Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. www.florence-nightingale.co.uk › the-nightingale-training-school-for-nurses-1860The Nightingale Training School for Nurses

    The Nightingale Training School for Nurses, 1860-1993. Display No. 129. The Nightingale Training School for Nurses was established at St ThomasHospital in 1860 as part of Florence’s campaign to transform nursing and health care. One of the pillars of making such change was to ensure the workforce was highly skilled, and Florence’s ...

  2. The Nightingale School of Nursing Following her time in the Crimea, Nightingale established the first school for nursing in this country, which opened in 1860. She taught nurses that wards should be clean and caring should be compassionate. This website illustrates the impact of Florence Nightingale's work. Here you can see that the the trainees.

  3. Returning to Britain, Nightingale opened the Nightingale Home and Training School for Nurses at St. Thomas Hospital in London on June 24, 1860. She believed that the focus of a training school should be nursing education rather than nursing service.

  4. Florence Nightingale (1820–1910) founded the world’s first professional school of nursing at St ThomasHospital, the precursor to King’s Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing, Midwifery & Palliative Care. Florence rose to prominence as a manager and trainer of nurses during the Crimean War.

  5. 9 de nov. de 2009 · Florence Nightingale (1820-1910), known as “The Lady With the Lamp,” was a British nurse, social reformer and statistician best known as the founder of modern nursing. Her experiences as a...

  6. These prints and photographs form part of the Nightingale Collection deposited in the Greater London Record Office by the Nightingale School. They illustrate the life of Florence Nightingale and the work of the school of nursing which she founded at St Thomas' Hospital in 1860.

  7. 1 de feb. de 2002 · In 1860, the Nightingale School of Nursing opened at St Thomas’s Hospital, London. Florence Nightingale’s overriding raison d’etre in the setting up of this foundation was a replacement of the old fashioned nurse (caricatured by Mrs Gamp—an “ignorant and immoral drunkard”) by the highly trained, and eminently respectable “lady-nurse”.