This fundamental core of caring and responding to human needs has been a guiding instinct that has driven the practices of nursing from one generation to another. Nursing starts from the inner desire that is driven by human nature of nurturing and caring. Prior to the time of Florence Nightingale, nursing was …show more content…
For example, in some countries in sub Sahara Africa like Nigeria, Ghana and Cameroon, nursing is still considered a female profession. The decision to become a nurse was as a result of the death of my grandmother, who died of glaucoma. For her, life was without care, crude and wicked. Often times no one was there to provide the basic care that could have prolong her life or allowed her to die in dignity. Ethical values and spiritual beliefs influenced the delivering of care to so many women in the village where she lived. After her death, I became a nurse; it became apparent to me how supporting a client who is ill and disable could go a long way. Being a nurse, I enjoyed every minute I spend making a difference in clients’ lives. In most cases, listening to what these clients have to say make me reflect on my own view of life.
In conclusion, the discipline of nursing has evolved as time goes by. It has evolved from the era of racial segregation and marginalization, low social class, uneducated, unmarried women, slaves, to a profession that now uses and applies Evidence Based practice approach in delivering care. Throughout the evolutionary processes, nursing has always been humanitarian in it services. Today, nurses play major role in healthcare administration and policies. The trained nurse means everything and anything and second to nothing. In other words, a skilled nurse is indispensable to the health care