{"id":8380,"date":"2016-01-26T11:00:38","date_gmt":"2016-01-26T16:00:38","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=8380"},"modified":"2022-05-23T13:48:29","modified_gmt":"2022-05-23T17:48:29","slug":"nurses-organize","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2016\/01\/26\/nurses-organize\/","title":{"rendered":"Nurses Organize"},"content":{"rendered":"

This post is the fourth in a series<\/a> exploring the history of nursing and domestic violence from the guest blogger Catherine Jacquet<\/a>, Assistant Professor of History and Women\u2019s and Gender Studies at Louisiana State University and guest curator of NLM’s exhibition <\/em>Confronting Violence: Improving Women\u2019s Lives<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n

During the mid-1980s nurses nationwide formally organized. Up until this time, many nurses either worked individually in their respective locations or were parts of informal networks across the country. In some instances, nurses were wholly unaware of some of the work that was transpiring in other towns and cities. When Dan Sheridan started a hospital-based family intervention program at Chicago\u2019s Rush Presbyterian St. Luke\u2019s Medical Center in 1986, for example, he didn\u2019t know that medical technologist Susan Hadley had also created a similar program in Minneapolis that same year. Known as WomanKind, Hadley\u2019s program provided education and consultation for healthcare providers and case management services for abused women. In other instances, nurses were part of informal networks of medical providers who were dedicated to the identification, treatment, and prevention of domestic violence. Jacquelyn Campbell remembers that, \u201calong the way we were in contact with other nurses, a few around the country that were doing this. And we got in contact with [pioneer reformer and physician] Anne Flitcraft\u00a0 and [social worker-reformer] Evan [Stark]\u2026 There were relatively few of us back then.\u201d Together, these pioneers would \u201ctrade ideas on how to fix the healthcare system.\u201d These informal networks connected some of the reformers who were doing this critical work nationwide. Yet a significant shift would occur in 1985, when nurses would formally organize on the heels of a national conference on violence and health. From there, they would continue the difficult work of reforming the health care system.<\/p>\n