, in one every three years. Nuisance as it is, for the time
-being, it is such a complete purification of places which want
-purifying, that having it done every year is preferable to every
-three years. For the same reasons bare white walls, whitewashed
-every year, and oftener if there has been some sudden
-outburst of any zymotic disease or Hospital gangrene are preferable
-to all colour. But polished impervious cement is, it is
-needless to repeat, the only really safe Hospital wall. When the
-cleaning time of a great London Hospital draws near, the number
-of patients is gradually reduced, and none but urgent cases
-taken in. The cleaning usually begins with the topmost ward
-of one part of the building, or of several parts of the building
-at once. The patients are usually moved to the ward immediately
-beneath. The ward goes through a complete purification,
-also reparation of whatever wants repair. All its furniture
-ditto; the bedsteads in particular. Afterwards windows and
-doors are left wide open for two or three days, and nights so
-far as feasible. In about a week from its commencement the
-cleaning is over; the patients moved back; and the ward or
-wards so cleaned recommence their usual taking-in&mdash;and so <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>on.
-The cleaning of a great London Hospital usually takes two
-full months; and a great nuisance it is for the time, but the
-place benefits by it the whole remaining ten. It is excellent
-economy to have plenty of hands, so as to have the cleaning
-part, in distinction to the airing part, done as quickly as
-thorough cleaning admits of. It is very bad economy to put
-too much of this great extra cleaning upon the Nurses. This
-would of course not apply to a Military Hospital, where it is
-important the Orderlies should become as thoroughly qualified
-as may be for foreign and war service. It is necessary that
-whatever exterior help is called in, should be closely overlooked;
-contractors and contractors’ servants being seldom overmuch
-troubled with conscience.</p>
-
-<p>Now it might be exceedingly worth while to have one or more
-reserve Pavilions, with a view to this annual cleaning.</p>
-
-<p>If the flooring of polished oiled boards should be found to
-answer (that it should receive a fair trial is very desirable, as it
-might result in a material benefit to our Hospitals), it would
-be doubly useful, when, every third year or so, the oiling and
-polishing required renewal, to leave the newly-oiled wards empty
-for a fortnight. An additional week or two would additionally
-harden and improve the flooring; but a fortnight would suffice.</p>
-
-<p>It might also be right to have reserve wards for what must
-occur every now and then in a Military Hospital, an influx of
-patients beyond the usual number, or an outbreak of cholera,
-or some malignant epidemic, which it might be desirable to
-isolate from the other patients.</p>
-
-<p>It may now be confidently expected that, under the new
-<i>régime</i>, the progress in improvement of Military Hospitals
-will proceed rapidly; that it will be quietly done is almost as
-certain&mdash;real improvement and noisy philanthropy being fearfully
-inconsistent with each other, especially in that momentous
-machine called the Army of England, which is no safe
-plaything.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Helm, the Director of the Vienna General Hospital, in a
-little pamphlet published some time ago, insists on the importance,
-in designing a new Hospital, of providing Reserve wards,
-especially with a view to dangerous epidemics. They should
-admit, he urges, of easy and complete isolation from all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span> the remaining
-parts of the building.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Occasional
-Revision of
-Rules.</div>
-
-<p>9. Dr. Esse, Director of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Charité</span>, at Berlin, in a practical
-and systematic, but pedantic and pudding-headed, little book
-on Hospitals, published in 1857, strongly urges the importance
-of occasionally revising and altering the rules of Hospital
-Officers and servants, and all the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Charité</span> instructions end with
-this proviso of alteration. It is one of our many unavoidable
-difficulties that it is necessary to begin our work under definite
-rules, while it is also necessary to consider the service, for some
-years to come, as tentative and experimental. It is well to
-bear in mind what cannot be expressed.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Defect in some
-Systems of
-Nursing.</div>
-
-<p>10. In admiring much, very much about the German Hospitals,
-it becomes necessary not to omit a warning. A number
-of women, all equal among themselves, with no female Superior
-or Superiors whatever, under the sole control of men, in an
-ascending scale from the Abtheilungs-Inspectoren or Oberkrankenpfleger,
-through Doctors of sundry ranks, to the Director
-himself, such is the system followed, as in the great <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Charité</span>
-Hospital at Berlin, so in the great General Hospital at Vienna;
-and this cardinal mistake leads to many others.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Nurses’
-Exercise.</div>
-
-<p>11. It is desirable that the Rules should give daily exercise
-to the Nurses, or rather that the Rules should give them the
-right of daily exercise; that the Superintendent should encourage
-and exhort them to take fresh air daily when feasible, leaving
-them sometimes to take a little quiet in their rooms. But in
-war service, and sundry foreign stations in time of peace, not
-merely exigencies of service (which at home will and ought often
-enough to curtail or abrogate exercise time), but various other
-reasons might render it very undesirable to give the Nurses
-right to two hours’ daily exercise. It must be impressed upon
-all Superintendents, that it is essential in the long run to the
-health of Nurses to have fresh air; but in many foreign stations
-it might be far better for the Superintendent to take, or
-rather send, them out for one <i>vice</i> two hours, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr></p>
-
-<p>In war and foreign service, the exercise time must be at the
-discretion of the Superintendent.</p>
-
-<p>There may be awkwardness enough on sundry home stations
-in allowing each Nurse two hours at her own discretion outside
-of the Hospital every day. Still it is right to look things
-in the face. The Rules do not contemplate a Sisterhood, but a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>staff of secular women, bound by strict rules in all that concerns
-the duty they undertake, left to themselves as to sundry things
-which in Sisterhoods are ruled. (How and by what measures
-in process of time strong and quiet religious influence may be
-brought to bear upon this staff, is the question of vital importance
-as to the whole; without it, I doubt whether the service
-of women would, in the long run, answer in Military Hospitals,
-which are and must remain very peculiar places; with it, it
-might please God to suffer good service to be done Him).
-Nurses trusted to do their duty in wards must be trusted to
-walk out alone if they choose, and I would not attempt to restrict
-it, though the Superintendent must see to this, so far
-as she can without doing or encouraging spy-work, a thing
-which has many advantages, and is often done in various, very
-various ways, but which in the long run brings no blessing, and
-<i>pro tanto</i>, degrades all who are concerned with it.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Number of
-Ward-Masters.</div>
-
-<p>12. In Vienna Military Hospital each set of five or six wards,
-with 30 or 40 patients, sometimes 20, in each, had a Sergeant
-and a Corporal over the Orderlies. (Berlin Military Hospital
-is served by Civil male Nurses).</p>
-
-<p>I think a Ward-Master would be enough for each Pavilion of
-six wards of 30 patients each, in three stories, each couple of
-wards being in charge of a Nurse, and each ward served by
-three Orderlies.</p>
-
-<h3 title="">III. <span class="smcap">Regulations.</span></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Query as to
-depriving
-certain
-Patients of
-Visitors.</div>
-
-<p>1. Proper military and medical advice should be taken as to
-whether it would be advisable to draw a distinction between
-the venereal and the other patients.</p>
-
-<p>In the Vienna Military Hospital they are locked up by
-themselves in particular wards, but are allowed to see their
-comrades at visiting hours.</p>
-
-<p>In the Berlin Military Hospital they are locked up in wards,
-and allowed to receive no visits whatever, excepting, of course,
-from the Chaplain and the proper Military and Medical
-Officers; and in the case of dying patients from their nearest
-friends.</p>
-
-<p>Nor are <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>they allowed exercise in the grounds.</p>
-
-<p>This excellent regulation makes them heartily tired of the
-venereal wards, and even this is a very salutary thing.</p>
-
-<p>In the Vienna and Berlin Civil Hospitals, the venereal
-patients of both sexes are also placed in locked wards, and
-allowed no visitors. Nor are they allowed exercise in the
-grounds or garden.</p>
-
-<p>In the two Paris Venereal Hospitals no visitors are
-allowed.</p>
-
-<p>Now, as the more disagreeable the subject, the more
-necessary it is to be explicit upon it when entered upon, this
-wholesome discipline exists in a very faint degree in our great
-Civil Hospitals,&mdash;a thing not to be lost sight of in introducing
-any change in the Army Hospitals.</p>
-
-<p>The three greatest London Hospitals have venereal wards.
-The female patients never leave the ward. The male patients
-take exercise in the court. In one case the rule is, that this
-should be at different hours from the other patients; the rule
-is not strictly adhered to.</p>
-
-<p>The exercise question should, in Military Hospitals, be left
-entirely to the Surgeons; they may fairly consider it enters
-into the question of treatment, which is different from the
-Continental treatment. The enforcement of different hours of
-exercise from those of the other patients is good, as is every
-brand which can, quietly and effectually, affix disgrace to these
-wards.</p>
-
-<p>Deprivation of visitors, if it could be done, would be very
-salutary. In the great London Civil Hospitals, men and
-women visit the male venereal wards; women alone the female
-wards (and melancholy things are the visiting hours there;
-here and there a heart-broken mother, abundance of prostitutes,
-and no lack of procuresses. A firm and vigilant Head Nurse
-will sometimes refuse admitting one of the two latter sorts to
-some patient, whom she knows they are endeavouring to make
-sure of again; but as the rules admit female visitors, and she
-is by rights only entitled to eject a visitor whose behaviour is
-disorderly in the ward, the Head Nurse can only do this in
-point of fact by straining the rules, and cannot do it often).
-The female visitors of the male venereal wards are usually, on
-the average, much less disreputable than those to the equivalent
-female wards; and are generally wives, mothers, and
-sisters, seldom prostitutes. There can be no doubt, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-that it would be much better if the patients of neither male
-nor female foul wards were allowed visitors, unless in the
-comparatively very rare cases of extreme danger; it would, in
-that case, be necessary that the Hospital should supply them
-with linen, and either supply them with groceries or forbid
-their receiving them from without.</p>
-
-<p>In various essential respects the patients of a Military
-Hospital are different from those of a Civil Hospital. Were
-it possible to prevent all female visitors to the wards, except
-in dangerous cases, this would be best. If the existing rules
-or practice do not compel the sentries to refuse entrance to all
-disorderly women, however orderly their behaviour, such a rule,
-at any rate, should be enforced. And if all visitors, male and
-female, including, of course, soldiers, could be refused
-admittance to the venereal wards, always excepting cases of
-great danger, it would be very desirable. At all events, it
-would be very desirable to have all female visitors, without
-exception, excluded from these wards. These things are, I do
-consider, very important. But I would not press them, if
-refused.</p>
-
-<p>Let the female service obtain, please God (I do not write
-these words <i>pro formâ</i>,&mdash;if possible, I feel every day more
-intensely how solely it is to Him we must trust in this difficult
-work,&mdash;the more so that, if possible, I feel every day more
-intensely the importance of, if He grants it success, improving
-secular Hospital nursing, leaving the English Sisterhoods, which
-will always have great advantages, and, I believe, great disadvantages,
-with reference to Hospital nursing, to take their share
-in this great field, which has plenty of room for both), let, I
-say, the female service obtain a firm footing in the Army Hospitals,
-and with it, and by cautious degrees, sundry ameliorations
-will creep in insensibly as to decorum among other
-things. Those solemn beautiful words I have always felt so
-full of meaning to us, “In quietness and in confidence shall be
-your strength.”</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Query as to
-Numbering
-Patients.</div>
-
-<p>2. Military as well as Medical advice should also be taken
-upon the following point:</p>
-
-<p>In most, not all, the great London Hospitals the patients,
-whose names are on their bed-tickets, are called by the
-numbers 1, 2, 3, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, suspended over each bed; sometimes a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-patient’s name is never heard in the ward.</p>
-
-<p>Now, very possibly, this would not at all do in a Military
-Hospital, and, if so, there is not another word to be said
-about it.</p>
-
-<p>Otherwise, very few things so effectually save time, as the
-numbering plan. (In Civil Hospitals it is also excellent in
-other ways, of much less consequence in a Military Hospital,
-which will never, I conclude, be afflicted with “gentlemen,”
-Mr. So-and-So, and Master So-and-So, which latter inscription
-is frequently to be read on the letters of little boys in Hospitals,
-whose friends, on visiting days, also enquire for them by that
-title). But few things, I repeat, so effectually save time as
-numbering instead of naming the patients (names, of course,
-to be on bed-tickets). If, however, the officers consider it
-“unsoldierly,” give it up at once.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Regulations as
-to Swearing.</div>
-
-<p>3. The regulations lately in force contained in plain strong
-language prohibition of swearing and indecent language in
-Hospitals; they are quoted from the Articles of War. It
-would be well to retain this in any new Regulations; and the
-retention of this Rule is not the less important when women
-are put in charge of Military wards, since, though it is not
-their business to maintain discipline, it is their duty to call in
-those whose duty it is when discipline is infringed. And it is
-important that this prohibition of swearing and foul language
-should not be looked upon as an individual or collective
-crotchet, or female innovation, but remain the rule of the
-Service. Such language would never be used in the Nurse’s
-presence unless by her own fault. But it should be unheard
-in the ward, whether she is in it or not. The old definite
-words should be transcribed.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Conclusion.</div>
-
-<p>I do not like writing any part of the above, not because it
-can, in any sense, be said to strain the necessary principle of
-reserve, save for strictly business purposes, as to all which is,
-strictly speaking, Hospital business, but because of the extreme
-caution necessary as to this sort of topics. Still life is so uncertain
-that the possible introduction of permanent Female
-Service into Army Hospitals has determined me on writing
-what I had rather not have written.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span class="smcap">Additional Hints as to Pavilion Hospitals suggested
-by the construction of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> Hospital
-at Paris.</span></h2>
-
-<h3 title="">I.&mdash;<em>Ventilation.</em></h3>
-
-<p>The question of ventilation is so all-important, so much
-doubt still seems to exist as to the comparative merits of
-natural and artificial ventilation, so much has been said in
-favour of the latter, because it is seen adopted in the finest
-hospital in the world, the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span>, that I have added a few
-practical remarks upon this system. The conclusion is, that
-even at the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span>, without opening the windows occasionally,
-and especially in the morning, real freshness is never
-obtained in the wards, and that, therefore, if there must be
-artificial ventilation, that is the best which allows the most of
-the windows being opened.</p>
-
-<p>On the men’s side, Thomas’ system, or that of injecting
-air at given points, by means of two high-pressure steam
-engines, each working a large fan, is adopted. On the
-female side, Duvoir’s system affords ventilation by extracting
-air at given points. In both, a number of shafts and openings
-provide for the exit of the air.</p>
-
-<p>Persons at the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> Hospital, who ought to be good
-judges, including foremost the Director, an experienced and
-able administrator, consider the ventilation on the male side
-the most expensive and the best, both for day and night,
-being the coolest in summer and the warmest in winter. In
-winter two great advantages are assigned to this side: first, the
-heating being provided by the Hospital, the wards are warmable
-at pleasure; whereas that of the female side is provided
-by the contractor at a fixed degree of heat, which, in extra
-cold weather, is augmented: from 15° to 18° C are the usual
-limits of the winter temperature on the female side, while that
-on the male side is usually several degrees higher. Secondly,
-the system of heating on the male side permits the windows
-to be opened: while on the female side objections are often
-made to opening the windows in winter, which it is alleged
-interferes with the heating.</p>
-
-<p><i>Per contrà.</i> How difficult it is to learn any facts by hearsay
-we know. Other persons who ought to be good judges
-think the male side apt to be too warm in winter, especially at
-night, and consider the temperature on the female <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>side quite
-sufficient.</p>
-
-<p>Both sides are ventilated both by the windows and by the
-machinery by day in summer. Both sides are ventilated, each
-by its own different machinery, by night in summer, except
-that, exceptionally on hot summer nights, a window is opened
-two or three times in the night, or five minutes every hour.</p>
-
-<p>Both sides are considered to be ventilated in winter mainly
-by the machinery by day; and both sides are entirely ventilated
-in winter by the machinery by night.</p>
-
-<p>As far as can be made out from conflicting accounts, (conflicting
-from the very simple reason that one person will consider
-a ward, or drawing room, for that matter, airy which another
-will consider close; one, pleasantly warm, another too hot or
-too cold), it is practically found impossible to freshen the
-ward of a morning without opening some windows, and to
-keep it fresh during the day without now and then doing the
-same; and it is easier to open the windows on the male side
-in winter than on the female side.</p>
-
-<p>The ventilation on both sides is considered to work with
-equal efficiency during the whole of the day.</p>
-
-<p>Of the eighteen wards, the ventilation on entering the wards
-at five a.m., when the ward nightwatch has generally not
-opened a single window, is certainly surprisingly good; <i>i.e.</i> the
-air is surprisingly little bad. <em>But neither here, any more
-than anywhere else, are the wards effectually freshened, until
-the windows are, of course with proper caution, opened.</em></p>
-
-<p>In both these particulars, no difference is to be observed
-between the male and female side.</p>
-
-<p>In repeating that the Director, and other persons who ought
-to be good judges, consider the machinery of the male side the
-most expensive and the best, I add these things:</p>
-
-<p>First. Since this machinery was erected, so far as concerns
-the steam engine, it is said that equally efficient and much
-less expensive engines have been erected in other Hospitals,
-among others, Necker and Beaujon. In both Hospitals, the
-plans of Duvoir and Van Heecke are in use, one on either side.
-But certainly, the system of outlets at Beaujon for the foul air
-is by no means so good as at the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span>.</p>
-
-<p>Secondly. If an accident happened to the machi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>nery of the
-male side, which is in communication with the steam engine,
-the results might be very serious. Twice a stove has burst
-on that side, happily without damaging anything else than
-furniture near it; had patients been near it, they must have
-been hurt or killed: and an accident on a large scale might
-blow up not a small part of the Hospital.</p>
-
-<p>More or less danger is inseparable from powerful steam
-machinery, or powerful machinery of any kind: the question is
-one of degree.</p>
-
-<p>Thirdly. Both sides of the Hospital have one thing in
-common. Except the sculleries of the 3 ground floor wards
-on the male side, which have each a stove or fire place, the
-kitchens or sculleries attached to all the other wards are warmed
-by hot water. Undoubtedly this saves much mess, much
-cleaning of stoves <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, and much bringing of fuel and consequent
-dirt. But the absence of fire is always a loss to the
-service of a ward. Sundry things, some one or other, often
-all of which are constantly wanted in a large ward, <i>e.g.</i> warming
-broth or drink, cooking for an extra bad case, warming
-poultices, warming (not airing) linen for ditto, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>,
-are much more slowly done by water than fire heat, and it is a
-question, variously answered, whether some of these things
-are as well done by the slow water method, as by the quick
-fire heat. Occasionally the hot water is not forthcoming, a
-nuisance alike to the ward attendants of the ward whose
-scullery is thus heated, and to those of the wards supplied
-with stoves, which have then to do, in driblets, considerable extra
-duty.</p>
-
-<p>During the hot months the smell of the latrines is very
-little perceptible in the wards, generally not at all: but the
-test of this, as of the ventilation, is in winter, when the large
-window close to the latrines is generally closed, and the smell
-is very offensive.</p>
-
-<h3 title="">II.&mdash;<em>Oiled Boards</em> versus <em>Parquets</em>.</h3>
-
-<p>1. They have in common the superiority over common floorings&mdash;that
-they are not scrubbed, and the damp thus arising is
-avoided.</p>
-
-<p>2. As re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>gards labour, so far as Civil Hospitals are concerned,
-where the ward service is done by women, <i>parquets</i> would be
-more laborious than scrubbing; a large ward, to be kept in a
-proper state, requires a certain amount of <i>frottage</i> (the peculiar
-polishing of <i>parquets</i>) every day; and this <i>frottage</i> is held to
-be unfit, from the fatigue it causes and the strength it requires,
-to be done by women, and is always done by men. Certainly
-Ward Nurses could never be required to <i>frotter</i>; it is
-altogether a man’s business.</p>
-
-<p>3. As regards labour, so far as Military or Naval Hospitals
-are concerned, where men preponderate in the ward service, it
-is my impression (for of course I cannot pretend any certainty
-as to this), that sailors who are proverbially handy (a different
-quality from either laboriousness or endurance, though they
-have these too) would, with instruction and painstaking,
-accomplish in time <i>frottage</i>; that civilians would under the
-same conditions; that soldier orderlies (infinitely, I humbly
-think, the best material for the staple of military ward service),
-would generally make bad <i>frotteurs</i>.</p>
-
-<p>4. As regards labour, cleaning oiled boards, though a
-laborious business, is much less so than either scrubbing or
-<i>frottéing</i>; and is fully within the power of average strong
-women: none other should nurse. (What subdivision of cleaning
-the ward, and of nursing properly so-called, might both
-improve the work done and relieve the Nurses, is another
-thing; my impression remains, that it is better to consider
-these things to a certain extent as distinct duties, discharged
-by women ranking alike; and that in a ward of forty, served
-by a Head Nurse and three Nurses, to charge one with the
-main ward cleaning, is better economy of strength and time
-than to divide it among the three).</p>
-
-<p>5. As regards labour, any Orderly giving his mind to it for
-a day at the shortest, or a week at the longest, ought to learn
-thoroughly how to clean polished oiled boards well, always
-supposing him to be properly taught a very simple thing, which,
-like everything else, can be done well, ill, or indifferently.</p>
-
-<p>6. Apart from the question of labour augmented or spared,
-the advantages of oiled and polished boards I believe to be
-these:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>(1.) Prevention of dust.</p>
-
-<p>(2.) More easy purification<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span> of the air of the ward in the
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>The air of every ward becomes more or less impure during
-the night, and the floor and furniture more or less dusty.
-Making the beds in the morning adds to the dust the night
-has accumulated.</p>
-
-<p>The dust is more thoroughly destroyed by the cleaning
-necessary to oiled and polished boards <em>of the <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethanien</span> variety</em>,
-than by any other cleaning I have seen. It is fairly destroyed;
-whereas both <i>parquets</i> and boards generally retain a little.</p>
-
-<p>Also, the water, with which the oiled boards after being
-swept are cleaned, freshens the ward and purifies it of the closeness
-remaining of the night air, in a very speedy and remarkable
-manner, which is even more evident as well as more useful
-in winter than in summer&mdash;as in winter it is not possible to
-admit as much air from the windows as in summer, especially
-when it is most wanted, in the cold, close, early mornings.</p>
-
-<p>The advantages of oiled and polished boards as counteracting
-the spread of miasma, which is strongly dwelt on at Berlin by
-competent authorities, I have not alluded to, as probably
-<i>parquets</i> are considered equal in these respects to them.</p>
-
-<p>Stains, mess, and dirt falling on polished oiled boards are
-much more easily cleaned than on parquets.</p>
-
-<h4 title=""><span class="smcap">Note.</span><br />
-
- <i>Mode of Cleaning Ward and Room Floors at <span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Bethanien</span>, Berlin.</i></h4>
-
-<h5 title="">I. <span class="smcap">Daily.</span></h5>
-
-<p>1. Take a common hair broom, a broom with a hard brush,
-a cloth of coarse flax, and one or two pails of cold water.</p>
-
-<p>2. Sweep the floor and skirtings with the hair broom.</p>
-
-<p>3. Dip the cloth in a pail, wring it gently between the
-hands, so as to have the whole equally wet, not running. Throw
-it on the ground, reverse the hard broom, and placing the
-reversed handle upon the cloth, clean the floor close to the
-skirtings, not the skirtings themselves, and the corners. When
-the cloth becomes dry, rinse it and re-wet it in the same pail.</p>
-
-<p>4. Then wet the cloth somewhat more, wringing it as
-before, throw it on the floor at the end furthest from the door,
-and placing the brush of the hard broom upon it, brush, firmly
-and quickly, each board in the direction that the boarding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-runs, about as far as the arms can reach, standing, not kneeling.
-A small ward can be at once brushed wet, a large one
-must be divided into parts, and each part be successively
-brushed wet and brushed dry. When the cloth becomes dry,
-rinse it and re-wet it.</p>
-
-<p>5. To brush dry, rinse and well wring the cloth, brush as
-before. The firmer you can press, the better and quicker the
-floor will be dried. When the cloth becomes wet, rinse it and
-wring it as before.</p>
-
-<p>6. Change the water when dirty. More or less water must
-be used, according as the floor is trod by dirty boots and
-shoes.</p>
-
-<p>7. Aim at drying the floor by one dry brushing; if not, it
-must be dry brushed a second time. Once should suffice.</p>
-
-<p>8. Ten minutes, at the furthest, after the dry rubbing is
-over, the floor ought to be thoroughly dry. When it is quite
-dry, sweep quickly over it with the hair broom.</p>
-
-<p>9. On putting by the cleaning materials, rinse well the
-cloth in clean water.</p>
-
-<h5 title="">II. <span class="smcap">Weekly.</span></h5>
-
-<p>1. Brush the skirtings with a small hard brush, and wipe
-them dry with a rag, as the cloth would be too large, and wet
-the walls.</p>
-
-<p>2. Use more water to clean the floor, which will probably
-require two dry brushings.</p>
-
-<p>3. Clean the brooms and pails.</p>
-
-<h5 title="">III. <span class="smcap">Annually.</span></h5>
-
-<p>1. Throw warm, not hot, water on the floor, and brush
-firmly and quickly, wet and dry. A very little soda in each
-pailful will be an improvement. More than very little will
-injure the flooring.</p>
-
-<p>[A new cloth, which it is economical to cut from a great
-piece which makes into some or many dozens, should be steeped
-for a night in a pail once filled with boiling water, an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>d in the
-morning rinsed and wrung several times in clean cold water,
-then used at once. Two or three new cloths can be steeped in
-the same pail.]</p>
-
-<h3 title="">III.&mdash;<i>Cautions in Hospital-Building.&mdash;Often repeated, but
-oftener neglected.</i></h3>
-
-<p>1. Wherever practicable build the hospital on arches; but,
-for the sake of discipline, they should be locked up.</p>
-
-<p>2. If practicable, let the laundry, if served by women, be
-removed from sight of the place where the patients take
-exercise, and of the ward windows.</p>
-
-<p>3. In a Civil Hospital it is objectionable to give the female
-patients right to take exercise in corridors which the officers
-and servants have constantly to traverse to go to and from the
-wards. In a Military Hospital it is of little comparative disadvantage
-that the patients should do this, although,</p>
-
-<p>4. In building a hospital it might be well worth while to
-contrive that the covered space, essential to give the patients
-power of taking exercise, should be used solely for that purpose.</p>
-
-<p>5. In Germany, the general opinion is in favour of small
-wards, twenty beds are considered the desirable maximum;
-twelve, <i>per se</i>, better than twenty.</p>
-
-<p>Ditto in Belgium, under the same restriction, although, in
-practice, there are wards containing larger numbers.</p>
-
-<p>In the old Hospitals at Paris, the number of patients is too
-large. The <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Charité</span> has long great wards of 100 and 120
-patients. At <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Louis (which is mostly for cutaneous, not
-venereal, diseases, where the patients usually are long under
-treatment and able to go about, and where there is little
-acute illness,) wards of eighty and seventy beds are the rule,
-smaller wards the exception. This may be considered an exceptional
-class of patients. The <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Charité</span>, somewhat densely
-pressed upon by neighbourhood, is also not considered a
-favourably circumstanced Hospital as to air.</p>
-
-<p>Putting aside for a moment the sanitary question, which
-we have fully discussed elsewhere, and which appears to be
-decided in favour of wards of from twenty to thirty patients,
-we will look upon the question of administration. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-moment we consider that a great public Hospital has to provide
-efficient attendance for all the sick it receives, that it
-must be economical of attendance, both because the expense
-of attendance, as well as the other requirements of the sick,
-commands all practicable economy; and because efficient
-attendance in sufficient numbers is difficult to obtain; it
-becomes evident that it is far better for the sick to have larger
-wards, efficiently served by as few attendants as is compatible
-with efficiency.</p>
-
-<p>This, which is the fair statement of the case, strikes those
-who have watched the working of the system of small wards
-in North Germany as more true than ever.</p>
-
-<p>Such persons consider that the size and numbers of the
-wards at the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> Hospital, viz., thirty-four beds, including
-the two in the little ward, are good: that preserving
-the existing considerable space between the beds, and supposing
-the same ratio of conditions as to windows, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, and the small
-ward for two at the end, wards of forty or fifty would be equally
-healthy for the sick, but that the number fifty should not be
-surpassed.</p>
-
-<p>Assuming, however, that thirty patients in a ward, or thirty-two,
-are the maximum number, sanitary and administrative
-necessities being conciliated, let us see what we do in our
-Military Hospitals at home.</p>
-
-<p>In most of our Regimental Hospitals the number of wards
-and of holes and corners, in comparison with the number of
-sick, is quite extraordinary.</p>
-
-<p>In a hospital for a battalion 500 or 600 strong, we shall find
-eight or ten wards of small size, a small kitchen, everything,
-in fact, on a small scale, just as if a large French Hospital had
-suddenly collapsed.</p>
-
-<p>How much more sensible would it not be to have one or, at
-most, two large wards for thirty sick each, with a small casualty
-ward and an itch ward!</p>
-
-<p>How much less expensive such a structure would be in
-erecting and administering, and how much more easy would be
-the discipline and oversight, not to mention the greater facility
-of ventilation!</p>
-
-<p>6. There is not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>hing at the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> Hospital answering to
-casualty wards. Besides the eighteen wards of thirty-four
-each, the Hospital contains two little (and inconveniently
-placed), wards of ten beds each, which, when medical cases
-overflow, are made medical wards; and which are closed when
-the ordinary wards suffice. But of casualty wards, for
-offensive, or noisy cases, there are none, and the double-bedded
-little ward at the end of each large ward is intended to
-answer this purpose; also, but subsidiary to this, to allow now
-and then a patient of the better class to have the comparative
-privacy.</p>
-
-<p>This latter consideration does not apply to a Military
-Hospital. As to allowing Non-Commissioned Officers for
-instance to be in the little wards, discipline would, I think,
-very soon suffer.</p>
-
-<p>But <em>if</em> casualty wards are provided for extra offensive,
-and noisy cases, it seems to me that any Hospital would be
-much better without these small wards attached to each larger
-one.</p>
-
-<p><em>Apart from the purposes which the casualty wards answer</em>, they
-are a nuisance. If convalescent patients are put into them,
-they are comparatively removed from inspection, and often
-play tricks there. Patients requiring much attention can
-seldom be put there, however their condition otherwise fits
-them for the little ward, because the ward attendants, and
-especially the Sister (as in secularly served Hospitals the
-Head Nurse), find it <em>impossible</em> to serve the inmates of the
-little ward properly, if there are also many serious cases in the
-large ward.</p>
-
-<p>I submit therefore that the small ward is only an incubus,
-if casualty wards are provided. One thing is certain: a
-patient requiring much attendance, put into a little ward,
-ought to have an extra attendant to himself, by day and by
-night; otherwise, either he is more or less neglected, or he
-unduly monopolises the service of the ward attendants.</p>
-
-<p>It remains a question for far others than women to settle,
-whether offensive and delirious cases are under more favourable
-conditions of cure when scattered in little wards,
-than when assembled in a large, or in several small wards. On
-this subject, I can only add my confirmed belief that a large
-airy ward, provided with a few small wards, and with complete
-ward attendance, is a much better place for the care and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-attendance of such cases, than small wards attached to the
-ordinary wards.</p>
-
-<p>7. Avoid many holes and corners. I could <em>not</em> recommend
-a dining room for patients attached to each ward, or floor, or
-pavilion. If there is any dining room, let all the convalescent
-patients of the wards not being convalescent wards, dine
-together in a room apart from the wards, and let the rest
-dine each at his bed side. If not, let each patient dine at his
-bed side.</p>
-
-<p>At the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lariboisière</span> Hospital, each ward has a vestiary, a
-doubtful arrangement. The nature of a Military Hospital
-renders it proper to have but one vestiary under charge of
-some man.</p>
-
-<p>8. If possible, let all foul linen be delivered daily, twice
-perhaps better than once daily, into the laundry, so as to
-remain the shortest possible time in the neighbourhood of the
-ward; otherwise, do what you will, foul Hospital linen will
-fairly, to say the ugly truth&mdash;stink, and its temporary receptacle
-will stink also. I would not make this temporary
-receptacle a room. A large chest in the scullery, a region
-under constant purification by fire and air, would be, as
-already hinted, p. 88, the least bad place for an accumulation
-inevitable to all Hospitals, but which should accumulate for
-as little time as possible.</p>
-
-<p>9. Provide from the first room for storing and issuing dried
-clean linen, as well as laundry room.</p>
-
-<p>10. In badly-planned Hospitals artificial ventilation is an
-excellent auxiliary for expelling the foul air, engendered in the
-ward, especially at night; but windows only can be relied upon
-for introducing good air. Let Hospitals, therefore, be so constructed
-as to admit of opening one or more windows as much
-as possible all the year round, with as little chance of draught
-as may be to individual patients, which can be done by providing
-double windows, opening above and below, or by some
-similar expedient.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span class="smcap">Note on Contagion and Infection.</span></h2>
-
-<p>There are no words in regard to which there is more misconception,
-or more nonsense talked and written, than the two
-words “contagion” and “infection;” and as the word “infectious”
-has been used in these Notes, it is necessary to say
-what it does mean, and what it does not mean. The word
-“contagion” appears to have been first used by certain
-classical writers to signify the spread of scab among sheep;
-and it would have been well for humanity if the word had been
-restricted to this very primitive bucolic signification. It was
-not till centuries after Virgil’s death that the common sense of
-men had descended so low as to introduce it into the Medical
-vocabulary. This took place at a period when, from the neglect
-of sanitary arrangements, pestilence attacked whole masses of
-people, and when no one appears to have considered that
-nature had any laws for her guidance whatever. It was not
-until human intelligence had descended to this depth that men
-seem to have bethought themselves of Virgil’s term as affording
-them an adequate explanation for pestilence, and sufficient
-reason for not exerting themselves to prevent its recurrence.
-So it has continued ever since. The little word used in all
-innocence by the poet for poetic purposes has become the
-ground-work of every manner of false observation, false reasoning,
-neglect of sanitary laws, lazarettos, quarantine, and continually-threatened
-interruption to the commercial intercourse
-of mankind. No single word has ever done so much harm to
-the human race, or given such a proof of what a mighty thing
-a word is!</p>
-
-<p>One would have thought that, after the sanitary experience
-of the last fifteen years, the word “contagion” would have
-disappeared from our language; but, even in the last document
-issued by the expiring Board of Health, written by their
-Medical Officer, Mr. Simon, and based on erroneous statistical
-evidence (Papers relating to the Sanitary state of the People
-of England, 1858), it is stated that “a further&mdash;practically
-speaking, unavoidable&mdash;cause of premature death in every civilized
-country is the risk of its <em>current contagions</em>.” [The italics
-are not mine.] And this refers to small pox, hooping cough,
-measels, and scarlatina, the mortality from which we are to
-presume, is <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>“unavoidable.”</p>
-
-<p>If this be Board of Health doctrine, it is certainly not
-sanitary doctrine. It would have astonished the Health of
-Towns Commission, and the first Board of Health.</p>
-
-<p>“Contagion,” as its etymology implies, means the communication
-of disease from person to person by contact. It is
-often confused with “infection;” but it has quite a different
-meaning. Contagion presupposes the existence of certain
-germs, like the sporules of fungi, which can be bottled up and
-conveyed any distance, attached to clothing, merchandize,
-especially to woollen stuffs, for which it is supposed to have a
-particular affection, and to feathers, which of all articles it
-especially loves, so much so that, according to Quarantine laws,
-a live goose may be safely introduced from a plague country;
-but, if it happens to be eaten on the voyage, its feathers cannot
-be introduced without danger to the entire community. The
-absurdities connected with the doctrine are numberless. Suffice
-it to say that in the ordinary sense of the term there is no such
-thing as “contagion.” There are two or three diseases in
-which there is a specific virus which can be seen, tasted, smelt,
-and analysed, and which, in certain constitutions, propagates
-the original disease by inoculation, such as small-pox, cow-pox,
-and syphilis, but these are not “contagions” in the sense supposed.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to the mysterious, imponderable, indivisible
-nonentities, which make up our “current contagions,” they
-may safely be dismissed into the limbo of extinct superstitions.</p>
-
-<p>The word “contagion” therefore is altogether objectionable.</p>
-
-<p>The word “infection” expresses a fact, without involving a
-hypothesis.</p>
-
-<p>It is most necessary, however, that the meaning should be
-guarded; for, just as there is no such thing as “contagion,”
-there is no such thing as <em>inevitable</em> “infection.” Infection acts
-through the air. Poison the air breathed by individuals and
-we have infection. Shut up 150 healthy people in a Black Hole
-of Calcutta, and in twenty-four hours you have an infection
-produced, so powerful that it will in that time have destroyed
-nearly the whole of the inmates. Sick people are more susceptible
-than healthy people; and if you shut up sick people
-together, without a sufficient space and sufficient fresh air, you
-will have not only fever, but erysipelas, pyæmia, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>nd the usual
-tribe of Hospital-generated epidemic diseases produced.</p>
-
-<p>Again, if we have a Fever Hospital with over-crowded badly-ventilated
-wards, or with the air stagnant in them, we are quite
-certain to have the air become so infected as to poison the
-blood not only of the sick, so as to augment their mortality,
-but also of the medical attendants and nurses, so that they
-shall also become subjects of fever.</p>
-
-<p>It will be seen at a glance that, in every such case and in
-every such example, the infection is not inevitable, but the
-simple result of gross carelessness and ignorance. In certain
-Hospitals it has been the custom to set apart wards for what
-are called “infectious” diseases; but, in reality, there ought
-to be no diseases considered such. It follows from what has
-been stated that, with proper sanitary precautions, diseases
-reputed to be peculiarly “infectious” may be treated in wards
-among other sick without any danger; just in the same way as,
-with proper sanitary precautions, a number of healthy people
-may be congregated together without becoming subject to the
-horrors of the Black Hole of Calcutta.</p>
-
-<p>It is in the highest degree probable that we should never
-have heard of “infectious” wards, if the other wards of a
-Hospital had been supplied with sufficient space and air for the
-sick; and in too many cases it is to be feared that the presumed
-“infectious” cases are huddled away into small, ill-lighted,
-ill-ventilated rooms, a kind of Lazaretto, in fact,
-where, if they die, they have at least been kept from doing
-harm to the other sick in Hospital!</p>
-
-<p>It is high time that common sense should deal with the
-question; for there does not seem to be much hope for a deliverance
-from these superstitions from any other quarter.</p>
-
-<p>The “infectious” wards in Military Hospitals correspond,
-in some sense, to the “casualty” wards in Civil Hospitals,
-into which accidents, noisy, and erysipelatous cases are transferred,
-when necessary. The advantages of a separate set of
-wards for this class of cases have been already insisted upon in
-these Notes; not certainly because the cases are inevitably
-“infectious,” but because the segregation of such facilitates
-greatly administration and nursing, while it removes offensive
-and noisy patients out of the Hospital wards, whose inmates
-they would annoy. The question of infection or non-infection<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-has nothing to do with the arrangement. No stronger condemnation
-of any Hospital or ward could be pronounced than
-the simple fact that any disease has attacked other patients
-than those first affected by it. “Infection” and incapable
-management, or bad construction, are, in Hospitals, convertible
-terms.</p>
-
-<p>It may be useful to mention what the meaning is of the
-words “epidemic,” “endemic,” “sporadic,” and “zymotic.”</p>
-
-<p>When a large number of people are attacked simultaneously
-with the same form of disease it is said to be <em>epidemic</em>. When
-a small number, as, <i>e.&nbsp;g.</i>, the inhabitants of a single court or
-alley, are so attacked, it is said to be <em>endemic</em>. When scattered
-cases of the same disease happen, one here, one there, over a
-large surface, the disease is said to be <em>sporadic</em>. The term
-<em>zymotic</em>, which includes all diseases of the preceding categories
-and some others, implies the existence of certain changes in the
-constitution or in the blood, rendering persons so affected liable
-to the diseases in question.</p>
-
-<p>It is a vulgar error to suppose that epidemics are occasioned
-by the spread of disease, from person to person, by infection
-or contagion; for it is an ascertained fact that, before
-any people is attacked epidemically, the disease attacks
-individuals in a milder form, one at a time, at distant
-intervals, for weeks or months before the epidemic appears.
-Before an epidemic of cholera, these cases consist generally
-of diarrhœa of more or less intensity, followed by a
-rapidly fatal case or two, very much resembling cholera.
-Even plague itself, as in the recent epidemic at Bengazi, begins
-with cases which cannot be distinguished from ordinary typhus-fever,
-the succeeding cases getting more and more intense,
-until the epidemic seizure takes place. Experience appears to
-show that without this antecedent preparatory stage, affecting
-more or less the entire population of a town or district, the
-occurrence of an epidemic is impossible&mdash;the epidemic being, in
-fact, the last or, so to speak, the retributive stage of a succession
-of antecedent phenomena extending over months or years,
-and all traceable to the culpable neglect of natural laws. It is
-simply worse than folly, after the penalty has been incurred,
-to cry out “contagion,” and call for the establishment of
-sanitary cordons and quarantine, instead of relying on measur<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>es
-of hygiène. Epidemics are lessons to be profited by: they
-teach, not that “current contagions” are “inevitable” but
-that, unless nature’s laws be studied and obeyed, she will
-infallibly step in and vindicate them, sooner or later.</p>
-
-<p>In the words of the Registrar-General, which are as applicable
-to Armies as to States, “Sanitary measures and not quarantines
-are the real safe-guards of nations.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 title="Note on Observations by the Principal Medical Officer of the Army in the East"><span class="smcap">Note.</span></h2>
-
-<p>I have just seen a paper by Sir John Hall, entitled
-“<cite class="plain">Observations on the Difficulties experienced by the Medical
-Department of the Army during the late War in Turkey</cite>.”
-In this somewhat singular document, which appears to be a
-defence of Sir John Hall’s own conduct, there are certain
-statements made about the female nursing establishment in
-the East which require a word of comment.</p>
-
-<p>It will be observed that throughout the paper, the weapon
-which Sir John Hall uses against all civil interference in repairing
-the sufferings which proceeded from the defects of his
-own department is simply detraction.</p>
-
-<p>As for Civil Commissions, they were useless, as for Civil
-Hospitals, they were costly, and their officers lived magnificently
-and were extravagantly paid. As for the nurses, they
-were benevolent, pious, well-intentioned persons, but what
-could they do? How could one woman nurse eighty sick?
-The medical men thought they could not.</p>
-
-<p>Why had Miss Nightingale stores of port wine placed at her
-disposal, which she could give to the French Hospitals, while
-he, the principal Medical Officer of the Army, had no such
-stores at his disposal?</p>
-
-<p>Sir John Hall must have already discovered that this old
-weapon is no longer of use in defending his position.</p>
-
-<p>It would have been more to the purpose had he produced
-his requisitions for food, clothing, comforts, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, and shown
-how they were refused or not complied with. At the very time
-I gave over part of our own private stores of port wine, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, to
-the French Hospitals (for part only of what was given were
-Government stores at all), Sir John Hall might have obtained,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-out of the large wine store at Balaklava, any amount
-of wine he required, by merely asking for it. The simple
-statement of this fact would have been a better answer to <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><abbr title="Monsieur">M.</abbr>
-Baudens</span><a name="Anchor_20" id="Anchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 20.">[20]</a> than assuming that I could obtain from Government
-stores and wine for the French Hospitals which he could not
-obtain for his own.</p>
-
-<p>As to his statement about the Nurses, it simply shows
-ignorance of the whole matter. Nobody ever contemplated
-giving to a Nurse the entire charge of a number of sick in a
-Military General Hospital. It is no part of good Hospital
-nursing to do so. With proper Orderlies, a Nurse can very
-well attend to sixty or seventy sick. We were prevented,
-indeed, by the authorities, and by circumstances, from organizing
-a proper system of nursing, and were obliged to do all
-the good possible in the best possible way. But Sir John
-Hall’s method of estimating the efficiency of nursing, by
-dividing the number of sick by the number of Nurses, is
-simply absurd.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<h3 title="">Footnotes:</h3>
-
-<ul>
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_2" id="Footnote_2" href="#Anchor_2" title="Return to text.">[2]</a>
-As little reference as possible, no reference at all, if it can be avoided,
-should be made, on our part, to the Confidential Report, which, in 1855,
-was presented against the War-Nurses. The less scandal about women is
-reverted to the better&mdash;a truth all slanderers have always appreciated:
-“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Calomniez, calomniez toujours: il en reste toujours quelque chose.</span>” It
-would be far preferable if Nurses could enter the Army Hospitals quietly,
-and let by-gones be by-gones (the useful experience always excepted, which
-has been gained).</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_3" id="Footnote_3" href="#Anchor_3" title="Return to text.">[3]</a>
-The work was done under many difficulties, some inevitable, some
-which should have been spared. Things happened among us deeply to be
-regretted. Rebellion among some ladies and some nuns, and drunkenness
-among some nurses unhappily disgraced our body; minor faults justified
-<i>pro tanto</i> the common opinion that the vanity, the gossip, and the insubordination
-(which none more despise than those who trade upon them) of
-women make them unfit for, and mischievous in the Service, however materially
-useful they may be in it. Of all this, the material consequences
-might have been spared by some such “General Order” as the above,
-which, at least, prevents others from taking advantage and making capital
-of such faults.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_4" id="Footnote_4" href="#Anchor_4" title="Return to text.">[4]</a>
-The Extra Diet Kitchens <em>must</em>, it is necessary to state, be under a
-separate roof from the General Kitchens, as long as the present system (or
-no-system) of cooking exists. But the sooner it is altered the better.
-There should be one kitchen only. But the Nurse should always superintend
-the administering of the Diets. She is unquestionably the proper
-person, also, to administer the medicines, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> The Orderlies, to be of any
-use, must act under the direction of the Head-Nurse and not independently.
-It would seem hardly necessary to enunciate such a self-evident
-proposition.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_5" id="Footnote_5" href="#Anchor_5" title="Return to text.">[5]</a>
-To all references which may here be made to Civil Hospitals I should
-wish to say, by way of preface:&mdash;</p>
-<p>1. That I have always believed and I believe it more and more every
-day I live, that what is wrong in hospitals is to be patiently, laboriously,
-and, above all, quietly mended by efforts made from within them, if it
-pleases God to grant that blessing upon them without which all human
-efforts are vain, and not by accusations, investigations, and noise from
-without.</p>
-<p>2. Also I have always believed, since I knew Hospitals at all, and I
-believe it more and more every day I live, that, with all their faults and
-shortcomings, which are easily learnt and more easily declaimed against,
-our great English hospitals are places in which more is done for the relief
-and cure of human misery, or, rather, of that large branch of it arising
-from disease, than in any other places in the world. Also that their faults
-are not essential to them, but that they may, by God’s blessing on the
-patient endeavours of many years, be very much modified.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_6" id="Footnote_6" href="#Anchor_6" title="Return to text.">[6]</a>
-In their regulation dress they should always appear, except when they
-go on holidays.</p>
-<p>But let the Queen pay for the transport of one box and one bag only,
-for each Nurse on duty; and if she takes more let her pay for it herself.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_7" id="Footnote_7" href="#Anchor_7" title="Return to text.">[7]</a>
-I would allow each Nurse 1½ pint of porter or ale <i>per diem</i>, or, instead
-of the half-pint of porter, 1 <abbr title="ounces">oz.</abbr> of brandy or a wineglass-full of wine, as she
-likes best. Most Nurses crave, and rightly, for a luncheon about 9 or
-10 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span>, and drink some beer then. I would let them take their own time
-as to when they drink their day’s allowance. But, while trying to suit each
-Nurse’s varying tastes (and in Hospital duty the taste does vary) each
-Nurse must keep to one thing, say for a week or month.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_8" id="Footnote_8" href="#Anchor_8" title="Return to text.">[8]</a>
-Better than a closet is a moveable dresser, only table-height, under
-which cleaning can be carried on.</p>
-<p>There should be no projections in a ward or recess, which are only
-lodgments for flue and dust. The walls of a ward should be even, polished,
-impervious.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_9" id="Footnote_9" href="#Anchor_9" title="Return to text.">[9]</a>
-With regard to children we might look forward to a time when a
-school might be formed for the children, if any, of such of Her Majesty’s
-Nurses as are widows. This would be an additional bond to the Service
-for the mothers. The children, of course, are not to be admitted into
-Hospital; and strict rules must be made (and kept to) as to when the
-mother should visit them. I do not anticipate that it would be possible
-ever to have married women in the Service. And it is hardly necessary to
-add, that no women but of unblemished character can ever be admitted.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_10" id="Footnote_10" href="#Anchor_10" title="Return to text.">[10]</a>
-Should a woman, however, out of the higher orders, be found as efficient
-as one of the middle classes, as Matron, this should be no reason for
-excluding her.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_11" id="Footnote_11" href="#Anchor_11" title="Return to text.">[11]</a>
-If it be desired to include some War-Nurses after 40 it would be
-better for the Superintendent-General, with the sanction of the Secretary
-of State, to take, at first starting, a few past the age, than, on their
-account, to alter the age. It stands to reason that, on the formation of the
-Staff, approved Nurses of the War-Service should be included in it, for the
-sake of the Service.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_12" id="Footnote_12" href="#Anchor_12" title="Return to text.">[12]</a>
-It is better to omit the Belief. Singularly enough it is the one thing
-objected to by Dissenters and Roman Catholics.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_13" id="Footnote_13" href="#Anchor_13" title="Return to text.">[13]</a>
-If the Surgeons are for the men doing it, I would not overpress this
-point. But, in the case of weak patients, it requires extra care, and it
-would be much better to leave it as the duty of the Nurse. At all events
-it will not answer to leave the enema and its administrator unspecified.
-The Medical Staff Regulations assign it to the Ward-Masters. It is a
-simple thing enough, but one by the careless or ignorant administration of
-which many a man (and woman) has been injured for life; and either the
-Ward-Master, the Assistant Ward-Master, or the Nurse should be responsible
-for it. I should prefer, as above stated, charging the Nurse with it;
-but if objected to by the Surgeons, I should at once let them assign it to
-whichever Non-commissioned Officer they chose.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_14" id="Footnote_14" href="#Anchor_14" title="Return to text.">[14]</a>
-One Nurse might possibly be able to serve the whole Pavilion. The
-highest estimate is here taken.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_15" id="Footnote_15" href="#Anchor_15" title="Return to text.">[15]</a>
-The floors are of deal; the length and breadth of the boards depending
-on circumstances. Wood skirtings run round the walls, following the
-recesses of the window and doors, 2½ <abbr title="inches">in.</abbr> in height and 1½ <abbr title="inches">in.</abbr> in thickness.
-The skirtings should have no indents in them, which form convenient
-lodgments for dust and take time to clean. A little rim must run round the
-top of the skirting, edging the wall. The skirting should thence descend,
-unindented, upon the floor. The boards are coloured and prepared, as
-follows: A new floor is rubbed over two or three times, with warm linseed-oil
-varnish, having some fine yellow-ochre, powdered, in it; then a coat of
-“laque-lustre,” a species of French polish, is laid over it, the result being a
-reddish-yellow colour, in which the grain and veining of the wood is shown.
-If, after being used some time, it begins to look worn, it is rubbed over with
-oil and a new coat of polish laid on it; but, as this takes a long time to
-dry, it is usual to fill up the worst parts with thin oil-colour, and then to
-take the yellow polish and lay it on, in two successive coats, leaving it to dry,
-if possible, for twenty-four hours, as it wears the better the firmer and drier
-it is. For old boards, that have been much used, considerably more laque-lustre
-is required than for new ones.
-</p>
-<p>
-After laying on the laque-lustre it is desirable that the floor should not
-be trodden upon for six weeks, and it is also well occasionally, say about
-once a week, to polish it, which conduces much to make it serviceable.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_16" id="Footnote_16" href="#Anchor_16" title="Return to text.">[16]</a>
-And this should be adhered to, the rare though extant cases of efficiency
-for Hospital nursing, past this age, notwithstanding.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_17" id="Footnote_17" href="#Anchor_17" title="Return to text.">[17]</a>
-Great caution must be used in acting upon this. The Superintendent-General,
-or the Superintendents who are responsible to her, order
-the service of each Nurse. How far is it just to consider extra dangerous
-duties or stations meritorious in the Nurse who does or suffers from them?
-Others might have done the same, if so ordered. Others might have
-wished for such an order. Or a strong efficient Nurse who, in other
-respects, gives anxiety, may render extra useful service on an emergency,
-and suffer for it in health: and yet, during her whole service, have given
-more anxiety and less satisfaction than others who did not, perhaps had
-not the opportunity to, distinguish themselves by any extra useful
-service.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_18" id="Footnote_18" href="#Anchor_18" title="Return to text.">[18]</a>
-The “Superintendent” and “Matron” are here used throughout as
-synonymous terms; because “Matron” is the shorter and more familiar
-name; although, for reasons before given, “Superintendent” would be the
-better word for Military Hospitals.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_19" id="Footnote_19" href="#Anchor_19" title="Return to text.">[19]</a>
-If it be said that the Workhouse sick are ill-nursed, it is in proportion
-as this rule is broken, not as it is kept, that they are so.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_20" id="Footnote_20" href="#Anchor_20" title="Return to text.">[20]</a>
-To <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><abbr title="Monsieur">M.</abbr> Baudens</span>, whose recent death is so much to be lamented, I
-cannot here but add a tribute of admiration for his wise and enlightened
-sanitary views, during the year of his superintendence over the Medical
-Department of the French army in the East, and of gratitude for his
-ready and magnanimous acceptance of our stores, when the French sick
-were really in want of them, after these had been refused by other French
-authorities.</p>
-</li>
-</ul>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="printed_by">
-LONDON:<br />
-PRINTED BY HARRISON AND SONS,<br />
-<abbr title="SAINT">ST.</abbr> MARTIN’S LANE, W.C.<br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1p" id="Page_1p">[1]</a></span></p>
-<p class="private">PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL.</p>
-
-<h2 title="Thoughts submitted as to an eventual
-Nurses’ Provident Fund.">THOUGHTS SUBMITTED AS TO AN EVENTUAL
-NURSES’ PROVIDENT FUND.</h2>
-
-<p>I. <span class="smcap">Wages and Prospects of Nurses.</span></p>
-
-<p>II. <span class="smcap">Desirability of some further Provision.</span></p>
-
-<p>III. <span class="smcap">Of what Nature?</span></p>
-
-<ul>
- <li>1. With regard to kind?</li>
- <li>2. <span class="ditto">With regard to</span> persons?</li>
- <li>3. <span class="ditto">With regard to</span> objects?</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>IV. <span class="smcap">Suggestions as to the Rules to be followed.</span></p>
-
-<p>V. <span class="smcap">Prospects of Eventual Support.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<h3 title="">I. <span class="smcap">Wages and Prospects of Nurses.</span></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">The two
-Classes of
-Hospital
-Nurses.</div>
-
-<p>1. The nurses of the great London hospitals are divided
-into two classes: head-nurses or sisters, and nurses or
-assistant-nurses. These latter are, generally, subdivided
-into day and night-nurses.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Head-Nurses
-or Sisters.</div>
-
-<p>2. The head-nurses, on an average, receive about £50
-a-year and no board, or lower wages and partial board;
-the use of one or two rooms, generally unfurnished, and
-an allowance of fuel and light. Sometimes uniform outer-clothing
-is included. Sometimes two pints of beer daily
-are added to the above.</p>
-
-<p class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2p" id="Page_2p">[2]</a></p>
-<div class="sidenote">Nurses or Assistant-Nurses.</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Day Nurses.</div>
-
-<p>3. The day-nurses, on an average, receive about 12<i><abbr title="shillings">s.</abbr></i> a-week
-and no board, or lower wages and partial board;
-lodging, with the use of some furniture; sometimes an
-allowance of fuel and light apart from the use of both in
-the wards. Sometimes uniform outer-clothing is added to
-the above; sometimes they have also an allowance of one
-pint of beer daily.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Night Nurses.</div>
-
-<p>4. The night-nurses, on an average, receive about 10<i><abbr title="shillings">s.</abbr></i> a-week
-and no board; lodging, with the use of some furniture;
-sometimes an allowance of fuel and light apart from
-the use of both in the wards. Sometimes they live in their
-own lodgings, near the hospital, receiving the same wages.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Retiring
-Pensions and
-Payments at <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr>
-Bartholomew’s.</div>
-
-<p>5. I am informed that <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Bartholomew’s Hospital has
-no fixed scale of pensions, nor is the term of service defined.
-But pensions have been granted to worn-out
-sisters of from £15 to £25; as also pensions of smaller
-amount to some worn-out nurses.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">At
-<abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Thomas’s.</div>
-
-<p>6. <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Thomas’s Hospital, in like manner, has given,
-without any fixed rule, pensions to worn-out sisters,
-of from £30 to £50. A gift in money has been granted
-on the retirement of a sister; and the same has been
-done in the case of nurses who may have received injuries
-in the discharge of their duties; and in a very few instances
-of long and faithful service they have been pensioned.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">At Guy’s
-Hospital.</div>
-
-<p>7. Guy’s Hospital for a long time generously provided
-for its superannuated sisters, but the plan in practice being
-found very objectionable, was a few years since given up,
-and the authorities established a Superannuation Fund for
-the Servants of the Hospital.</p>
-
-<p>It is compulsory on sisters, optional to nurses, to belong
-to it. Each subscriber receives a book containing printed
-rules, with tables of rates of ages, payments, and pensions,
-and also blank leaves. The subscriber selects the amount
-of pension for which she wishes to subscribe. At each
-quarterly payment of wages, a proportion is paid into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3p" id="Page_3p">[3]</a></span>
-the fund; entered in the subscriber’s book, and properly
-attested; the hospital makes a payment of equal
-amount into the fund on the subscriber’s account. If
-the subscriber die before attaining the age when the
-pension begins, the amount paid by the subscriber is disposable
-by will, and in case of intestacy reverts to the next
-of kin. The pensions, one-half of which are thus purchased
-by the subscriber, and one-half presented by the
-hospital, vary, if I remember rightly, from £15 to £50.
-In February 1857, no nurse subscribed; to which three
-remarks apply:&mdash;first, that every good work takes time to
-grow; secondly, that not a few of the sisters, having looked
-forward to benefiting by the old system of superannuation,
-rather grudged their own payments than sought to
-induce their nurses to subscribe; thirdly, that many of
-the nurses were really unable to make the payment.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">At the Non-Endowed
-Hospitals.</div>
-
-<p>8. The non-endowed hospitals, I believe, but write from
-very imperfect information, grant few pensions. Sometimes
-they grant a gift of £25 or less to a retiring head-nurse.
-Sometimes they employ a head-nurse, become too old for her
-work, as an extra and inferior nurse. Sometimes they grant
-a worn-out head-nurse an asylum in the incurable ward of
-the hospital. I believe the pensions to old nurses are still
-fewer than the few to head-nurses. Definite information
-could easily be procured. Their funds do not permit such
-a diversion from their main and primary object, for which
-they are often, as it is, inadequate.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">At County
-Hospitals.</div>
-
-<p>9. Of the wages and prospects of eventual provision of
-the nurses of the county hospitals I know nothing; but
-understand that the former are lower than, and the latter
-as entirely blank as those of the nurses of the non-endowed
-London hospitals.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4p" id="Page_4p">[4]</a></span></p>
-<h3 title="">II. <span class="smcap">Desirability of some further Provision.</span></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Unfitness of
-Nurses for any
-other work.</div>
-
-<p>1. It may be safely taken for granted as a rule, with few
-exceptions, that a thorough hospital nurse can seldom turn
-herself to any other business. Her life and work are altogether
-peculiar; she acquires a knowledge and habits
-which incapacitate her from all ordinary occupations, grows
-into fitness for them, and out of fitness for all others.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Shortness of
-their time of
-capacity for
-Service.</div>
-
-<p>2. No less so, that the time during which a hospital nurse
-can work and lay by, is short, compared with the average
-duration of other kinds of service. Apart from all excess
-of their own, their work and its concomitants wear out
-hospital nurses fast. In every large hospital you will see
-many women of 40, whom you would suppose 60, and
-strength often decays as prematurely as appearance. Well-ventilated
-bed-rooms, more sleep, and better food, would
-be materially in their favour; but the work can never be
-other than one which wears out most constitutions fast.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Character of
-Nurses as a
-Class.</div>
-
-<p>3. In the London hospitals there are some women of excellent
-character and of great efficiency; many the reverse,
-in one or both respects; many between the two classes,
-who generally end by ranking in the second.</p>
-
-<p>4. To augment the number of the first class, to reduce
-the number of the second, to induce the intermediate
-eventually to rank with the first, and not with the second,
-is the desire of every hospital.</p>
-
-<p>5. It is most important, in all things, in none more than
-in hospital matters, to moderate expectations, not to hope
-too much from any measure, or set of measures, and to
-keep well in view the stern prosaic realities of things.
-The hospitals of great towns are not asylums where a few
-or many selected patients can be received and petted; but
-great receptacles of all sick comers. Their foundations lie
-down and deep in the human sin and misery for which
-they in part provide, and the traces of their purpose an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5p" id="Page_5p">[5]</a></span>d
-nature must ever remain impressed upon them. They are
-also schools for the practical education of a great profession,
-important to mankind and dangerous to its members.</p>
-
-<p>Hospital nurses are not women attempting or following
-“counsels of perfection,” (whatever incorporation of other
-elements may be eventually effected), but some of those
-many women whom God has ordained to earn their bread
-by toil, (and in the large towns of England honest ways of
-earning that bread are for women but too scarce and too
-overcrowded), and upon whom He has laid the same condition
-as on all the souls He has made, to keep the commandments
-to enter into life. A very mixed class they must
-ever remain: to improve the class, by God’s blessing,
-would be to effect a great benefit both to the hospitals and
-to these immortal souls.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Probable
-beneficial
-results of a
-prospect of
-eventual
-provision,
-depending on
-character.</div>
-
-<p>6. Among several things which might be done or tried,
-with the view, if it please God to prosper the endeavour,
-of eventually improving the class of hospital nurses, the
-establishment of some definite prospect of eventual provision,
-dependent upon good character, appears very important.</p>
-
-<p>7. It would tend to augment the number of steady
-respectable women, who are anxious to keep a good moral
-and require a good business character, whose aim it is to
-do their duty, to give satisfaction to their superiors, to
-keep their places in the same hospital, and eventually to
-end their days out of the workhouse.</p>
-
-<p>8. It would tend to diminish the number of ill-conducted
-women, who wander from hospital to hospital; whose
-wages go in drink or finery, or both; who would be disgusted
-at the idea of regularly laying by for their future
-support, and who would resent strict investigation into
-character.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6p" id="Page_6p">[6]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>9. It would tend to induce the intermediate class of
-women, who hesitate between good and bad companions,
-to incline to the former, and to break off from the latter,
-by the favourable result of provident and economical
-habits on their actual conduct; and by the effect which
-the prospect of a decent support in their age, dependent
-upon these habits, would produce.</p>
-
-<h3 title="">III. <span class="smcap">Of what Nature?</span></h3>
-
-<ul>
- <li>1. With regard to kind?</li>
- <li>2. <span class="ditto"> With regard to</span> persons?</li>
- <li>3. <span class="ditto"> With regard to</span> objects?</li>
-</ul>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Kinds of
-possible
-assistance,
-three.</div>
-
-<p>1. With regard to kind.</p>
-
-<p>There are three kinds of possible assistance.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Pensions.</div>
-
-<p>First. Granting free pensions to efficient and well-conducted
-sisters and nurses, under fixed regulations.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Facilities for
-Saving.</div>
-
-<p>Second. Providing sisters and nurses with a secure
-channel of investing their savings; giving them thus the
-important assistance of saving their time, trouble, and
-expense, in obtaining information as to such secure investment.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Additions to
-Savings.</div>
-
-<p>Third. Combining, with the second, a certain proportion
-of pecuniary aid.</p>
-
-<p>As to the first. It would be wise economy if the
-endowed hospitals, who alone could do it, were to grant
-such pensions; but whether they are likely to do more
-than they do now I am quite ignorant.</p>
-
-<p>Whether our labours in this field should take the
-direction of the second or third, is one of the most difficult
-questions with reference to a thing which is rife with
-difficulties. Towards solving it, I submit that it would
-be expedient to employ an able and honest man of business
-to procure&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Information<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7p" id="Page_7p">[7]</a></span>
-and Advice to
-be procured on
-the Subject.</div>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">I.</span> The rules, working, and results so far of the
-Servants’ Provident Society.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">II.</span> Of several of the various partly self-supporting and
-partly assisted provident societies of the different trades’
-and city unions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">III.</span> Of some dozen benefit societies in large towns.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">IV.</span> Of Guy’s Hospital Superannuation Fund.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">V.</span> To take the practical opinion of two experienced
-actuaries.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">VI.</span> Also of the Treasurer and Matron of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Bartholomew’s;</p>
-
-<ul>
- <li>Of the Treasurer, Resident Medical Officer, and
-Matron of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> Thomas’s;</li>
-
- <li>Of the Treasurer and Matron of Guy’s Hospital;</li>
-
- <li>Of the Chairman of the House-Committee, House-Governor,
-and Matron of the London Hospital;</li>
-
- <li>Of the equivalent authorities of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> George’s,
-and of two or three other hospitals (including King’s
-College).</li>
-</ul>
-
-<div class="sidenote">It is not
-possible for
-Nurses to
-purchase
-Annuities out
-of their
-Savings.</div>
-
-<p>My impression is that it is not possible, in the majority
-of cases, for either head-nurses or nurses to purchase
-annuities out of their savings.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">I.</span> Their work wears them out comparatively soon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">II.</span> During its continuance they require to live well
-<i>i.&nbsp;e.</i>, to have a sufficiency of good plain food.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">III.</span> They are obliged to put out and pay for either the
-whole or nearly the whole of their washing, making, and
-mending (and most properly obliged).</p>
-
-<p>Thus apart altogether from the consideration that many
-nurses are widows with families, and many others burdened
-with helpless or infirm relations, and that, in many
-of these cases, the smallest saving out of their wages is
-impossible, I doubt whether it can be reasonably expected
-that, as a class, hospital nurses should lay by out of their
-unassisted savings a provision for their age.<a name="Anchor_21" id="Anchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 21.">[21]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8p" id="Page_8p">[8]</a></span></p>
-<div class="sidenote">Persons to be
-assisted.</div>
-
-<p>2. With regard to persons.</p>
-
-<p>Shall the Fund be open exclusively to nurses belonging
-to the proposed Institution under Miss Nightingale?</p>
-
-<ul>
-
- <li>Or extended to those of the London hospitals?</li>
-
- <li>Or extended to all Hospitals in England?</li>
-
- <li>Or in the three kingdoms?</li>
-
- <li>Or in Her Majesty’s dominions in general?</li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<p>Shall the Fund be extended to private and monthly
-nurses, including midwives, as well as to hospital-nurses?</p>
-
-<p>I submit that we should consult, on these points, the
-authorities of the principal hospitals and a few men of
-experience in business besides. (Philanthropists by trade
-are, as is well known, the worst possible authorities on
-subjects of this kind.)</p>
-
-<p>My impression is that the Fund should certainly be
-extended to the three kingdoms. Whether it should be
-extended to the empire would depend entirely, in my
-judgment, upon the check and scrutiny it would be possible
-to exert, on accounts, monies, and certificates, in
-distant parts. Upon this men of business should advise.</p>
-
-<p>I think the Fund might eventually be open to private
-nurses, midwives, and monthly nurses.<a name="Anchor_22" id="Anchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 22.">[22]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9p" id="Page_9p">[9]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I think it perhaps might be open to the <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> John’s House
-nurses and to those of any institution which does not
-provide its servants with a pension. The Nursing Sisters’
-Society, I believe, have recently decided on granting their
-sisters £20 a-year, after twelve years’ service, a wise,
-generous, and, if properly worked, economical measure.
-We must avoid the very appearance of disfavour to other
-nursing institutions.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Objects to be
-sought.</div>
-
-<p>3. With regard to objects.</p>
-
-<p>Shall the objects be</p>
-
-<ul>
- <li>Material?</li>
- <li>Sanitary?</li>
- <li>Moral?</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p class="noindent">Or shall they be restricted either to the first only or the
-first and second? Here, again, I submit that we should
-consult hospital authorities and a few men of business
-and of experience, as to the feasibility, often a distinct
-thing from desirability, of these things.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the whole, and weighing many opposite difficulties,
-my impression is strongly in favour of attempting to combine
-the three.</p>
-
-<h4 title="">Material objects.</h4>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Material
-Objects to be
-sought.</div>
-
-<p>The benefit and provident societies embrace many
-objects: annuities, payments on illness, payments at
-burial, provision for children’s apprenticeships, provision
-for children at death, and other things.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Provision after
-Superannuation.</div>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">I.</span> It appears to me that the main if not the only object
-of the Fund should be to provide annuities.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">During
-Illness.</div>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">II.</span> It would be a question whether or not to arrange
-for payments during illness.<a name="Anchor_23" id="Anchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 23.">[23]</a> Every now and then ward
-air gets down the throat of almost every nurse, and every
-few years or so there is an illness. In many cases a
-nurse’s pay stops either when or soon after she becomes a
-patient. Some check upon malingering, a thing well<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10p" id="Page_10p">[10]</a></span>
-known where the name is not, is essential to every hospital.
-Of course it presses heaviest upon those who do not
-require it. After an illness, before returning into the
-wards, the best thing is a short thorough change of air.
-Often a severe illness is, and oftener still would be prevented
-by a week’s change of air, when the peculiar hospital-languor,
-so well known in hospitals, and so indescribable
-outside of them, first fairly sets in. The means of change
-of air, either before or after illness, are often deficient.
-Still, useful as some such provision would be, in many
-cases every year, it appears to me so subordinate to the
-great object of furnishing these women with some provision
-on their superannuation, that if it in the least impeded or
-rendered the latter less secure, I should unhesitatingly give
-it up.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Burial
-Payments.</div>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">III.</span> With burial payments I think the Fund should have
-nothing to do.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Payments for
-Children.</div>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">IV.</span> As to payments for children, whether on apprenticeship
-or at death:&mdash;Upon the whole, after much anxious
-thought, I think it undesirable to encourage mothers, as
-such. This is one of the many points, as to hospitals,
-where theories and experience differ much from each
-other.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Reasons
-against the
-last Form of
-Aid.</div>
-
-<p>A very large proportion of nurses are mothers, often
-widows, with large families, whom they support and put
-to service out of their wages, too often eked out by
-improper means, <i>i.&nbsp;e.</i>, bribes and petty dishonesty. Many
-of these women are moral, sober, industrious, and doubly
-anxious to retain their places, on account of their children;
-still there are serious embarrassments in employing them.
-The wages of hospital nurses are not and never can be
-enough to supply a proper support for children, in addition
-to the support the mothers ought themselves to have. Consequently
-when children are in whole or in part lodged, fed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11p" id="Page_11p">[11]</a></span>
-clothed, “educated,” and put to service out of the £50 a-year
-of the head-nurse, or out of the 12<i><abbr title="shillings">s.</abbr></i> a-week of the
-nurse, the mother either stints herself of proper food,
-proper strong drink (we deal with practice not with
-theory), proper warm clothing, for the children’s sake, or
-she supplies the deficiency by improper means. If the
-nurse cannot afford to live well and abstains from dishonesty,
-one of two things infallibly happens&mdash;either she
-takes to drink, as the fallacious support of an exhausted
-frame, or her strength fails and she breaks down, after a
-few months’, sometimes a few years’ struggle. When once
-she has taken to drink, one of two things invariably
-follows (dishonesty may be presumed to ensue upon, though
-it often does not precede habits of drink); she is or becomes
-unguarded, and is soon found out, and sinks into
-the miserable second and far too numerous class of characterless
-hospital nurses, unless drink shortly finishes her;
-or, in the other case, she is cautious and guarded&mdash;she
-then becomes sly, dishonest, and thoroughly venal; she
-extorts gifts and takes bribes from her patients and their
-friends&mdash;and the friends of hospital patients, like others,
-are of various kinds; she commits constant acts of petty
-but often most dangerous dishonesty, possibly remaining
-an efficient and clever nurse, sometimes a favourite nurse;
-and, so far as regards the crime which has taken the name
-of immorality, a moral woman. A certain proportion of
-nurses are all the above, excepting drink; for though,
-almost without exception, every nurse who drinks takes
-bribes, some take bribes and do not drink.</p>
-
-<p>Of course widows and unmarried women who are not
-mothers do the above things; but there cannot be a doubt
-of the additional and terrible temptation <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12p" id="Page_12p">[12]</a></span>to women
-burdened with children, to make money in various ways
-out of their patients. Even in the most favourable
-cases (and it is to be feared they are few) where the
-real good principle of the mother restrains her from
-venality, there are still serious objections. The time when
-a nurse can go out must necessarily be comparatively
-very limited. The time that is enough for the moderate
-demands of friendship or acquaintance is miserably insufficient
-for the natural yearnings of the mother, especially if
-the children are young and helpless. The consequence is
-that, either openly or by stealth, she goes to them or
-has them brought to her at unallowed times; or, if the
-rules of the hospital are lax as to visitors, the children are
-perpetually with her: and let it be remembered, that
-the head-nurse’s room or rooms are usually at the entrance
-of the ward, that being infinitely the best place. It is
-difficult to say whether such a practice is most objectionable
-as regards the children, or the patients, or the hospital;
-and whether it is most objectionable when the
-children are young, or adolescent, or grown up. It is
-objectionable in all and every one of these cases. And no
-less objectionable is it in the case of the assistant-nurse,
-who where the rules are lax will receive her children either
-in the ward or in the nurses’ kitchen; or where they are
-strict, will have the children come about the hospital and
-will meet them on the sly.</p>
-
-<p>These things enter immensely, minute as they seem,
-into the discipline of wards and of the hospital; and discipline
-means a great deal.</p>
-
-<h4 title="">Sanitary objects.</h4>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13p" id="Page_13p">[13]</a></span></p>
-<div class="sidenote">Sanitary
-Objects.</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">To discourage
-admission of
-women
-physically
-unfit.</div>
-
-<p>A good many nurses enter hospital service who are
-quite unfit for it. Often consumptive and ruptured women,
-those suffering from piles or prolapsus, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, present themselves,
-are admitted, struggle on for a time, and break
-down with or without taking to drink. Undoubtedly, none
-but strong healthy women should enter hospital service;
-the work will wear them out quite soon enough, and some
-of the above complaints are particularly liable to follow
-the work.</p>
-
-<p>Here again men of business must advise: the fund ought
-to have some efficient though not infallible security as to
-the average good health on joining of its members. Life
-Insurance rules as to this would be to the point.</p>
-
-<p>Believe me, all these things are important.</p>
-
-<h4 title="">Moral objects.</h4>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Moral Objects
-attainable.</div>
-
-<p>The most difficult part of a difficult thing, only perhaps
-it is at the same time the most important.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Need of
-Certificates.</div>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">I.</span> I think that every nurse, before joining the Fund,
-should produce a certificate from her matron, stating her
-to be a respectable woman. In plain words, for the word
-respectable is certainly capable of most wondrous extension,
-the certificate should state her to be, in the matron’s
-belief, and to the best of her knowledge, a chaste woman,
-and should specify whether she be spinster, wife, or widow.
-In either of the latter cases, the marriage certificate, and
-in the last that of the husband’s death, should accompany
-the matron’s.</p>
-
-<p>The matron’s certificate should, I consider, also state
-her to be sober; and it would be a question whether it
-should not also state her to have served for not less than
-a year in the hospital. The vagabond class are a terrible
-drag upon the whole order; and some of these might,
-from the novelty of the thing, be disposed to join it at
-first.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14p" id="Page_14p">[14]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">II.</span> An important question would be: Should the
-matron’s certificate be renewed every year, and should the
-continuance of the nurse’s membership depend on its production?
-Men of business must advise as to this: I am
-quite unversed as to the details of Provident Societies.</p>
-
-<p>So far as regards the contributor’s own money, the
-contract once entered into, must certainly be open to no
-further question; unless there has been fraud in the preliminary
-statement on which it was based. With regard to
-any <em>assistance</em> that may be given the question is different.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smrom">III.</span> The preliminary certificate I do consider very
-important, and the subsequent ones, if they can be required.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Hospitals are
-not places for
-Penitents.</div>
-
-<p>Until the hospitals are swept of the many mothers who
-are not wives, now unhappily to be found in them, no real
-good can be done. Hospitals are not, and never can be,
-places for “penitents;” and they are about the most dangerous
-places where sham penitents can be.</p>
-
-<p>This is precisely what so many people of very different
-kinds cannot or will not see; some from ignorance, some
-from knowledge, some from the vague, silly, kind feeling
-which does such mischief when exerted on practical matters.</p>
-
-<p>Suffer me to submit, without wearying patience by
-urging proof,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>i. That real penitents are wrongly placed in hospital
-service, because their admission breaks down the standard
-which respectable women who are hospital nurses feel (quite
-as keenly as their superiors do in their own concerns)
-ought at once to restrain and to protect those engaged in
-this very peculiar, very trying, and very exposed work and
-life. (I have invariably observed that real penitents are
-extra-prudish, and comparatively inefficient, in their hospital
-duty. It will at once be perceived how inevitable
-this result is.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15p" id="Page_15p">[15]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>ii. That sincere but unconfirmed penitents, in addition
-to the above, are most dangerously and improperly placed
-in a situation, to them, of very peculiar trial.</p>
-
-<p>iii. That sham penitents, who unhappily abound, are
-dangerous everywhere, extra-dangerous in hospitals,
-whether to superiors, companions, or patients.</p>
-
-<p>iv. That although the class must ever be a very mixed
-one, it is most important to have a standard. Let it be
-necessary for every nurse to enter hospital with a good
-character, and to leave it on losing it. Deception, hypocrisy,
-and successful guilt will be found in hospitals, as
-elsewhere; but the class must be raised, and therefore
-improved, by requiring the condition of good character;
-though guilt may occasionally mask itself behind it.</p>
-
-<p>v. That although, for various and very differing reasons,
-the certificates will be not unseldom untrustworthy, still
-the same reasoning will apply. Upon the whole the tendency
-will be, by requiring the condition of good character,
-to improve a class which, containing, as it does,
-many well-conducted women, is sadly degraded and contaminated
-by many vile ones.</p>
-
-<p>vi. I do not overlook the fact that honest certificates,
-especially if annually renewed, might give the matrons
-some perplexity, from reasons which need not be enlarged
-upon. Still, it seems to me, it would be well worth
-trying.</p>
-
-<h3 title="">IV. <span class="smcap">Rules to be followed in giving Assistance.</span></h3>
-
-<p>Lastly. With regard to rules to be followed in giving
-assistance of whatever kind.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Need of Advice
-with a view
-above all to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16p" id="Page_16p">[16]</a></span>
-Security.</div>
-
-<p>It seems to me most important that we should
-obtain the opinions both of hospital authorities and of a
-few able men of business, before laying down rules. The
-whole matter is so essentially mixed up with the tangible
-point of securing that the savings of these poor women
-should avail them in their age, that it is urgent to have
-sound practical advice as to letting nothing else imperil
-this. Security seems the cardinal point of the whole, and
-that is a question for men of business to answer.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Suggestions in
-detail.</div>
-
-<p>The following suggestions toward obtaining it are offered.</p>
-
-<p>1. Security of invested savings to be the first and main
-thing to be secured. Every other object should be subordinate
-to this.</p>
-
-<p>2. If we decide upon aiding their savings, let the security
-of this aid be the main point. Invest all donations,
-annual or not; unless, should any hospitals contribute
-annually, it might be fairly considered that those contributions
-should be annually used.</p>
-
-<p>3. The aim should be to enable all hospital nurses, of
-good character, to provide annuities for themselves, whether
-with or without assistance. I think assistance will be
-necessary.</p>
-
-<p>4. Also to enable private and monthly nurses, and midwives,
-to do the same, but without requiring the certificate
-of character, which, not to be a mockery, ought to be an
-effectual one; and these persons are not under a fixed
-superior.</p>
-
-<p>5. The pensions should, if it be possible, range from
-£13 or £15 a-year to £50 a-year: say £13, £20, £30,
-£40, £50.</p>
-
-<p>6. Each hospital nurse to produce, before being allowed
-to join the Fund, a certificate from her matron of chastity,
-general good conduct, and a statement as to her being
-unmarried, married, or a widow, also of her having served
-in one hospital not less than a year. Also her marriage
-certificate, if a wife, and, if a widow, that and the certificate
-of her husband’s death. In the event of her marriage
-or re-marriage afterwards, the marriage-certificate to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17p" id="Page_17p">[17]</a></span>
-produced, and her altered name and the fact of her
-marriage duly recorded in the Fund-book. (All this is
-important: aliases and fictitious marriages are sadly
-common, in this class).</p>
-
-<p>7. If possible the certificate to be produced once a-year,
-and, on its failure, the contributor to cease to have a title to
-assistance. <em>Assistance</em> in the form of an addition to the
-annuity may be made <em>contingent</em>; the annuity which the
-premiums provide must be absolute: most of the vices
-tend to shorten life, that is, to diminish the number of
-annual payments, so that the fund would not be likely to
-incur losses through them.</p>
-
-<p>8. Private and monthly nurses, and midwives, to
-produce, before being allowed to join the Fund, a certificate
-from the Clergyman of the parish, stating his belief
-that the subscriber is a respectable woman, unmarried,
-married, or a widow; and in the latter cases, marriage and
-death certificates. On any after-marriage or re-marriage,
-certificate to be produced and altered name registered, on
-pain of expulsion from the Fund. I should not attempt
-an annual certificate for this migratory and “independent”
-class.</p>
-
-<p>9. Each nurse, before being allowed to join the Fund,
-to undergo whatever examination is undergone by women
-before they are allowed to effect Life Insurances, as to
-her being, at the date of joining, a healthy woman.
-(Physicians ought to advise here as to inserting provisions
-technical enough to be effective).</p>
-
-<p>10. Payments to be made weekly, monthly, quarterly,
-or annually, as shall be advised. Amounts to run from
-6<i><abbr title="pence">d.</abbr></i> or 1<i><abbr title="shilling">s.</abbr></i> a week upwards. For the plan to work, it ought
-to allow small payments on an ascending scale.</p>
-
-<p>Many will only be able to make very small payments.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18p" id="Page_18p">[18]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Few will be able to make other than small payments.</p>
-
-<p>11. Payments made by a subscriber dying before attaining
-pension to be devisable by will, and in case of intestacy,
-divided among next of kin.</p>
-
-<p>12. All possible safe curtailment of office expenses.</p>
-
-<p>13. Treasurers, or equivalent civil chiefs, of all hospitals
-that subscribe, to be on the committee or council, or by
-whatever name the equivalent may be termed.</p>
-
-<h3 title="">V. <span class="smcap">Prospects of eventual Support.</span></h3>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Support by the
-Nurses
-themselves.</div>
-
-<p>1. I believe that many head-nurses would thoroughly
-appreciate and thankfully avail themselves of such a
-Fund.</p>
-
-<p>2. I think that many nurses would do the same, and, in
-time, many more. Many cannot contribute to it; many
-will not.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Support from
-the Hospitals.</div>
-
-<p>3. What aid the hospitals might be disposed to give I
-do not know. I rather think none at first. If the thing
-works and works well, I think they would probably contribute.
-But it must never be forgotten that, excepting the
-endowed hospitals (the financial position of <abbr title="Saint">St.</abbr> George’s I
-do not know) the London hospitals find their income
-scarcely sufficient, often not sufficient, to meet their
-expenditure. They cannot be expected, nor would they
-perhaps be justified, to curtail the number of the sick they
-relieve, in order to provide for the superannuated nurses
-of those sick. It is true, however, that it might enable
-them to get better nurses, which is surely economy.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Support from
-the Public in
-general.</div>
-
-<p>4. I do not think that much lasting public interest is
-likely to attend the Fund. The interest the public has,
-for the last few years, taken in hospitals has been fictitious
-and almost mischievous. The public can never really
-know what hospitals are, nor is it feasible or desirable
-that it should. What eventual good may be done in them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19p" id="Page_19p">[19]</a></span>
-must be done quietly and with great patience. What
-good may be done among the nurses must be done by
-infusing, if it may be, a higher and truer spirit of duty, by
-increased discipline and protection, and by ameliorating,
-in some material points, among which the aim contemplated
-by the Fund ranks very high, a condition which,
-to the end of time, must remain severe, rough, dangerous,
-and in all senses trying. In the details of all
-these things, most especially in all that concerns discipline,
-which involves protection, the public, with the best intentions,
-will only be an obstacle, and John Bull is sadly
-prone to pull up anything he plants or anything he waters,
-to see how it grows.</p>
-
-<p>I think anything like appeals to or solicited support from
-the public might, in various ways, seriously embarrass the
-Superintendent of a very difficult and a very important
-though, at the same time, a very humble branch of Her
-Majesty’s Service. I should be very anxious to avoid this:
-it would be perpetuating the evils of publicity, and sacrificing
-the greater good for the lesser.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Necessity of
-Advice.</div>
-
-<p>5. In conclusion I again submit that it would be desirable
-to ascertain from the hospital authorities above mentioned,
-and if possible from three or four able and honest
-men accustomed to business, their opinion as to the scope
-and details of this plan. In matters of spirit and of discipline
-we should probably rely on other judgment; but
-these are matters of business; and in which, without
-binding ourselves to follow, it seems most important to
-obtain and to weigh, the opinions of men long conversant
-with business.</p>
-
-<p><i>January 23, 1858.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20p" id="Page_20p">[20]</a></span></p>
-<h2><span class="smcap">Note as to the Number of Women employed as
-Nurses in Great Britain.</span></h2>
-
-<p>To show the importance of an Institute for Nurses, it
-must be stated that 25,466 were returned, at the census
-of 1851, as nurses by profession, exclusive of 39,139
-nurses in domestic service,<a name="Anchor_24" id="Anchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor" title="Go to footnote 24.">[24]</a> and 2,882 midwives. The
-numbers of different ages are shown in table A, and in
-table B their distribution over Great Britain.</p>
-
-<p>To increase the efficiency of this class, and to make
-as many of them as possible the disciples of the true
-doctrines of health, would be a great national work.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21p" id="Page_21p">[21]</a></span></p>
-<h3 title=""><a name="TABLES_OF_AGE_AND_DISTRIBUTION" id="TABLES_OF_AGE_AND_DISTRIBUTION" class="nodec">TABLES OF AGE AND DISTRIBUTION.</a></h3>
-
-<h4 title=""><span class="smcap">Table A.</span><br />
-
-<span>GREAT BRITAIN.</span><br />
-
-<span class="smaller">AGES.</span></h4>
-
-<table class="nurses" summary="nurses by age">
-<tr>
- <th>
- NURSES.
- </th>
- <th class="num">
- Nurse<br />(not<br />Domestic Servant)
- </th>
- <th class="num">
- Nurse<br /><br />(Domestic Servant)
- </th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- All Ages.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 25,466
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 39,139
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- Under 5 Years.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- ...
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- ...
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- <span class="hidden">0</span>5 &mdash;
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- ...
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 508
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 10 &mdash;
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- ...
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 7259
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 15 &mdash;
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- ...
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 10,355
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 20 &mdash;
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 624
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 6537
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 25 &mdash;
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 817
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 4174
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 30 &mdash;
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 1118
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 2495
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 35 &mdash;
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 1359
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 1681
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 40 &mdash;
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 2223
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 1468
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 45 &mdash;
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 2748
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 1206
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 50 &mdash;
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 3982
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 1196
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 55 &mdash;
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 3456
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 833
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 60 &mdash;
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 3825
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 712
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 65 &mdash;
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 2542
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 369
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 70 &mdash;
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 1568
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 204
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 75 &mdash;
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 746
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 101
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 80 &mdash;
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 311
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 25
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 85 and Upwards
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 147
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 16
- </td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<h4 title=""><span class="smcap">Table B.</span><br />
-
-AGED 20 YEARS OF AGE, AND UPWARDS.</h4>
-
-<table class="nurses location" summary="nurses by location">
-<tr>
- <th>
- &nbsp;
- </th>
- <th class="num">
- Nurse<br />(not<br />Domestic Servant)
- </th>
- <th class="num">
- Nurse<br /><br />(Domestic Servant)
- </th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- Great Britain and Islands in the British Seas.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 25,466
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 21,017
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- England and Wales.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 23,751
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 18,945
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- Scotland.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 1543
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 1922
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- Islands in the British Seas.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 172
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 150
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 1st Division.<br />London.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 7807
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 5061
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 2nd Division.<br />South Eastern.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 2878
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 2514
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 3rd Division.<br />South Midland.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 2286
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 1252
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 4th Division.<br />Eastern Counties.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 2408
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 959
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 5th Division.<br />South Western Counties.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 3055
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 1737
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 6th Division.<br />West Midland Counties.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 1225
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 2283
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 7th Division.<br />North Midland Counties.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 1303
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 957
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 8th Division.<br />North Western Counties.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 970
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 2135
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 9th Division.<br />Yorkshire.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 1074
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 1023
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 10th Division.<br />Northern Counties.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 402
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 410
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
- 11th Division.<br />Monmouth and Wales.
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 343
- </td>
- <td class="num">
- 614
- </td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22p" id="Page_22p">[22]</a></span></p>
-<h2><span class="smcap">Note as to teaching Nursing.</span></h2>
-
-<p>There is, at Madras, an Institution called the Military
-Female Orphan Asylum, which trains 200 orphan girls,
-daughters of European soldiers. They enter in infancy,
-and, as they attain a proper age, they are married to
-soldiers or others. There is always an abundance of applicants
-for them, and every endeavour is made to train them
-to be useful soldiers’ wives. Dr. MacPherson, the excellent
-Principal Medical Officer of the Turkish Contingent,
-when at Kertch, who is now in charge of this Asylum, was
-the person, I believe, who introduced amongst the senior
-girls, a system of training, to enable them to officiate as
-nurses, an all-important element in their education. Below
-is a syllabus of the theoretical branches taught, a practical
-knowledge being acquired in the Hospital attached to the
-Institution. It would be well if all women underwent a
-similar training.</p>
-
-<h3 title=""><i>Course of Instruction for the Class of Sick Nurses, at the
-Military Female Orphan Asylum.</i></h3>
-
-<h5 title="">Popular and Regional Anatomy and Physiology.</h5>
-
-<p>A general knowledge of the human body, its various
-organs, and their uses.</p>
-
-<h5 title="">Sanitation.</h5>
-
-<p>To be made acquainted with every subject relating to
-health, viz.: Food&mdash;Exercise&mdash;Clothing&mdash;Cleanliness&mdash;Ventilation,
-<abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr></p>
-
-<h5 title="">Sick-room Management.</h5>
-
-<p>Administration of Medicines, Application of Leeches,
-Lotions, Fomentations, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> Cleanliness, Darkening of
-the Apartment, Quietness, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr> Cooking for the Sick.
-Diet for Infants.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23p" id="Page_23p">[23]</a></span></p>
-<h5 title="">Household Medicine and Surgery.</h5>
-
-<p>To be taught how to act in emergencies, viz.: in cases
-of Fainting&mdash;Hysterics&mdash;Convulsions of Children&mdash;Burns&mdash;Stings
-of Insects&mdash;Wounds, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>; and the simplest mode
-of treating the diseases most commonly met with in India,
-viz.:</p>
-
-<ul>
- <li>External Inflammation,</li>
- <li>Cholera,</li>
- <li>Fever,</li>
- <li>Dysentery,</li>
- <li>Sore Eyes,</li>
- <li>Bowel Complaints,</li>
- <li>Cutaneous Eruptions.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>How to prepare Poultices, Fomentations, and Lotions.</p>
-<p><span class="ditto">How to</span> dress Wounds, Sores, and Blisters.</p>
-<p><span class="ditto">How to</span> apply Bandages.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<h3 title="">Footnotes:</h3>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_21" id="Footnote_21" href="#Anchor_21" title="Return to text.">[21]</a>
-If the sisters and nurses, as a rule, were fed as well as lodged at
-all the Hospitals, <abbr title="etcetera">&amp;c.</abbr>, the class of women would, in a very short time,
-be entirely changed; this kind of employment would not then, with the
-reduced money payment, be so much an object of desire to widows with
-families, particularly if compelled to subscribe to a pension fund, which
-should be compulsory.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_22" id="Footnote_22" href="#Anchor_22" title="Return to text.">[22]</a>
-At first it would be unwise to attempt too much. If extended to
-Her Majesty’s dominions or private nurses, it would be almost impossible
-to control abuses.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_23" id="Footnote_23" href="#Anchor_23" title="Return to text.">[23]</a>
-Every institution ought to provide for its nurses during illness, but
-in fact it is not done.</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
- <p><a name="Footnote_24" id="Footnote_24" href="#Anchor_24" title="Return to text.">[24]</a>
-A curious fact will be shown by Table A, viz., that 18,122 out of
-39,139, or nearly one-half of all the Nurses, in domestic service, are between
-5 and 20 years of age.</p>
-</li>
-
-</ul>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
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