A history of general nurse training at the Royal Hobart Hospital, spanning from the hospital's earliest colonial origins in 1803 through to 1993. The Royal Hobart Hospital's roots reach back to the earliest years of European settlement in Van Diemen's Land, and nurse training there evolved over almost two centuries from informal colonial-era care through to the structured professional training systems of the 20th century.
Cherryl Norris draws together the institutional history with the personal experiences of the nurses themselves — the discipline, the conditions, the changing role of women in the medical profession, and the place nursing held in Tasmanian life across nearly two hundred years.
At 302 pages with an index, this is a substantial and detailed social history, useful for anyone with family connections to Tasmanian nursing, for medical history researchers, or for former RHH nurses and their families.
This copy is signed by the author.
Out of print and not commonly found.
CONDITION
Used, generally very good condition.
BOOK DETAILS
Softcover.
302 pages, indexed.
Published 2011. Out of print.
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