| [Transcriber's
note: These tables have been transposed to fit the page width.
The figures in the left hand
column, Table B: Nurse (not Domestic Servant) do not add up.
There is probably a typographical error in this column since
it cannot be accounted for by errors in transcription.]
TABLE A. GREAT BRITAIN. AGES.
| NURSES.
| All Ages.
| Under 5 Years.
| 5-
| 10-
| 15-
| 20-
| 25-
| 30-
| 35-
| 40-
| 45-
| 50-
| 55-
| 60-
| 65-
| 70-
| 75-
| 80-
| 85 and Upwards
|
| Nurse (not Domestic Servant)
| 25,466
| ...
| ...
| ...
| ...
| 624
| 817
| 1,118
| 1,359
| 2,223
| 2,748
| 3,982
| 3,456
| 3,825
| 2,542
| 1,568
| 746
| 311
| 147
|
| Nurse (Domestic Servant)
| 39,139
| ...
| 508
| 7,259
| 10,355
| 6,537
| 4,174
| 2,495
| 1,681
| 1,468
| 1,206
| 1,196
| 833
| 712
| 369
| 204
| 101
| 25
| 16
|
TABLE B. AGED 20 YEARS, AND UPWARDS.
[Editor's Note: Table has been rotated so that contents are displayed vertically rather than horizontally, for easier display in HTML.]
| NURSES.
| Nurse (Not Domestic Servant)
| Nurse (Domestic Servant)
|
| Great Britain and Islands in the British
Seas.
| 25,466
| 21,017
|
| England and Wales.
| 23,751
| 18,945
|
| Scotland.
| 1,543
| 1,922
|
| Islands in the British Seas.
| 172
| 150
|
| 1st Division. London.
| 7,807
| 5,061
|
| 2nd Division. South Eastern.
| 2,878
| 2,514
|
| 3rd Division. South Midland.
| 2,286
| 1,252
|
| 4th Division. Eastern Counties.
| 2,408
| 959
|
| 5th Division. South Western Counties.
| 3,055
| 1,737
|
| 6th Division. West Midland Counties.
| 1,225
| 2,283
|
| 7th Division. North Midland Counties.
| 1,003
| 957
|
| 8th Division. North Western Counties.
| 970
| 2,135
|
| 9th Division. Yorkshire.
| 1,074
| 1,023
|
| 10th Division. Northern Counties.
| 402
| 410
|
| 11th Division. Monmouth and Wales.
| 343
| 614 |
NOTE AS TO THE NUMBER OF WOMEN EMPLOYED AS NURSES IN GREAT
BRITAIN.
25,466 were returned, at the
census of 1851, as nurses by profession, 39,139 nurses in
domestic service,[1] and 2,822 midwives. The numbers of different
ages are shown in table A, and in table B their distribution
over Great Britain.
To increase the efficiency
of this class, and to make as many of them as possible the
disciples of the true doctrines of health, would be a great
national work.
For there the material exists,
and will be used for nursing, whether the real "conclusion
of the matter" be to nurse or to poison the sick. A man,
who stands perhaps at the head of our medical profession,
once said to me, I send a nurse into a private family to nurse
the sick, but I know that it is only to do them harm.
Now a nurse means any person
in charge of the personal health of another. And, in the preceding
notes, the term _nurse_ is used indiscriminately for amateur
and professional nurses. For, besides nurses of the sick and
nurses of children, the numbers of whom are here given, there
are friends or relations who take temporary charge of a sick
person, there are mothers of families. It appears as if these
unprofessional nurses were just as much in want of knowledge
of the laws
of health as professional ones.
Then there are the schoolmistresses
of all national and other schools throughout the kingdom.
How many of children's epidemics originate in these! Then
the proportion of girls in these schools, who become mothers
or members among the 64,600 nurses recorded above, or schoolmistresses
in their turn. If the laws of health, as far as regards fresh
air, cleanliness, light, &c., were taught to these, would
this not prevent some children being killed, some evil being
perpetuated? On women we must depend, first and last, for
personal and household hygiene--for preventing the race from
degenerating in as far as these
things are concerned. Would not the true way of infusing the
art of preserving its own health into the human race be to
teach the female part of it in schools and hospitals, both
by practical teaching and by simple experiments, in as far
as these illustrate what may be called the theory of it?
[1] A curious fact will
be shown by Table A, viz., that 18,122 out of 39,139, or nearly
one-half of all the nurses, in domestic service, are between
5 and 20 years of age.
|