Matthew Bradby

District Nursing at a Glance


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Nurse’s indoor uniform, 1943.

      Source: Queen’s Nursing Institute.

Photo depicts Queen’s Institute of District Nursing logo, 19 28.

      Source: Queen’s Nursing Institute.

Photo depicts Queen’s Nursing Institute logo, 19 73.

      Source: Queen’s Nursing Institute.

Photo depicts Queen’s Nurses badge.

      The Institute’s Council – its governing body – laid down the ‘Conditions of Affiliation’ for district nursing associations, the local charities that employed nurses until 1948. These conditions included the qualifications required of Queen’s Nurses, including training at an approved hospital or infirmary for at least a year; approved training in district nursing for at least six months; training in nursing of mothers and infants after childbirth (subsequently, this contributed to the development of the health visitor profession). Nurses in country districts also had to have three months’ training in midwifery. Nursing was carried out under the direction of medical practitioners, and services were confined to the poor, ‘while not excluding cases of such patients as are able to make some small contribution.’ Nurses were ‘strictly forbidden to interfere in any way with the religious opinions of patients or members of their families’.

      The idea of district nursing spread rapidly in areas of British colonialism and other regions overseas. The Victorian Order of Nurses for Canada was founded in 1897, while in Australia the ‘Bush’ Nursing Association was founded in 1911. In the United States, the Boston district nursing association was founded in 1886 and the National Organisation for Public Health Nursing by 1912. The King Edward VII Order of Nurses was founded in South Africa in 1913. European countries also experimented with the district nursing model. In many cases, trained district nurses from Britain and Ireland helped to staff these overseas organisations. In 1909 the Jubilee Congress of District Nursing was held in Liverpool, attended by delegates from all over the world. District nursing had become an international movement.

       Shirley Willis, QN

Schematic illustration of the three pillars supporting learning within the community setting. Schematic illustration of individual learning styles. Schematic illustration of quality in community education.