A brief history of nursing

Nursing as a profession and as a service has always existed in human societies. Since humans started living in villages they have felt the need for healthcare and in time the people who took part in health care became more and more specialized. Nursing as a term was coined in Western Europe and England where young children would be looked after by a ‘nurse’. The profession slowly spread to taking care of the sick and ailing over the years. Even in the 15th century it was just nuns and the military who offered any form of services even close to nursing. The main event in the history of nursing has to be in the era of the world wars in the 20th century. The most famous name in nursing, Florence Nightingale paved the way for the development of this profession as a globally vital concept.
The professional nursing community today is a very big organization that functions to improve the standards and research that goes into nursing and aims to improve its standards. Even though New Zealand was among the first countries to make a national regulatory body for nurses there is no single organization that has claims to regions outside of its own area. There is however a general agreement among different organizations that nursing is a very important element in the uplifting of individual and overall health standards and medical care. The religious roots of nursing can also be looked at to understand how it has become an essential service so important to humanity on the whole. Monks, nuns and other religious operators have throughout history studied health care in a way and delivered care to the masses. The profession of nursing today is one that has excellent benefits and incentives but it has also grown into a very demanding profession with a lot of specialization.

Next wiki page: A day in the life of a CNA

For more information, visit cnatrainingclasses.info. They offer information on cna training classes, including free cna training and free cna training classes.