Florence Nightingale's India Connection And 15 Other Facts

International Nurses Day is held on 12 May, the birth anniversary of Florence Nightingale, the 'Lady With The Lamp'

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International Nurses Day is held on 12 May, the birth anniversary of Florence Nightingale, the 'Lady With The Lamp'

Today, we look back at the life of Florence Nightingale, a pioneer and a saviour who transformed the field of nursing forever.

1. Florence Nightingale was named after the city of Florence in Italy, where she was born during her wealthy English parent's honeymoon trip that lasted three years.

2. At 16, Nightingale claimed that she experienced a ‘‘call to service,’’ from God. She wanted to become a nurse, but her parents were opposed to a 'lady' like her taking up what was then considered a lowly profession.

3. Nightingale learnt many languages, and took to reading books on religion, medicine and healthcare. She also taught children in various slums of England during her teen years and her 20s as well.

4. She was finally permitted by her parents to attend a nursing course only when she was in her early 30s. She attended Deaconess Institution in Kaiserswerth, near Düsseldorf, Germany, and nursing orders in Paris later.

Florence Nightingale, circa 1860 (Photograph by H. Hering. Source: National Portrait Gallery, London via Wikimedia Commons)

5. She returned to England and served in various hospitals, where she rose through the ranks very quickly because of her dedication to the profession. During a cholera outbreak, she frowned upon the unsanitary conditions in hospitals and emphasized on improved hygiene practices. This resulted in a lowering of the death rate.

6. After reading horror stories of English soldiers being left to die due to lack of medical h...

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