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May 6th – 12th kicks off National Nurses Week which recognizes and honors Nurses around the world. And after the last year we’ve had and the healthcare struggles we continue to deal with at home and worldwide, we want to show them our appreciation and gratitude!

The theme for International Nurses Week 2021 is A Voice to Lead: a Vision for Future Healthcare

 

 

While Nurses Day was proposed twice to different administrations, it wasn’t until 1974 that Nixon recognized it, and in 1982 President Reagan officially proclaimed National Nurses Day in the US to celebrate those in one of our most trusted and important of professions.

This Thursday isn’t just the day in the US to recognize nurses, but it launches Nurses Appreciation Week, which culminates on May 12th, International Nurses Day! Why the twelfth? Because it’s the birthday of famous nurse, Florence Nightingale.

Who Is Florence Nightingale?

Florence Nightingale with a lamp wearing a black and white habit for whom Nurses Day is celebrated

Also known as “The Lady of the Lamp,” Florence Nightingale is a statistician who revolutionized the field of nursing.

During the Crimean War, many people died in horrible hospital conditions. The care facilities lacked sanitation, and straw was often left on the floor to soak up excess blood. Nightingale brought in a regimen of cleanliness, cleaning the hospital for the wounded from top to bottom, and enforcing several hygiene practices, such as handwashing. In practicing these measures, the death rate of the injured reduced from 42% to 2%, an incredible achievement.

Improvements made to the field hospital at Üsküdar by British nurse Florence Nightingale revolutionized the treatment of wounded soldiers and paved the way for later developments in battlefield medicine. Britannica

We can see the effect of measures meant to maximize health today, as in the last year with the emphasis on mask wearing and handwashing that led to a steep drop in flu cases. This last year was the lowest hospitalization rate for people with the flu ever recorded (recording began in 2005), and only 1 pediatric flu death has been reported this year compared to the 196 in the 2019-2020 flu season. You can read more of what the CDC has to say about flu cases in the past year here.

A white person's hands being heavily sudsed under a sink

Remember, when washing your hands you can count out 20 seconds by singing “Happy Birthday” twice, but we prefer to recite the intro from Star Trek, The Next Generation.

Space: the final frontier. These are the voyages of the starship Enterprise. Its continuing mission: to explore strange new worlds. To seek out new life and new civilizations. To boldly go where no one has gone before!  

Back to Nightingale, after the Crimean War, she continued to advocate for sanitary conditions in hospitals and for living situations generally, lowering the death rate in peacetime by an impressive amount. In 1860, she also founded the first secular nursing school in the world, which is still a part of King’s College London.

On top of all of this, Nightingale was a prolific writer, which we always love to see at Chanticleer. We’re proud to have done our part with two virtual conferences to encourage social distancing and safety to care for both ourselves, and also be responsible for the larger community that we are a part of. As we say for our Non-Fiction Awards, “Truth matters now more than ever.”

Learn More about Florence Nightingale:

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

We have book recommendations, of course, to support the nurses in your life, but before we move to that, we’d like to quote from “Santa Filomena” by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, which refers to how Nightingale received her nickname through her tireless efforts to care for troops during the Crimean War:

Lo! in that house of misery
A lady with a lamp I see
Pass through the glimmering gloom,
And flit from room to room.


We would like to introduce you to some of our favorite novels written by or about nurses.

Passage Home to Meuse
by Gail Noble-Sanderson

It’s 1923 and character Marie Durant Chagall is now 27 years old as she tells about her life-altering events in The Passage Home to Meuse, thanks to author Gayle Noble-Sanderson. This is the second historical novel in the Meuse Trilogy. The world around Marie is still reeling from the devastation of World War I. She and the other characters in the book are learning how to continue living, and perhaps more importantly, wishing to find joy once again in life.

Marie is at home in France, seeking peace within, as well as for those around her. She looks for ways to help others who are in need, and her nursing skills come in handy to help this farming community. Nearby she’s found a sense of belonging with the Sisters at the Chapel, and her friendships continue with Henri and others.

Continue Reading Here…

 

Look For Me series
by Janet Shawgo

The first novel in a series of novels about war-time nurses written by  travel nurse, Janet K. Shawgo.

A lantern, a medicine pouch, and a bell to stop the gunfire: That was all nurses took into the Civil War battlefields as they sought out injured men, boys, and women disguised as men. Among them is Sarah Bowen, a young healer from Georgia, whose use of herbal medicine brings her scorn from most field doctors even as it saves countless lives.

Look For Me begins with young, affluent New York-er Samuel White, who has just embarked on his career as a war correspondent. Through an early incident between their fathers, he is also Sarah’s longtime pen pal.

Meanwhile, Mack, a teenage girl traveling as a boy, delivers a letter from the youngest Bowen son to the family farm, lingering long enough to be tutored by Sarah and to fall in love with brother James before leaving to pursue her goal of becoming a Confederate spy. Soon after her departure, a band of traveling nurses comes looking for the local healer, and it doesn’t take much persuading for Sarah to realize her destiny. This is when all of the primary story-lines begin to intersect.

Continue Reading Here…

The Particular Appeal of Gillian Pugsley
by Susan Örnbratt

Irish-born Gillian McAllister knew she was meant for bigger things than a quiet life among her large extended family. Leaving home at seventeen against her protective father’s wishes, Gillian is looking for adventure – and that’s exactly what she finds. She was a nanny for a maharaja, a caretaker for WWII internees, and a nurse on the Isle of Man before finally becoming a wife, mother, and grandmother in London, Canada, where she spent the majority of her eighty-nine years.

However, with only weeks to live after being stricken by cancer, she knows her time with her beloved granddaughter and namesake is truly precious. Before she goes, she wants to pass on the poems that capture her long, adventurous life to the junior Gilly in hopes the girl will use the poems to write about her adventure – her hidden love story.

Continue Reading Here…

Our Duty
by Gerri Hilger

Our Dutyopens with a group of nursing students sunbathing on the roof of their apartment. Pauline Garrity, aka Polly, has a little bit of fun and decides to sunbathe sans robes. While this stirs some of the girls up a bit, others know Polly is only being Polly. When a fighter plane does a fly-by on a training mission, Polly has a little more fun.

Here’s a story of World War II with a slightly different bend. Rather than focus on the horrors of what was happening in the trenches, Gerri Hilger centers her novel around Polly and her close-knit group of friends who are attending nursing school together. Our Duty is a novel for fans of lighthearted historical fiction with a sprinkling of cozy romance and a thread of Christianity.

Continue Reading Here…

None of Us the Same 

by Jeffrey K. Walker

Five young friends from then-English Newfoundland and Ireland together join a regiment to serve in the war, as does a young nurse from Dublin. At first, a reader might be lulled into thinking this is a light-hearted Irish dialect-filled romp a la Finian’s Rainbow, but the novel takes us deep into the lives of its characters as they serve in the bloody trenches, convalesce, and try to live normal lives despite the physical and emotional damages they suffered.

Diedre, the tough but emotionally scarred nurse, Jack, who left “bits” of him on the battlefield, Will, with his invisible yet no-less devastating wounds—these are a few of the complex yet wholly identifiable characters who become alive through this novel’s pages. These are no simplistic people. Their humanness, their frailties confronted by the awfulness of the war, gives the book its special heart.

Continue reading here

Thank you to nurses everywhere!

 


Have a great story about nursing?

When you’re ready, did you know that Chanticleer offers editorial services? We do and have been doing so since 2011.

Our professional editors are top-notch and are experts in the Chicago Manual of Style. They have and are working for the top publishing houses (TOR, McMillian, Thomas Mercer, Penguin Random House, Simon Schuster, etc.).

If you would like more information, we invite you to email Kiffer or Sharon at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com or SAnderson@ChantiReviews.com for more information, testimonials, and fees.

We work with a small number of exclusive clients who want to collaborate with our team of top-editors on an on-going basis. Contact us today!

Chanticleer Editorial Services also offers writing craft sessions and masterclasses. Sign up to find out where, when, and how sessions being held.

A great way to get started is with our manuscript evaluation service, with more information available here.

And we do editorial consultations for $75. Learn more here.  

If you’re confident in your book, consider submitting it for a Editorial Book Review here or to one of our Chanticleer International Awards here.

Also remember! We’re hosting our 2020 CIBA Ceremonies for First Place Category and Grand Prize Winners June 5th at the Hotel Bellwether in Beautiful Bellingham, Wash. Attending the June 5, 2021 VIRTUAL Ceremonies for the 2020 CIBAs is Free. However,  registration is required. We will have the link posted on our website after the Finalists are announced.

Thank you to nurses everywhere!