Difference between revisions 840688704 and 840688877 on enwiki

{{Other uses}}
{{Redirect2|Nurse|Nurses}}
{{Infobox Occupation
| name= Nurse
| image= [[File:British woman tending to a baby.jpg|250px]]
| caption= A British nurse caring for a baby
| official_names= Nurse
| Occupation
(contracted; show full)ssdate=2011-10-31|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111028190846/http://www.army.mod.uk/army-medical-services/qaranc/9910.aspx|archivedate=2011-10-28|df=dmy-all}}</ref> and the [[Mahdist War|Sudan Campaign]] (1883).<ref>{{Cite web|title = History of the School of Nursing  {{!}} University of Maryland School of Nursing|url = https://www.nursing.umaryland.edu/about/community/museum/virtual-tour/foundation/|website = nursing.umaryland.edu|access-date = 2016-01-19}}</ref>


===20th century===
{{Further information|Women in nursing}}
[[File:RedCrossNursen.jpg|thumb|left|A recruiting poster for Australian nurses from [[World War I]]]]

Hospital-based training came to the fore in the early 1900s, with an emphasis on practical experience. The Nightingale-style school began to disappear. Hospitals and physicians saw women in nursing as a source of free or inexpensive labor. Exploitation of nurses was not uncommon by employers, physicians and educational providers.<ref name=CHIN2008>{{cite book|last1=Chin|first1=PL|last2=Kramer|first2=MK|title=Integrated Theory and Knowledge Development in Nursing|date=2008|publisher=Mosby Elsevier|loc(contracted; show full){{Medicine}}
{{Glossaries of science and engineering}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2012}}

[[Category:Nursing| ]]
[[Category:Military supporting service occupations]]
[[Category:Rehabilitation team]]
[[Category:Healthcare occupations]]