Description
Book SynopsisNursing the Nation explores how nurses became employees of hospital and care agencies rather than independent, individual contractors. It also demonstrates how nurses missed opportunities to control their own destinies in practice, but gained the ability to establish themselves as the most critical part of health care today.
Trade Review"We have needed this superb historical analysis for a very long time. Jean Whelan, analyzing perennial nursing shortages, explains why the American health care system seems to always be in crisis. Whelan's elegantly written book intertwines the experiences of individual nurses with the institutions that supported, transformed, and undermined their work, and the sexism and racism that thwarted their efforts. With its focus on nurses as workers not just professionals,
Nursing the Nation should be read and taught widely to explain the origins of contemporary dilemmas in American health care." -- Susan M. Reverby * author of Ordered to Care: the Dilemma of American Nursing *
"This timely and important book fills a much needed gap in our understanding of how the modern nursing profession has developed. Whelan draws on extensive sources to demonstrate the ways that both race and gender have impacted the workforce and patient care. A must read." -- Kylie Smith * Talking Therapy: Knowledge and Power in American Psychiatric Nursing *
"Filled with 'aha! moments,'
Nursing the Nation provides an interesting lens through which to explore and illuminate the early days of the nursing profession. In an illuminating discussion, Whelan traces historical roots explaining our relationships to each other as nurses, our students, our physician colleagues and the hospitals in which many of us work." -- Dr. Robert Atkins * Director of New Jersey Health Initiatives *
Table of ContentsContents
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: Have Cap Will Travel: How and Why Nurses Became Professionals
Chapter 2: Starting Out: Organizing the Work and the Profession
Chapter 3: Supplying Nurses: The Central Registry Business
Chapter 4: Surpluses, Shortages and Segregation
Chapter 5: Private Duty’s Golden Age
Chapter 6: The Great Depression: Collapse, Resurrection, and Success
Chapter 7: More and More (and Better) Nurses
Chapter 8: Conclusion
Bibliography