This book chapter discusses young people who undertook nursing training in the Medical Missionary Training School at the Sydney Sanitarium during the two World Wars. Specifically, it focuses on how the Sydney Sanitarium’s student nurses were trained, the types of patients cared for and the science which underpinned the care given
Sydney Sanitarium. Adventist medical institution in Wahroonga, New South Wales, Australia that opene...
Abstract: While health education in late nineteenth-century Britain could be benefi cial for every h...
A photograph of four nurses sitting in a lounge in the Administration Building at the US Naval Speci...
The history of nursing education has often been portrayed as the subordination of nursing to medici...
First graduating class of the Nurses\u27Aide Corps, March 1943. From 1926 to 1934 City Hospital trie...
Background: Following stabilisation in hospitals and on hospital ships wounded and sick servicemen i...
© 2006 Dr. Kirsty Jean Hamlyn HarrisThis comparative labour history seeks to reveal the working life...
Netley Hospital played a crucial role in caring for the wounded during the nineteenth century and tw...
Institutionalised isolation: tuberculosis nursing at Westwood Sanatorium, Queensland, Australia 1919...
Copyright confirmation in progress. Any queries to UMER-enquiries@unimelb.edu.auNearly fifty nurses...
Introduction: Today Harefield Hospital is a renowned cardio-thoracic hospital in the UK. In 1914 Har...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Australian Military Medicine 2003 published...
Nurses played an essential role in the major developments in surgery between the mid-nineteenth and ...
This book is a re-telling of the story of the mission of the Sydney Adventist Hospital - even today ...
The history of nursing in Sydney is central to understanding a range of issues including healthcare ...
Sydney Sanitarium. Adventist medical institution in Wahroonga, New South Wales, Australia that opene...
Abstract: While health education in late nineteenth-century Britain could be benefi cial for every h...
A photograph of four nurses sitting in a lounge in the Administration Building at the US Naval Speci...
The history of nursing education has often been portrayed as the subordination of nursing to medici...
First graduating class of the Nurses\u27Aide Corps, March 1943. From 1926 to 1934 City Hospital trie...
Background: Following stabilisation in hospitals and on hospital ships wounded and sick servicemen i...
© 2006 Dr. Kirsty Jean Hamlyn HarrisThis comparative labour history seeks to reveal the working life...
Netley Hospital played a crucial role in caring for the wounded during the nineteenth century and tw...
Institutionalised isolation: tuberculosis nursing at Westwood Sanatorium, Queensland, Australia 1919...
Copyright confirmation in progress. Any queries to UMER-enquiries@unimelb.edu.auNearly fifty nurses...
Introduction: Today Harefield Hospital is a renowned cardio-thoracic hospital in the UK. In 1914 Har...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Australian Military Medicine 2003 published...
Nurses played an essential role in the major developments in surgery between the mid-nineteenth and ...
This book is a re-telling of the story of the mission of the Sydney Adventist Hospital - even today ...
The history of nursing in Sydney is central to understanding a range of issues including healthcare ...
Sydney Sanitarium. Adventist medical institution in Wahroonga, New South Wales, Australia that opene...
Abstract: While health education in late nineteenth-century Britain could be benefi cial for every h...
A photograph of four nurses sitting in a lounge in the Administration Building at the US Naval Speci...