Nursing education in a changing society

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Bibliographic Information

Nursing education in a changing society

edited by Mary Q. Innis

University of Toronto Press, [1970]

  • : cl
  • : pbk

Available at  / 9 libraries

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Note

Published on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the University of Toronto School of Nursing

Bibliography: p. [241]-244

Contents of Works

  • 1. Social change, specialization, and science : where does nursing stand / O. Hall
  • 2. Nursing and the law: The history of legislation in Ontario / D. G. Riddell
  • 3. Nursing as a profession / D. J. Kergin
  • 4. The development of university nursing education / M. K. King
  • 5. The University of Toronto School of Nursing : an agent of change / H. M. Carpenter
  • 6. The development of nursing education at the diploma level / B. Duncanson
  • 7. The emergence of the nursing assistent / M. G. Russell
  • 8. An administrator's view of nursing education / J. D. Wallace
  • 9. The education of the public health nurse / J. C. Leask
  • 10. A general practitioner considers nursing education / M. A. R. Young
  • 11. The humanities in the nursing curriculum / R. R. Priest
  • 12. 2020: Health services fifty years hence / J. D. Hamilton
  • 13. 2020: Nursing fifty years hence / H. K. Mussallem
  • 14. Nursing circa 2020 / K. M. Parker

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Rapid social change and the advances made in the field of health care have greatly changed the role and function of the nurse in the last fifty years. Nursing is now almost a full-fledged profession. This book celebrates the fiftieth anniversary of the School of Nursing of the University of Toronto. The field it covers is wide and varied – from care of the sick by the nuns of early Quebec to the development of pre-paid nursing plans, from concepts of "beside nursing" to "delivery health services." There are long looks into the future of nursing education and health care which include descriptions of health science centres, diagnosis by computer, and treatment centres in outer space. The book sketches the history of this pioneer school of nursing, surveys nursing legislation, and examines the rise of the public-health nurse and the nursing assistant. Essays contributed by leading Canadian authorities show a wide range of opinion: one writer wants to see the scope of nursing education enlarged, another thinks it is too broad already. At a time when nursing education is becoming an increasingly controversial subject, this book will be of interest and value to all those in the health field.

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