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The Making of Modern Medicine - Sisters of charity

Logo for The Making of Modern Medicine - Sisters of charity

A major narrative history series exploring over 2,000 years of western medicine, written and presented by medical historian Andrew Cunningham. According to the Nursing Record, a typical nurse in the 1830s was like Sarah Gamp in Charles Dickens' Martin Chuzzlewit - a domestic servant who was incompetent and rough with patients. By the 1880s, a nurse was young, neat and uniformed and had been formally trained. How did this change come about? As Andrew reveals, an enterprising Florence Nightingale gave us a new kind of nurse - offering a vocation that girls 'of good character' increasingly were called to undertake.