15 Badass Facts About Florence Nightingale You Never Knew
You may think you've learned all you need to know about Florence Nightingale in history classes, but there's much more you could stand to learn.Â
Nightingale was of Latin and Greek descent. Her father was a Cambridge grad who made sure she got a well-rounded education.Â
She declined many proposals.Â
Nursing wasn't a respected profession in 1837, so her parents worried she would become an alcoholic or prostitute because of how low the wages were. Three years after she decided to dedicate herself to nursing, she became superintendent of a women's hospital.Â
She worked with 38 volunteers in a hospital at Scutari. She lost almost half of her patients because of how difficult it was to keep such a small space clean. She developed strict hygiene rules and 98% of patients recovered.Â
She was called "The Lady with the Lamp," because she would check up on her patients in the middle of the night with a lamp in her hand.Â
She gave a report titled "Notes on Matters Affecting the Health, Efficiency and Hospital Administration of the British Army" which used a pie chart to present information about causes of death for soldiers.Â
The Queen sent her a special brooch as a thank you for her work during the Crimean War.Â
Notes on Nursing: What It Is And What It Is Not was released in 1859.Â
In 1835, she worked with the British government to create laws for proper sanitation. Life expectancy in Britain increased by 20 years by 1935.
Both the Union and the Confederacy were concerned with maintaining proper ventilation in their hospitals.Â
Linda Richards attended the Nightingale School of Nursing in London and was personally advised by Nightingale.Â
She was inducted into the group, which honored people who gave "exceptionally meritorious services ... towards the advancement of the Arts, Learning, Literature, and Science," in 1907. No woman was inducted for another 58 years.Â
Nurses around the world are honored on May 12.Â
This recording was created by one of Thomas Edison's British Representatives in 1890.Â