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matching 1. surgical nursing
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Northern District School of Nursing. Managed by Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Book - Medical Reference Books
... 1. Surgical Nursing...1. Surgical Nursing by J.E.Whiteside F.C.N.A. Belonged... 11 Mackenzie Street Bendigo goldfields 1. Surgical Nursing ...1. Surgical Nursing by J.E.Whiteside F.C.N.A. Belonged to Marion Dunn 'Pilot' NDSN 24/2/75 2. Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine and Nursing by Benjamin F Miller, M.D. and Claire Brackman Keane, R.N., B.S. Belonged to Marion Symes (nee Dunn) N.D.S.N. 17-3-7 3. Medical-Surgical Nursing and Related Physiology by Jeannette E. Watson, R.N., M.Sc.N. Belonged to Marion Symes (nee Dunn) 4. Basic Physiology and Anatomy by Ellen E. Chaffee and Esther M. Greisheimer Belonged to Marion Dunn NDSN, 37 Rowan St, Bendigo, 14/2/741. surgical nursing, medicine, physiology, anatomy -
Northern District School of Nursing. Managed by Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Book - Medical Reference Books
... 1. Surgical Nursing... 11 Mackenzie Street Bendigo goldfields 1. Surgical Nursing ...1,2,3,4 Modern Professional Nursing (4 Volumes) New & Revised Editions. Edited by Mildred Hainsworth R.R.C., D.N., S.R.N. Belonged to D.J.Whitfield, Swan Hill District Hospital, 1954. Beverford P.O. via Swan Hill. 5. Modern Practical Nursing Procedures by M.K.Doherty R.R.C., M.B.Sirl, O.I.Ring Belonged to Dorothy Whitfield, District Hospital, Swan Hill. 6. Surgery for Nurses by James Moroney M.B., Ch.B., F.R.C.S. (Eng.), L.R.C.P. (Lond.) with Foreword by Miss Dorothy M. Smith, O.B.E. Belonged to D.J.Whitfield, District Hospital, Swan Hill. 7. Modern Surgery for Nurses, (2nd edition) Edited by F.Wilson Harlow M.B., B.S. (Durham), F.R.C.S. (Eng.) Belonged to A.Archibald, Lansellstowe, 60 Barkly Place, Bendigo, 3.3.54 8. Modern Surgery for Nurses (3rd edition) Edited by F. Wilson Harlow 1. surgical nursing, medicine, physiology, anatomy -
Northern District School of Nursing. Managed by Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Book - Medical Reference Books
... 1. Surgical Nursing... 11 Mackenzie Street Bendigo goldfields 1. Surgical Nursing ...1. The Principles and Practice of Surgical Nursing by D.F. Ellison Nash F.R.C.S. Belonged to Nr. M.L. Carr, Northern District School of Nursing 2. Davison's Principles and Practice of Medicine, Edited by John Macleod Belonged to Marion Dunn N.D.S.N., 19-3-75 3. Nursing Care of the Patient by W.B.Smith and Y.L. Lew R.G.N., R.M.N., F.C.N. (NSW) Belonged to Marion Dunn 'Pilot' 4.2.74 4 & 5. Lister House, The Story of the Northern District Scholl of Nursing by Frank Cusack (2copies) One copy belonged to Rosita Jones with signatures of 8 nurses on fly leaf. 6. Medical Nursing by J.E. Whiteside, F.C.N.A. Belonged to Marion Dunn 'Pilot' N.D.S.N. 24.2.'75 7. Lectures for Nurses by G.N. Burbidge S.R.N. Belonged to Swan Hill District Hospital 8. Materia Medica for Nurses by W. Gordon Sears M.D. (Lond.) M.R.C.P. (Lond,) 9. & 10. Aids to Hygiene for Nurses by Edith M. Funnell S.R.N., D.N. (Lond.) Two copies of 4th Edition One copy belonged to Ann Archibald, Bendigo Base Hospital 11. Aids to Gynaecological Nursing, 5th Edition, by Hilda M. Gration and Dorothy L. Holland, both S.R.N., S.C.M., D.N. (London) 12. The Nurses Dictionary of Medical Terms and Nursing Treatment by Honor Morten (21st Edition) Belonged to Nurse Heather Campbell, School 15. 13. Medicine for Nurses by W. Gordon Sears M.D. (Lond.) M.R.C.P. (Lond.) Belonged to D.J. Whitfield, District Hospital Swan Hill 14. Microbiology for Nurses by E. Joan Bocock and Margaret J. Parker Belonged to Marion Dunn, 'Pilot' N.D.S.N. 4.2.74 1. surgical nursing, medicine, physiology, anatomy, lister house, microbiology, nursing care -
Ringwood and District Historical Society
Book, Collection of nine medical books 1900-1935 belonging to Nurse Maggs and descendants (1973), of Ringwood, Victoria
Nurse Marianne Maggs undertook medical care and midwifery from 1900 - 1926 and delivered more than 500 babies. She was presented with a "wireless" in 1926 in appreciation for her services to the community. She sold her Ringwood house and moved to Mitcham. 10 medical books from 1909 to 1935 1 . Homeopathic Vade Mecum Medical and Surgical by E.H.Ruddock M.D. Xmas gift from G Smith to Nurse Maggs 1909 2. The Doctor at Home Ed. by George Black Presented from friend to Mrs. A Maggs 12-12-1909 3. Illustrated Family Doctor 1935 4.The Practical Guide to Health Frederick Rossiter 5. Johnson and Johnson's First Aid Manual 1909, including booklet - Accidents in the Home 6. Diseases of Infants and Children and their Homeopathic Treatment Dr. Ruddock 1910, including lock of (child's?) hair. 7. Home Nursing St. John's Ambulance 1939 8. First Aid to the Injured 1921 (2 copies) 9. Modern First Aid A.S. PLayfair 1973 -
Australian Nursing & Midwifery Federation
Australian Nursing Federation ratios campaign badge, 2003
Button distributed to and worn by Australian Nursing Federation (ANF) members and staff as part of a 2003-2004 campaign to secure minimum nurse staffing in the public healthcare sector. The '5-4-20' denotes a minimum of five nurses for twenty patients in a general medical or surgical ward. During this period, staffing ratios were secured as part of bargaining negotiations between unions and employer groups. After decades of campaigning from the ANF/ANMF, ratios were legislated for the public sector in Victoria with the passing of the Safe Patient Care (Nurse to Patient and Midwife to Patient) Bill in 2015. This campaign was featured in ANF Victorian Branch newsletters from late 2003 to early 2004. Entitled the '5-4-20 campaign', it was officially launched on 19 November 2003. Advertisements and shirts from the time featured the slogan, '5 nurses for 20 patients. Nothing less!' along with the ANF logo and illustrations by The Age cartoonist Ron Tandberg. The campaign was to promote the role of minimum nurse to patient ratios in ensuring patient safety and encouraging nurse recruitment and retention.Circular yellow, blue and red badge. Silver metal, plastic-coated, with safety pin fastener adhered to back. Badge printed with '5-4-20' and a blue and red triangle design.nursing, ratios, workforce, staffing, nurses, unionism, badges, buttons, pins, campaigning, trade unions, labour history, safe patient care (nurse to patient and midwife to patient ratios) act 2015, australian nursing federation, victoria, enterprise bargaining -
Australian Nursing & Midwifery Federation
Florence Nightingale note to Annie Miller, 1867
'Miss Annie Miller, who had nursed Prince Alfred with Miss Turriff [Haldane, first matron of Alfred Hospital], also joined staff at the Alfred some time before 1876. During her time at the Sydney Infirmary, Annie Miller created something of a stir when, after her experience nursing Prince Alfred, she became selective about which areas of the hospital she would work, only willing to serve in Male Surgical and Accident. She also had been reported to Miss Nightingale by both Lucy Osburn and Haldane Turriff for openly flirting with the Resident Physician, receiving flowers, embroidering slippers, playing with his watch chain and generally becoming the subject of gossip ... Before his departure from the hospital the doctor in question diagnosed Annie Miller as having an [abdominal] aneurism and she went into decline, mainly from the deprivation of his company, it was felt. With the threat of her possibly being returned to England because of ill health, Miller went to Brisbane and Goodna (Queensland), subsequently to Melbourne, where she faded into obscurity. Her aneurism had apparently subsided.' From '5.30, nurse! : the story of the Alfred nurses' by Helen Paterson. History Books: Melbourne, 1996 p. 8 'Annie Miller was Scottish, single and claimed to be 34 years old (in Sydney, she was assumed to be ten years older); Wardroper [Sarah Elizabeth, first superintendent at the Nightingale School of Nursing at St Thomas's Hospital, London] had found her to be a good nurse, but 'proud and peculiarly sensitive'' (Burrows, 2018 p. 33). At the end of 1870 Annie resigned after the three-year term at Sydney Infirmary ended. She was appointed to the position of matron at Brisbane Hospital in February 1871. She resigned within a few months of her appointment after a dispute with the staff surgeon who refused to recognise her and her status. From 'Nurses of Australia : the illustrated history' by Deborah Burrows. NLA Publishing : Canberra, 2018 p. 41 'Annie Miller went from the [Sydney] Infirmary to Brisbane Hospital, she then joined Haldane Turriff at The Alfred Hospital, while Osburn thought that Miller had gone to nurse private patients. The two versions are not incompatible as hospitals hired out nurses to care for wealthier patients in their homes. Schultz records that Miller worked at the Hospital for the Insane at Goodna [Queensland] and died in the Melbourne Benevolent Asylum on 12 March 1907. The Victorian branch of the Australian Nursing Federation owns the book presented to Miller by Florence Nightingale in 1867.' From 'Lucy Osburn, a lady displaced : Florence Nightingale's envoy to Australia' by Judith Godden. Sydney University Press : Sydney, 2006 p. 315 'This betrayal of all that had been said to Tate [Henry, Alfred Hospital Secretary-Manager 1874-1876] was in keeping with Annie Miller's reputation (earned in Sydney) for being unreliable and a trouble-maker. Miss Miller was also an intimate of Miss Turriff's. Annie Miller is said to have had a brief term as matron in Brisbane after her resignation from the Sydney Infirmary in 1870 but the Brisbane Hospital authorities are unable to provide this one way of the other. Lucy Osburn thought that Miss Miller was in private nursing in Melbourne in 1873 and the Vagabond [alias of John Stanley James, Argus journalist] stated positively that she was working for Miss Turriff at the Alfred when he was there in 1876'. From 'The hospital south of the Yarra' by Ann Mitchell. Alfred Hospital : Melbourne, 1977 p. 242 'Annie Miller was appointed matron of the lunatic asylum at Woogaroo (Goodna) in Queensland in 1877, and remained there for ten years. When she left the medical superintendent, in his report for 1888, praised her for the work she had done in the female division of the asylum'. From 'A tapestry of service' by Bartz Schultz. Churchill Livingstone : South Melbourne, 1991 p.222Annie Miller was one of five Nightingale-trained nurses who come to Sydney in 1868 with Lucy Osburn, the newly appointed Superintendent and Chief Female Officer at the Sydney Infirmary. Florence Nightingale gave them all books before they sailed in December of that year. Annie worked in Sydney, Brisbane and Goodna, and in Melbourne. She died in 1907 and is buried at Boroondara cemetery. Annie was a member of the Royal Victorian Trained Nurses' Association. This note was written in Annie's book and this item is in the archive collection of the ANMF Vic Branch Library. The note was written on the front page of a book. We believe the item was donated to the Branch.Hand written note by Florence Nightingale to Annie Miller, upon her departure to Sydney with Lucy Osburn in 1868, written in ink on a blank page at the front of Walter Scott's 'Poetical works' (1866) [The poetical works of Sir Walter Scott]"For Mrs. Miller affectionately offered in remembrance of her own Scotch country by Florence Nightingale London 27 Nov. 1867"nursing history, nursing