Matthew Bradby

District Nursing at a Glance


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href="#fb3_img_img_1e644782-5d86-5f49-8ac2-b59ce89b8fa3.jpg" alt="Schematic illustration of the ground floor plan of a district nurse’s cottage, 19 45."/>

Schematic illustration of an architect’s design for a district nurse’s cottage, 19 45.

      it occurred to me to engage Mrs. Robinson, her nurse, to go into one of the poorest districts of Liverpool and try, in nursing the poor, to relieve suffering and to teach them the rules of health and comfort. I furnished her with the medical comforts necessary, but after a month’s experience she came to me crying and said that she could not bear any longer the misery she saw. I asked her to continue the work until the end of her engagement with me (which was three months), and at the end of that time, she came back saying that the amount of misery she could relieve was so satisfactory that nothing would induce her to go back to private nursing, if I were willing to continue the work (Hardy, 1981).

      William Rathbone decided to try to extend the service started with Mary Robinson, but soon found that there was a lack of trained nurses and that nurse training was disorganised and very variable in quality. In 1860, he wrote to Florence Nightingale, who advised him to create a nurse training school and home for nurses attached to the Liverpool Royal Infirmary and, with typical Victorian organisation and energy, this was built by May 1863.

      At least until the 1950s most district nurses were single women, living in nurses’ homes provided by local nursing associations. The nursing associations also employed the nurses in the days before the NHS; salaries were funded by donations and subscriptions. Nurses often had to collect fees from their patients, something that many nurses found very uncomfortable. From 1948, district nurses were employed first by local authorities and then by community healthcare organisations that have continued to evolve as part of the NHS ever since.

      Post‐1948, in the early years of the NHS, much district nursing work involved combating infectious diseases such as tuberculosis, as well as caring for people with diabetes, cancer, bronchitis, or mental illness, and people who were disabled through accident or other cause. End‐of‐life care and wound care was very important, as was the coordination of other services. Modern district nursing has continued to evolve to meet the needs of people in their own homes, leading and coordinating the work of the multidisciplinary team. Today, as specialist practitioners, district nurses play a vital role to play in enabling people to live in greater comfort in their own homes, preventing unnecessary suffering and distress and promoting independence.

       Matthew Bradby

Photo depicts insignia of Queen Victoria’s Jubilee Institute for Nurses, 18 87.

      Source: Queen’s Nursing Institute.

Photo depicts Queen’s Nurse’s Outdoor Uniform, 19 oh 5.

      Source: Queen’s Nursing Institute.

Photo depicts an uniform hat for Queen’s Nurses, 19 13.

      Source: Queen’s Nursing Institute.

Photo depicts Queen’s Nursing Institute badge for Jamaican nurses.

      Source: Queen’s Nursing Institute.

Photo depicts Queen’s Nurse’s indoor uniform, 19 43.