The Scotsman

Legacy of the Lady with the Lamp has never seemed more important

Spirit of Florence Nightingal­e lives on amid Covid-19 crisis in Year of the Nurse and Midwife, says Siobhan O’connor

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This year marks an auspicious year for nurses around the world, as they celebrate the 200th anniversar­y of the birth of Florence Nightingal­e, the world’s best known and most influentia­l nurse. Born in London in 1820, she became known as the “The Lady with the Lamp” due to her work caring for wounded British soldiers during the Crimean War (1853 - 1856). She made many other notable contributi­ons to nursing and public health, setting up the first secular nursing school at St Thomas Hospital in London and using her statistica­l expertise to pioneer data visualisat­ions and lobby government to bring about improvemen­ts in sanitation and hygiene, helping reduce infections from diseases and improve human health. As the world grapples with the coronaviru­s, her legacy and the work of millions of nurses in countries across the globe is crucial in providing a frontline response to this ongoing pandemic.

This year has been designated Year of the Nurse and the Midwife by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO), with an internatio­nal campaign to acknowledg­e and celebrate the contributi­on nurses make to healthcare while advocating for more investment in the nursing workforce. At the Royal Society of Edinburgh (RSE) Young Academy of Scotland (YAS), we have been engaging with the public over a number of years to raise the profile of nursing. Our work is interdisci­plinary and one of our key strategic themes is “Healthier” to identify and tackle health and wellbeing challenges. One of these challenges is to ensure a strong nursing workforce in Scotland and beyond in the wake of Brexit.

Our Brexit Impact Report published in September 2018 highlighte­d that there could be shortages in the number of nurses in the UK, as those who come from Europe and further afield may choose not to do so if stricter immigratio­n policies and unfavourab­le employment rights and working conditions proliferat­e. In addition, several YAS members contribute­d to an RSE response to the Scottish Parliament’s 2018 Inquiry into the Impact of leaving the EU on Health and Social Care in Scotland. The RSE’S response highlighte­d the implicatio­ns for safely staffing the NHS with enough nurses, doctors and other health profession­als.

YAS has also showcased innovative nursing research and its potential to improve health as part of the Scottish Parliament’s current Scotland 2030 programme. We created a short film called Our Future Scotland that captured people’s vision for the future across education, wellbeing, the environmen­t and technology. Public figures including First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and actor Brian Cox took part to share their views.

Lis Neubeck, a professor of cardiovasc­ular health at Edinburgh Napier University, also discussed her work using novel technologi­es to diagnose heart conditions and the potential to have virtual nurses supporting people to be healthy at home.

As well as looking to the future, YAS celebrated nurses from the past who have made important contributi­ons to human health. In November 2018, to mark the centenary of Armistice Day, Dr Diane Atkinson, a writer on women’s history, read excerpts from and answered questions about her book Elsie and Mairi Go To War: Two Extraordin­ary Women on the Western Front, which focuses on nursing heroes during the First World War. The book charts the journey of a Scottish woman, Mairi Chisholm, and her English friend, Elsie Knocker, who treated thousands of soldiers on the front lines in Belgium. This event was accompanie­d by a public exhibition, jointly run by YAS and the RSE, and the storytelli­ng event can be viewed in full on the RSE’S Youtube channel. More recently, unofficial blue plaques were created to commemorat­e women in STEM, with one honouring Mairi Chisholm on display at the University of Edinburgh.

As nurses make up a significan­t proportion of the health workforce – approximat­ely 40 per cent in Scotland and more worldwide – investing in nursing education, profession­al

 ??  ?? 0 Crimean War nurse and campaigner Florence Nightingal­e quietly heralded a revolution
0 Crimean War nurse and campaigner Florence Nightingal­e quietly heralded a revolution
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