Las Vegas Review-Journal

Thank a nurse today, or any day

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We are always thankful for nurses, but in recent years, saying thank you just doesn’t seem to be enough during National Nurses Week.

COVID-19 had nurses on the front line of care. Not only caring for people whose lives are at risk but risking their own lives to provide that care.

So, it seems only appropriat­e to say thank you, salute and honor nurses as the week concludes today, which also marks the birthday of Florence Nightingal­e, who is considered the founder of modern nursing. National Nurses Week always includes her birthday.

While many nurses are referred to as “Florence Nightingal­e,” Nightingal­e had a nickname of her own: “The Lady with the Lamp.”

Born May 12, 1820, Nightingal­e earned the nickname during the Crimean War when one correspond­ent noted that after the battles, after the soldiers had retired and the medical officers slept, Nightingal­e continued tending the sick and wounded deep into the night, traveling from bed to bed by the light of the “little lamp in her hand.”

In the mid-1880s, Nightingal­e establishe­d a school to train nurses. She wrote “Notes on Nursing,” a book that remained a bestseller into the late 20th century.

The Nightingal­e example continues 200plus years after her birth.

If you’ve ever been in the hospital, ever had a relative who needed care, remember the nurses who comforted you or a loved one.

Tell a nurse thanks for all they do, whether it is at the end of National Nurses Week or any day. Tell them thanks, treat them with respect, show them every courtesy and never forget their help and their example.

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