Florence Nightingale’s 13 Canons – Flashcards
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Overview
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Nightingale maintained that every woman is a nurse because every woman, at one time or another in her life, has charge of the personal health of someone. Nightingale equated knowledge of nursing with knowledge of sanitation. The focus of nursing knowledge was how to keep the body free from disease or in such a condition that it could recover from disease. According to Nightingale, nursing ought to signify the proper use of fresh air, light, warmth, cleanliness, quiet, and the proper selection and administration of diet--all at the least expense of vital power to the patient. That is, she maintained that the purpose of nursing was to put patients in the best condition for nature to act upon them.
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Implications for Nursing Practice: 1. Ventilation and warming
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The nurse must be concerned first with keeping the air that patients breathe as pure as the external air, without chilling them.
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Implications for Nursing Practice: 2. Health of houses
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Attention to pure air, pure water, efficient drainage, cleanliness, and light will secure the health of houses.
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Implications for Nursing Practice: 3. Petty management
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All the results of good nursing may be negated by one defect: not knowing how to manage what you do when you are there and what shall be done when you are not there.
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Implications for Nursing Practice: 4. Noise
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Unnecessary noise, or noise that creates an expectation in the mind, is that which hurts patients. Anything that wakes patients suddenly out of their sleep will invariably put them into a state of grater excitement and do them more serious and lasting mischief than any continuous noise, however loud.
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Implications for Nursing Practice: 5. Variety
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The nerves of the sick suffer from seeing the same walls, the same ceiling, the same surroundings during a long confinement to one or two rooms. The majority of cheerful cases are to be found among those patients who are not confined to one room, whatever their suffering, and the majority of depressed cases will be seen among those subjected to a long monotony of objects about them.
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Implications for Nursing Practice: 6. Taking food
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The nurse should be conscious of patients' diets and remember how much food each patient has had and ought to have each day.
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Implications for Nursing Practice: 7. What food?
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To watch for the opinions the patient's stomach gives, rather than to read "analyses of foods," is the business of all those who have to decide what the patient should eat.
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Implications for Nursing Practice: 8. Bed and bedding
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The patient should have a clean bed every 12 hours. The bed should be narrow, so that the patient does not feel "out of humanity's reach." The bed should not be so high that the patient cannot easily get in and out of it. The bed should be in the lightest spot in the room, preferably near a window. Pillows should be used to support the back below the breathing apparatus, to allow shoulders room to fall back, and to support the head without throwing it forward.
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Implications for Nursing Practice: 9. Light
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With the sick, second only to their need of fresh air is their need of light. Light, especially direct sunlight, has a purifying effect upon the air of a room.
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Implications for Nursing Practice: 10. Cleanliness of rooms and walls
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The greater part of nursing consists in preserving cleanliness. The inside air can be kept clean only by excessive care to rid rooms and their furnishings of the organic matter and dust with which they become saturated. Without cleanliness, you cannot have all the effects of ventilation; without ventilation, you can have no thorough cleanliness.
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Implications for Nursing Practice: 11. Personal cleanliness
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Nurses should always remember that if they allow patients to remain unwashed or to remain in clothing saturated with perspiration or other excretion, they are interfering injuriously with the natural processes of health just as much as if they were to give their patients a dose of slow poison.
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Implications for Nursing Practice: 12. Chattering hopes and advices
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There is scarcely a greater worry which invalids have to endure than the incurable hopes of their friends. All friends, visitors, and attendants of the sick should avoid the practice of attempting to cheer the sick by making light of their danger and by exaggerating their probabilities of recovery.
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Implications for Nursing Practice: 13. Observation of the sick
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The most important practical lesson nurses can learn is what to observe, how to observe, which symptoms indicate improvement, which indicate the reverse, which are important, which are not, and which are the evidence of neglect and what kind of neglect.