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Sanitary nursing as essential in surgical
as in medical
cases, but not to supersede surgical nursing.
The whole of the preceding
remarks apply even more to children and to puerperal woman
than to patients in general. They also apply to the nursing
of surgical, quite as much as to that of medical cases. Indeed,
if it be possible, cases of external injury require such care
even more than sick. In surgical wards, one duty of every
nurse certainly is _prevention_. Fever, or hospital gangrene,
or pyaemia, or purulent discharge of some kind may else supervene.
Has she a case of compound fracture, of amputation, or of
erysipelas, it may depend very much on
how she looks upon the things enumerated in these notes, whether
one or other of these hospital diseases attacks her patient
or not. If she allows her ward to become filled with the peculiar
close foetid smell, so apt to be produced among surgical cases,
especially where there is great suppuration and discharge,
she may see a vigorous patient in the prime of life gradually
sink and die where, according to all human probability, he
ought to have recovered. The surgical nurse must be ever on
the watch, ever on her guard, against want of cleanliness,
foul air, want of light, and of warmth.
Nevertheless let no one think
that because _sanitary_ nursing is the subject of these notes,
therefore, what may be called the handicraft of nursing is
to be undervalued. A patient may be left to bleed to death
in a sanitary palace. Another who cannot move himself may
die of bed-sores, because the nurse does not know how to change
and clean him, while he has every requisite of air, light,
and quiet. But nursing, as a handicraft, has not been treated
of here for three reasons: 1. That these notes do not pretend
to be a manual for nursing, any more than for
cooking for the sick; 2. That the writer, who as herself seen
more of what may be called surgical nursing, i.e. practical
manual nursing,
than, perhaps, any one in Europe, honestly believes that it
is impossible to learn it from any book, and that it can only
be thoroughly
learnt in the wards of a hospital; and she also honestly believes
that the perfection of surgical nursing may be seen practised
by the
old-fashioned "Sister" of a London hospital, as
it can be seen nowhere else in Europe. 3. While thousands
die of foul air, &c., who have this surgical nursing to
perfection, the converse is comparatively rare.
Children: their greater susceptibility
to the same things.
To revert to children. They
are much more susceptible than grown people to all noxious
influences. They are affected by the same things, but much
more quickly and seriously, viz., by want of fresh air, of
proper warmth, want of cleanliness in house, clothes, bedding,
or body, by startling noises, improper food, or want of punctuality,
by dulness and by want of light, by too much or too little
covering in bed, or when up, by want of the spirit of management
generally in those in charge of them. One can, therefore,
only press the importance, as being yet greater in the case
of children, greatest in the case of sick children, of attending
to these things.
That which, however, above all, is known to injure children
seriously is foul air, and most seriously at night. Keeping
the rooms where they sleep tight shut up, is destruction to
them. And, if the child's breathing be disordered by disease,
a few hours only of such foul air
may endanger its life, even where no inconvenience is felt
by grown-up persons in the same room.
The following passages, taken
out of an excellent "Lecture on Sudden Death in Infancy
and Childhood," just published, show the vital importance
of careful nursing of children. "In the great majority
of instances, when death suddenly befalls the infant or young
child, it is an _accident_; it is not a necessary result of
any disease from which it
is suffering."
It may be here added, that
it would be very desirable to know how often death is, with
adults, "not a necessary, inevitable result of any disease."
Omit the word "sudden;" (for _sudden_ death is comparatively
rare in middle age;) and the sentence is almost equally true
for all ages.
The following causes of "accidental"
death in sick children are enumerated:--"Sudden noises,
which startle--a rapid change of temperature, which chills
the surface, though only for a moment--a rude awakening from
sleep--or even an over-hasty, or an overfull meal"--"any
sudden impression on the nervous system--any hasty alteration
of
posture--in short, any cause whatever by hich the respiratory
process may be disturbed."
It may again be added, that,
with very weak adult patients, these causes are also (not
often "suddenly fatal," it is true, but) very much
oftener than is at all generally known, irreparable in their
consequences. Both for children and for adults, both for sick
and for well (although more certainly in the case of sick
children than in any others), I would
here again repeat, the most frequent and most fatal cause
of all is sleeping, for even a few hours, much more for weeks
and months, in foul air, a condition which, more than any
other condition, disturbs the respiratory process, and tends
to produce "accidental" death in disease.
I need hardly here repeat
the warning against any confusion of ideas between cold and
fresh air. You may chill a patient fatally without
giving him fresh air at all. And you can quite well, nay,
much better, give him fresh air without chilling him. This
is the test of a good
nurse.
In cases of long recurring
faintnesses from disease, for instance, especially disease
which affects the organs of breathing, fresh air to the lungs,
warmth to the surface, and often (as soon as the patient can
swallow) hot drink, these are the right remedies and the only
ones.
Yet, oftener than not, you
see the nurse or mother just reversing this; shutting up every
cranny through which fresh air can enter, and leaving the
body cold, or perhaps throwing a greater weight of clothes
upon it, when already it is generating too little heat.
"Breathing carefully,
anxiously, as though respiration were a function which required
all the attention for its performance," is cited as a
not unusual state in children, and as one calling for care
in all the things enumerated above. That breathing becomes
an almost voluntary act, even in grown up patients who are
very weak, must often have been remarked.
"Disease having interfered
with the perfect accomplishment of the respiratory function,
some sudden demand for its complete exercise, issues in the
sudden standstill of the whole machinery," is given as
one process:--"life goes out for want of nervous power
to keep the vital functions in activity," is given as
another, by which "accidental" death is most often
brought to pass in infancy.
Also in middle age, both these
processes may be seen ending in death, although generally
not suddenly. And I have seen, even in middle age, the "_sudden_
stand-still" here mentioned, and from the same causes.
Summary.
To sum up:--the answer to
two of the commonest objections urged, one by
women themselves, the other by men, against the desirableness
of sanitary knowledge for women, _plus_ a caution, comprises
the whole argument for the art of nursing.
Reckless amateur physicking by women.
Real knowledge of the laws of health alone can check this.
(1.) It is often said by men,
that it is unwise to teach women anything about these laws
of health, because they will take to physicking,--that there
is a great deal too much of amateur physicking as it is, which
is indeed true. One eminent physician told me that he had
known more calomel given, both at a pinch and for a continuance,
by mothers, governesses, and nurses, to children than he had
ever heard of a
physician prescribing in all his experience. Another says,
that women's only idea in medicine is calomel and aperients.
This is undeniably too often the case. There is nothing ever
seen in any professional practice
like the reckless physicking by amateur females.[1] But this
is just what the really experienced and observing nurse does
_not_ do; she neither physics herself nor others. And to cultivate
in things pertaining to health observation and experience
in women who are mothers, governesses or nurses, is just the
way to do away with amateur physicking, and if the doctors
did but know it, to make the nurses obedient to them,--helps
to them instead of hindrances. Such education
in women would indeed diminish the doctor's work--but no one
really believes that doctors wish that there should be more
illness, in order to have more work.
What pathology teaches. What observation
alone teaches. What
medicine does. What nature alone does.
(2.) It is often said by women,
that they cannot know anything of the laws of health, or what
to do to preserve their children's health,
because they can know nothing of Pathology," or cannot
"dissect,"--a confusion of ideas which it is hard
to attempt to disentangle.
Pathology teaches the harm
that disease has done. But it teaches nothing more. We know
nothing of the principle of health, the positive of which
pathology is the negative, except from observation and experience.
And nothing but observation and experience will teach us the
ways to maintain or to bring back the state of health. It
is often thought that
medicine is the curative process. It is no such thing; medicine
is the surgery of functions, as surgery proper is that of
limbs and organs.
Neither can do anything but remove obstructions; neither can
cure; nature alone cures. Surgery removes the bullet out of
the limb, which is an obstruction to cure, but nature heals
the wound. So it is with medicine; the function of an organ
becomes obstructed; medicine, so far as we know, assists nature
to remove the obstruction, but does nothing more. And what
nursing has to do in either case, is to put the patient in
the best condition for nature to act upon him. Generally,
just the
contrary is done. You think fresh air, and quiet and cleanliness
extravagant, perhaps dangerous, luxuries, which should be
given to the patient only when quite convenient, and medicine
the _sine qua non_, the panacea. If I have succeeded in any
measure in dispelling this illusion, and in showing what true
nursing is, and what it is not, my object will have been answered.
Now for the caution:--
(3.) It seems a commonly received
idea among men and even among women themselves that it requires
nothing but a disappointment in love, the want of an object,
a general disgust, or incapacity for other things, to turn
a woman into a good nurse.
This reminds one of the parish
where a stupid old man was set to be schoolmaster because
he was "past keeping the pigs."
Apply the above receipt for
making a good nurse to making a good servant. And the receipt
will be found to fail.
Yet popular novelists of recent
days have invented ladies disappointed in love or fresh out
of the drawing-room turning into the war-hospitals to find
their wounded lovers, and when found, forthwith abandoning
their sick-ward for their lover, as might be expected. Yet
in the estimation of the authors, these ladies were none the
worse for that, but on the contrary were heroines of nursing.
What cruel mistakes are sometimes
made by benevolent men and women in matters of business about
which they can know nothing and think they know a great deal.
The everyday management of
a large ward, let alone of a hospital--the knowing what are
the laws of life and death for men, and what the laws of health
for wards--(and wards are healthy or unhealthy, mainly according
to the knowledge or ignorance of the nurse)--are not these
matters of sufficient importance and difficulty to require
learning by experience and careful inquiry, just as much as
any other art? They do not come by inspiration to the lady
disappointed in love, nor to the poor workhouse drudge hard
up for a livelihood.
And terrible is the injury
which has followed to the sick from such wild notions!
In this respect (and why is
it so?), in Roman Catholic countries, both writers and workers
are, in theory at least, far before ours. They would never
think of such a beginning for a good working Superior or Sister
of Charity. And many a Superior has refused to admit a _Postulant_
who appeared to have no better "vocation" or reasons
for offering herself
than these.
It is true _we_ make "no
vows." But is a "vow" necessary to convince
us that the true spirit for learning any art, most especially
an art of charity, aright, is not a disgust to everything
or something else? Do we really place the love of our kind
(and of nursing, as one branch of it) so low as this? What
would the Mère Angélique of Port Royal, what
would our own Mrs. Fry have said to this?
NOTE.--I would earnestly ask my sisters to keep clear of both
the jargons now current every where (for they _are_ equally
jargons); of the jargon, namely, about the "rights"
of women, which urges women to do all that men do, including
the medical and other professions, merely because men do it,
and without regard to whether this _is_ the best that women,
can do; and of the jargon which urges women to do nothing
that men do, merely because they are women, and should be
"recalled to a sense of their duty as women," and
because "this is women's work," and "that is
men's," and "these are things which women should
not do," which is all
assertion, and nothing more. Surely woman should bring the
best she has, _whatever_ that is, to the work of God's world,
without attending to either of these cries. For what are they,
both of them, the one _just_ as much as the other, but listening
to the "what people will say," to opinion, to the
"voices from without?" And as a wise man has said,
no one has ever done anything great or useful by listening
to the voices from without.
You do not want the effect
of your good things to be, "How wonderful for a _woman_!"
nor would you be deterred from good things by hearing it said,
"Yes, but she ought not to have done this, because it
is not
suitable for a woman." But you want to do the thing that
is good, whether it is "suitable for a woman" or
not.
It does not make a thing good,
that it is remarkable that a woman should have been able to
do it. Neither does it make a thing bad, which would have
been good had a man done it, that it has been done by a woman.
Oh, leave these jargons, and
go your way straight to God's work, in simplicity and singleness
of heart.
FOOTNOTES:
[1]
Danger of physicking by amateur females.
I have known many ladies who,
having once obtained a "blue pill" prescription
from a physician, gave and took it as a common aperient two
or three times a week--with what effect may be supposed. In
one case I happened to be the person to inform the physician
of it, who substituted for the prescription a comparatively
harmless aperient pill. The lady came to me and complained
that it "did not suit her half so well."
If women will take or give
physic, by far the safest plan is to send for " the doctor"
every time--for I have known ladies who both gave and took
physic, who would not take the pains to learn the names of
the commonest
medicines, and confounded, _e.g._, colocynth with colchicum.
This _is_ playing with sharp-edged tools "with a vengeance."
There are excellent women
who will write to London to their physician that there is
much sickness in their neighbourhood in the country, and ask
for some prescription from him, which they used to like themselves,
and then give it to all their friends and to all their poorer
neighbours who will take it. Now, instead of giving medicine,
of which you cannot possibly know the exact and proper application,
nor all its consequences, would it not be better if you were
to persuade and help your poorer neighbours to remove the
dung-hill from before the door, to put in a window which opens,
or an Arnott's ventilator, or to cleanse
and lime-wash the cottages? Of these things the benefits are
sure. The benefits of the inexperienced administration of
medicines are by no means so sure.
Homoeopathy has introduced
one essential amelioration in the practice of physic by amateur
females; for its rules are excellent, its physicking comparatively
harmless--the "globule" is the one grain of folly
which
appears to be necessary to make any good thing acceptable.
Let then women, if they will give medicine, give homoeopathic
medicine. It won't do any harm.
An almost universal error
among women is the supposition that everybody
_must_ have the bowels opened once in every twenty-four hours,
or must
fly immediately to aperients. The reverse is the conclusion
of
experience.
This is a doctor's subject,
and I will not enter more into it; but will simply repeat,
do not go on taking or giving to your children your abominable
"courses of aperients," without calling in the doctor.
It is very seldom indeed,
that by choosing your diet, you cannot regulate your own bowels;
and every woman may watch herself to know what kind of diet
will do this; I have known deficiency of meat produce constipation,
quite as often as deficiency of vegetables; baker's bread
much oftener than either. Home made brown bread will oftener
cure it than anything else.
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