This page has been validated.
INDEX.
PAGE | |
Disease is a reparative process | 7 |
Of the sufferings of disease; disease not always the cause |
7 |
What nursing ought to do | 8 |
Nursing the sick little understood | 8 |
Nursing ought to assist the reparative process |
8 |
Nursing the well little understood | 9 |
Curious deductions from an excessive death rate | 9 |
First rule of nursing to keep the air within as pure as the air without |
11 |
Why are uninhabited rooms shut up? |
11 |
Without chill | 12 |
Open windows | 13 |
What kind of warmth desirable | 13 |
Bedrooms almost universally foul | 13 |
An air-test of essential consequence | 14 |
When warmth must be carefully looked to |
14 |
Cold air not ventilation, nor fresh air a method of chill |
15 |
Night air. Air from outside. Open your windows, shut your doors |
16 |
Smoke. Airing damp things in a patient's room. Effluvia from exereta |
17 |
Chamber utensils without lids | 18 |
Don't make your sick room into a sewer |
18 |
Abolish slop pails. Fumigations. Health of houses—five points essential. Health of carriages |
19 |
Pure air, pure water | 20 |
Drainage. Sinks | 21 |
Cleanliness. Light | 22 |
Three common errors in managing the health of houses |
22 |
Head in charge must see to house hygiene, not do it herself |
23 |
Does God think of these things so seriously? |
23 |
How does he carry out his laws? | 24 |
How does he teach his laws? | 24 |
Servants' rooms | 24 |
Physical degeneration in families; its causes. Don't make your sick room into a ventilating shaft for the whole house. Infection. Diseases are not individuals arranged in classes, like cats and dogs, but conditions growing out of one another |
25 |
Why must children have measles, &c.? Petty management |
27 |
Illustrations of the want of it | 28 |
Strangers coming into sick room | 28 |
Sick room airing the whole house | 28 |
Uninhabited room fouling the whole house. Lingering smell of paint a want of care |
28 |
Delivery and non-delivery of letters and messages |
29 |
Partial messages such as "being always in the way" yourself, increase instead of saving the patient's anxiety, because they must be only partial. Why let your patient ever be surprised? |
29 |
What is the cause of half the accidents which happen? |
30 |
Petty management better understood in institutions than in private houses. What institutions are the exception? Nursing in regimental hospitals |
31 |
What it is to be "in charge" | 32 |
Why hired nurses give so much trouble. Unnecessary noise. Never let a patient be waked out of his first sleep. |
34 |
Noise which excites expectation | 35 |
Whispered conversation in the room, or just outside the door |
35, 36 |
Noise of female dress. Patient's repulsion to nurses who rustle |
36 |
Burning of the crinolines | 37 |
Indecency of the crinolines | 37 |
Hurry peculiarly hurtful to the sick | 37 |
How to visit the sick, and not hurt them. These things not fancy |
38 |
Interruption damaging to sick and to well |
38, 39 |
Keeping a patient standing. Patients dread surprise. Never speak to a patient in the art of moving |
39 |
Effects of over-exertion of sick | 40 |
Careless observation of the results of careless visits |
40 |
Difference between real and fancy patients |
41 |
Conciseness necessary with sick | 41 |
Irresolution most painful to them | 42 |
What a patient must not have to see to. Reading aloud |
42 |
Read aloud slowly, distinctly, and steadily to the sick |
43 |
Never read aloud by fits and starts to the sick. The sick would rather be told a thing than have it read to them |
43 |
People overheard. Music | 44 |
Variety a means of recovery | 44 |
Color and form means of recovery; this is no fancy. Flowers |
45 |
Effects of body and mind | 46 |
Sick suffer to excess from mental as well as bodily pain. Help the sick to vary their thoughts |
46 |
Desperate desire in the sick to "see out of window." Supply to the sick the defect of manual labor |
47 |
Physical effect of color. Want of attention to hours of taking food |
49 |
Patients often starved to death in chronic cases. Food never to be left by the patient's side. Patient had better not see more food than his own. |
50 |
(5)