1st Edition

A History of The Queen's Nursing Institute

By Monica E. Baly Copyright 1987
    180 Pages
    by Routledge

    Originally published in 1987, this book presented a history of the Queen’s Nursing Institute on the occasion of the centenary of its founding in 1887. Since that time, the Institute had been the major force behind all developments in the field of district nursing. Monica Baly here traces the history of the Institute concentrating not just on top personalities, but on showing what district nurses actually did and on relating developments to the social, political and cultural events and attitudes of the day. Breaking much new ground, the book should be essential reading for all district nurses in particular, and for other nurses and historians with an interest in the history of nursing. Still going today, The Queen’s Nursing Institute is a registered charity dedicated to improving the nursing care of people in the home and community.

    List of Plates.  Foreword William Rathbone.  Acknowledgements.  Preface.  1. Nursing the Sick Poor at Home Before 1887  2. Founding the Victoria Jubilee Institute  3. A New Chapter in District Nursing  4. Rural District Nursing  5. The Queen’s Nurses at the Beginning of the Century  6. District Nursing: Charity or Public Service?  7. The World We Have Lost  8. The Coming of the National Health Service  9. Postwar Policies for District Nursing  10. The Old Order Changeth  11. The Queen’s Nursing Institute Today  12. Epilogue.  Select Bibliography.  Appendix.  Index.

    Biography

    Monica E. Baly (1914–1998) Centenary Fellow of The Queen’s Nursing Institute, was an English nurse, historian of nursing, and an advocate for social change. A world authority on Florence Nightingale, Baly battled throughout her life to improve nurses' training and conditions. She made her name in 1970 as an organiser of the "Raising the Roof" campaign which resulted in an unprecedented 22 percent pay award for nurses.