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Nightingale, Florence, 1820-1920

"Notes on Nursing What It Is, and What It Is Not"

This is
an extreme case. But in a small way, the same manner of acting falls
under the cognizance of us all. How often the attendants of a case have
stated that they knew perfectly well that the patient could not get well
in such an air, in such a room, or under such circumstances, yet have
gone on dosing him with medicine, and making no effort to remove the
poison from him, or him from the poison which they knew was killing him;
nay, more, have sometimes not so much as mentioned their conviction in
the right quarter--that is, to the only person who could act in the
matter.


CONCLUSION.

[Sidenote: Sanitary nursing as essential in surgical as in medical
cases, but not to supersede surgical nursing.]
The whole of the preceding remarks apply even more to children and to
puerperal women than to patients in general. They also apply to the
nursing of surgical, quite as much as to that of medical cases. Indeed,
if it be possible, cases of external injury require such care even more
than sick. In surgical wards, one duty of every nurse certainly is
_prevention_.


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