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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
15 pages in length. As nursing has moved forward into the twenty-first century, has the industry earned any more respect and admiration than it had over one hundred years ago? Indeed, it can readily be argued that men continue to hold both superiority and power within today's medical
community, inasmuch as nurses' responsibilities include spending the most time, effort and emotion on their many patients. Such dedication has been the cause of change of heart for many nurses, whose unfaltering generosity of spirit has typically received little recognition. The writer discusses how when combined with the inherently grueling aspects required of the job, it is no wonder nurses
can lose the very nurturing element they need to perform the job. Bibliography lists 18 sources.
Page Count:
15 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCnursg.doc
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that the best way to make a difference in someones life is to be there in their most desperate of times. This is why nursing is such a tremendously
rewarding career: just by offering a piece of oneself, an individual can make a lasting impression, while at the same time assisting in a persons recuperation. However, as uplifting
as this field may be, there is a significant downside in that a high percentage of nurses become burned out after considerable time in and around a health care facility.
II. SPECIFICATION OF FRAMEWORK Diane Garey and Lawrence R. Hotts Sentimental Women Need Not Apply: A History of the American Nurse is
instrumental in tracing the historical importance of nurses in specific, along with the significant contributions made to the medical community in general. The authors outline the past one hundred
and fifty years of dedication that stems from the Nightingales all the way through the caretakers of Vietnam; by employing the use of recent interviews and historical film clips, photographs
and drawings, Garey and Hott effectively establish a concrete connection between the under appreciated and much disparaged angels of mercy and their inherent indispensability. "Society couldnt get along without
nurses any more than they could get along without mothers" (Garey et al, 1988, p. PG). A profession that was decidedly more of
the female persuasion in the mid-eighteen hundreds was that of nursing. Considered an extension of a womans natural ability to nurture and tend to others, nursing fell into the
more traditional female role where the majority of women went unpaid for their services. It is a clear presumption by Garey et al (1988) that womens contributions -- no
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