Friday, May 6, 2011

How To Do Newborn Physical Examination?


A complete physical examination is an important part of newborn care within the first 12 hours of life. Each body system is carefully examined for signs of health and normal function. The physician also looks for any signs of illness or birth defects. Physical examination of a newborn often includes assessment or examination of the following:

A. Vital Signs (normal readings):
  • Axillary temperature - 96°F to 99°F or 35.6°C to 37.2°C 
  • Pulse - 120 - 160 bpm, normally irregular 
  • Respiration - 30 - 60 per minute, irregular, abdominal 
  • Blood Pressure - 60 - 90mmHg (systolic) , 40 - 90 mmHg (diastolic) 

Thursday, May 5, 2011

24 Ways To Loose Weight Without Dieting (Part III)

Here is the last part on how to loose weight without deiting.

16: Chew Strong Mint Gum
Chew sugarless gum with a strong flavor when you're at risk for a snack attack. Making dinner after work, at a party, watching TV, or surfing the Internet are a few dangerous scenarios for mindless snacking. Gum with a big flavor punch overpowers other foods so they don't taste good.

17: Shrink Your Dishes
Chose a 10" lunch plate instead of a 12" dinner plate to automatically eat less. Cornell's Brian Wansink, PhD, found in test after test that people serve more and eat more food with larger dishes. Shrink your plate or bowl to cut out 100-200 calories a day – and 10-20 pounds in a year. In Wansink's tests, no one felt hungry or even noticed when tricks of the eye shaved 200 calories off their daily intake.

How Does Haemodialysis Works?


Hemodialysis is a type of dialysis that uses a machine with an artificial filter to remove wastes and extra fluids from the blood. This treatment also helps control the chemical balance in your body and helps control blood pressure. Each treatment takes about 4 hours and is done 3 times each week.

A dialysis machine pumps small amounts of blood out of the body and through a filter called an artificial kidney or dialyzer. This kidney filters extra fluid and wastes from the blood. The blood is then pumped back into your body. Medicine will be given to you to prevent your blood from clotting. Fluid, called dialysate, is added to the dialysis machine to:

The Secret To Surviving Nursing School

Always remember these! 

What Are The Nursing Care Given To Haemodialysis Patients

When your kidneys do not work well, dialysis is needed to remove extra fluid and waste products such as creatinine and urea, as well as free water from the blood in your body.  It can be done either by haemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis, where the former is the most common choice among patients.

Hemodialysis is a type of dialysis that uses a machine with an artificial filter to remove wastes and extra fluids from the blood. This treatment also helps control the chemical balance in your body and helps control blood pressure. Each treatment takes about 4 hours and is done 3 times each week. 

The need for dialysis may be acute (when there is high and increasing level of serum potassium, fluid overload-impending pulmonary edema, increasing acidosis, pericarditis and severe confusion) or chronic (e.g., End Stage Renal Failure, presence of uremic sign and symptoms affecting all body systems, hyperkalemia, fluid overload not responsive to diuretics and fluid restriction, and a general lack of well-being).

Nursing Care

Pre dialysis care
  • assess vital sign as a baseline information to help evaluate the effects of haemodialysis
  • weigh and record patient's weight
  • assess vascular access site for palpable pulsation or vibration and for signs of inflammation.  Absence of pulsation/vibration should be reported to doctors and dialysis can no longer be done in the assessed access site.
  • no procedure should be done on the extremities with vascular access site to avoid damage of blood vessels leading to the failure of the arteriovenous fistula.
Post dialysis care
  • assess and document vital signs, weight and vascular access site condition
  • rapid fluid and solute removal during dialysis may lead to hypotension, cardiopulmonary changes and weight loss
  • assess client general condition for dialysis disequillibrium
  • rapid changes in BUN (Blood Urea Nitrogen), pH and electrolyte level during dialysis may lead to cerebral edema and increase intracranial pressure
  • assess for bleeding at the access site
  • heparinization during dialysis increase the risk of bleeding
  • provide psychological support; listen actively, address concerns and explain about the dialysis
Haemodialysis can be an outpatient or inpatient therapy.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Prenatal Pesticide Exposure Linked With Lower IQ

Babies exposed to pesticides before birth may have significantly lower intelligence scores by age 7 than children who were not exposed, three separate studies published on Thursday said.

Results from the studies — two in New York and one in an agricultural community in California — suggest prenatal exposure to pesticides can have a lasting effect on intelligence.

In one study, a team at the University of California Berkeley found that every tenfold increase in prenatal exposure to organophosphate pesticides corresponded with a 5.5 point drop in overall IQ scores in children by age 7.

“That difference could mean, on average, more kids being shifted into the lower end of the spectrum of learning, and more kids needing special services in school,” Berkeley’s Brenda Eskenazi, who led one of the three studies published online in Environmental Health Perspectives, said in a statement.

The two other studies — one at Mount Sinai Medical Center and the other at Columbia University — also examined prenatal exposure to pesticides and IQ in children at age 7.

The teams at Berkeley and Mount Sinai sampled pesticide residues in maternal urine, while the team at Columbia tested umbilical cord blood levels of chlorpyrifos, part of a class of pesticides known as organophosphates that are known to be toxic to brain cells.

Until it was banned for indoor residential use by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in 2001, chlorpyrifos was one of the most widely used insecticides for residential pest control.

In the Columbia study, researchers sampled 265 New York City minority children born before the ban. The higher levels of chlorpyrifos in the babies’ umbilical cord blood were linked with lower performance on two different IQ tests.

Children who were in the highest 25 percent of exposure levels scored 2.7 points lower on IQ tests than children whose exposures were in the lowest quarter of the study.

The UC Berkeley study involved 329 children whose mothers enrolled when they were pregnant.

Urine samples were taken twice during pregnancy from the mothers and after birth from the children at regular intervals between ages 6 months and 5 years.

The team said while prenatal exposure to pesticides were significantly linked with childhood IQ, pesticide exposure after birth was not, suggesting exposure during fetal brain development was a more critical period than childhood exposure.

Children in the UC Berkeley study were exposed to pesticides in 1999 through 2000. Since the 2001 ban, use of organophosphates in the United States has fallen by more than 50 percent, but agricultural use of chlorpyrifos is still permitted.

“It is vitally important that we continue to monitor the levels of exposure in potentially vulnerable populations, especially in pregnant women in agricultural communities, as their infants may continue to be at risk,” Dr. Robin Whyatt of Columbia said in a statement.

(Source: Reuters, April 17th, 2011)

Monday, May 2, 2011

Tips on How To Survive As A Student Nurse

My first day as a student nurse was frightening.  I can fell the ball rolling down my tummy and wanting to go to bathroom every now and then.  There were so many things questions in my mind. Will i make friends or will they like an older classmate.  Can i cope up with the lessons being out of education for over 10 years?  Can i really put into practice what i will learn in the class?  The worst is can i keep my promise to my husband that i can manage my time as a student, a wife and a mother!  For over a year now, i would say YES. In fact i am 1 of the deans list in the class and i have conquered all my fears during clinical posting time.  Though you fell scared on your first days on new hospital setting but definitely you be able to cope up once you are familiar with the new environment and the people around.

If you’re feeling nervous, let me reassure you. You are about to start the most amazing adventure. The next few years will be the most rewarding of your life.

Being a student nurse is a privilege and a wonderful experience. Yes it can be hard, yes you may struggle, but every moment is worth it. As you learn, you will acquire valuable memories that will stay with you throughout your career.  You will make friends who will stay with you for the rest of your life. Hold on to those special people who encourage and support you.

So what’s the most important thing to do as you embrace this new stage of your life? Enjoy it! All the best to guys!


A. STUDIES
  • Don’t put too much pressure on yourself, but try your hardest and be proud of your achievements.
  • Listen, understand and relate the lesson.  You can score even for twisted and tricky question.
  • Ask if you have any doubts. 
  • Learn to laugh at yourself. You will make mistakes, but that is how you learn.
  • Manage your time for your studies, extra curricular activities, houseworks, exercise and others carefully.  Nursing needs ample time to study.
  • Practice procedures many times and if you are not sure of the steps and proper ways to do it, ask your tutor, lecturer, or Clinical Instructor.  Remember practice makes perfect!
B. CLINICAL POSTING
  • Be ready for your clinical posting.  Read and refresh your new and old notes.  Clinical Instructors (CI) loves to ask question every technical words you say and make sure you know the rationale.
  • Be confident in every procedures you do with your CI.  This builds trust with the patient.
  • Never try and do something if you are unclear about what you’ve been asked to do. It is always better to ask even 10 times if needed to fully understand rather make mistakes.
  • Learn to laugh at yourself. Everyone make mistakes but learn from it.
  • Keep a diary and/or write reflective accounts of your experiences. This may seem like a chore but when you read it, you’ll realise just how far you’ve come. It’s also a good way of venting emotions and putting things in perspective.
  • Don’t refer to patients by their condition or bed number rather learn their names! That and a kind word can work wonders.
  • Don't get disappointed when you are address as "the student" instead of your name.
  • Be ready for criticism.  Don't be discouraged no matter how well you think you are doing.  Take it positively.
  • Get used to assessment and appraisal.  It is part of the training.  Remember every CI has their own assessment and some has prejudices, don't be discouraged and accept it with good grace.
  • Respect healthcare assistants. They know the wards inside and out. If you’re looking for something, they will know where to find things. Form good relationships with them and they will support you.
  • Don’t be afraid to cry. I wouldn’t recommend you do it on the ward, but it is perfectly OK to cry. We all have awful days as student nurses and it’s important to deal with them. And then it’s time to move on - tomorrow will bring new challenges and new people.
DO WHAT YOU HAVE LEARN and WRITE WHAT YOU HAVE DONE!!!
This is the favorite saying our head of the nursing school will always remind us...

    Monday, March 7, 2011

    24 Ways To Loose Weight Without Dieting (Part II)

    Here is the second part of the 24 ways to loose weight without dieting.

    11: Limit Alcohol

    When an occasion includes alcohol, follow the first drink with a non-alcoholic, low-calorie beverage like sparkling water instead of moving directly to another cocktail, beer, or glass of wine. Alcohol has more calories per gram (7) than carbohydrates (4) or protein (4). It can also loosen your resolve, leading you to mindlessly inhale chips, nuts, and other foods you'd normally limit.

    12: Go for Green Tea


    Drinking green tea may also be a good weight loss strategy. Some studies suggest that it can rev up the body's calorie-burning engine temporarily, possibly through the action of phytochemicals called catechins. At the very least, you'll get a refreshing drink without tons of calories.

    13: Go Yoga - The State of Mind

    Women who do yoga tend to weigh less than others, according to a study in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association. What is the connection? The yoga regulars reported a more "mindful" approach to eating. For example, they tend to notice the large portions in restaurants but eat only enough to feel full. Researchers think the calm self-awareness developed through yoga may help people resist overeating.


    14: Prefer Home Cook 

    Eat home-cooked meals at least five days a week to live like a thin person. A Consumer Reports survey found this was a top habit of "successful losers." Sound daunting? Cooking may be easier than you think. Short cut foods can make for quick meals, such as pre-chopped lean beef for fajitas, washed lettuce, pre-cut veggies, canned beans, cooked chicken strips, or grilled deli salmon.



    15: Catch the "Eating Pause"

    Most people have a natural "eating pause," when they drop the fork for a couple of minutes. Watch for this moment and don't take another bite. Clear your plate and enjoy the conversation. This is the quiet signal that you're full, but not stuffed. Most people miss it.

    to be continued...Part III

    Saturday, February 26, 2011

    24 Ways To Loose Weight Without Dieting (Part I)


    Do you want to loose weight but having problems with dieting? Try these ways and see whether you can cope it.

    1: Time Your Meals

    Set a timer for 20 minutes and reinvent yourself as a slow eater. This is one of the top habits for slimming down without a complicated diet plan. Savour each bite and make it last until the bell chimes. Paced meals offer great pleasure from smaller portions and trigger the body's fullness hormones. Wolfing your food down in a hurry blocks those signals and causes overeating.

    2: Sleep More, Weigh Less

    Sleeping an extra hour a night could help a person drop 14 pounds in a year, according to a University of Michigan researcher who ran the numbers for a 2,500 calorie per day intake. His scenario shows that when sleep replaces idle activities – and the usual mindless snacking – you can effortlessly cut calories by 6%. Results would vary for each person, but sleep may help in another way, too. There's evidence that getting too little sleep revs up your appetite, making you uncommonly hungry.

    3: Serve More, Eat More Veggies. 

    Serve three vegetables with dinner tonight, instead of just one, and you'll eat more without really trying. Greater variety tricks people into eating more food – and eating more fruits and vegetables is a great way to lose weight. The high fibre and water content fills you up with fewer calories. Cook them without added fat. And season with lemon juice and herbs rather than drowning their goodness in high-fat sauces or dressings.

    4: When Soup's On, Weight Comes Off

    Add a broth-based soup to your day and you'll fill up on fewer calories. Think minestrone, tortilla soup, or Chinese won-ton. Soup's especially handy at the beginning of a meal because it slows your eating and curbs your appetite. Start with a low-sodium broth or canned soup, add fresh or frozen vegetables and simmer. Beware of creamy soups, which can be high in fat and calories.

    5: Go for Whole Grains

    Whole grains such as brown rice, barley, oats, buckwheat, and whole wheat also belong in your stealthy weight loss strategy. They help fill you up with fewer calories and may improve your cholesterol profile, too. Whole grains are now in many products including waffles, pizza crust, English muffins, pasta, and soft "white" whole-wheat bread.

    6: Eyeball Your Skinny Clothes


    Hang an old favourite dress, skirt, or a smokin' pair of jeans where you'll see them every day. This keeps
     your eyes on the prize. Choose an item that's just a little too snug, so you reach this reward in a relatively short time. Then pull out last year's cocktail dress for your next small, attainable goal.




    7: Skip the Bacon

    Pass on those two strips of bacon at breakfast or in your sandwich at lunch time. This simple move saves about 100 calories, which can add up to a 10 pound weight loss over a year. Other sandwich fixings can replace the flavour with fewer calories. Think about tomato slices, banana peppers, roasted red bell peppers, grainy mustard, or a light spread of herbed goat cheese.

    8: Build a Better Slice of Pizza

    Choose vegetable toppings for pizza instead of meat and you'll shave 100 calories from your meal. Other skinny pizza tricks: go light on the cheese or use reduced-fat cheese and choose a thin, bread-like crust made with just a touch of olive oil.

    9: Sip Smart: Cut Back on Sugar

    Replace one sugary drink like regular soda with water or a zero-calorie seltzer and you'll avoid 10 teaspoons of sugar. Add lemon, mint or frozen strawberries for flavour and fun.


    The liquid sugar in soda appears to bypass the body's normal fullness cues. One study compared an extra 450 calories per day from jelly beans vs. soda. The candy eaters unconsciously ate fewer calories overall, but not so the soda drinkers. They gained 2.5 pounds in four weeks.

    10: Sip Smart: Use a Tall, Thin Glass

    Use a tall, skinny glass instead of a short, wide tumbler to cut liquid calories — and your weight — without dieting. You'll drink 25-30% less juice, soda, wine, or any other beverage.

    How can this work? Brian Wansink, PhD, says visual cues can trick us into consuming more or less. His tests at Cornell University found all kinds of people poured more into a short, wide glass — even experienced bartenders.

    (More tips on Part II - next posting...)

    Learn The 9 Best Diet Tips


    Are you looking for the best diet tips online? Well, here the 9 simple but best diet tips i have ever found.  Apply it and see for yourself.

    1:  Drink plenty of water or other calorie-free beverages.

    Before you tear into that bag of potato chips, drink a glass of water first. People sometimes confuse thirst with hunger, so you can end up eating extra calories when an ice-cold glass of water is really all you needed. If plain water doesn't cut it, try drinking flavoured sparkling water or brewing a cup of fruit-infused herbal tea.
    2:  Be choosy about night time snacks.

    Mindless eating occurs most frequently after dinner, when you finally sit down and relax. Snacking in front of the TV is one of the easiest ways to throw your diet off course. Either close down the kitchen after a certain hour, or allow yourself a low-calorie snack, like a 100-calorie pack of cookies or a half-cup scoop of low-fat ice cream.



    3: Enjoy your favourite foods.


    Instead of cutting out your favourite foods altogether, be a slim shopper. Buy one fresh bakery cookie instead of a box, or a small portion of candy from the bulk bins instead of a whole bag. You can still enjoy your favourite foods - the key is moderation.

    4: Eat several mini-meals during the day.

    If you eat fewer calories than you burn, you'll lose weight. But when you're hungry all the time, eating fewer calories can be a challenge. "Studies show people who eat 4-5 meals or snacks per day are better able to control their appetite and weight," says obesity researcher Rebecca Reeves, DrPH, RD. She recommends dividing your daily calories into smaller meals or snacks and enjoying most of them earlier in the day - dinner should be the last time you eat.

    5: Eat protein at every meal.

    Protein is the ultimate fill-me-up food - it's more satisfying than carbs or fats and keeps you feeling full for longer. It also helps preserve muscle mass and encourages fat burning. So be sure to incorporate healthy proteins like lean meat, yogurt, cheese, nuts, or beans into your meals and snacks.

    6: Spice it up.

    Add spices or chiles to your food for a flavor boost that can help you feel satisfied. "Food that is loaded with flavour will stimulate your taste buds and be more satisfying, so you won't eat as much," says American Dietetic Association spokeswoman Malena Perdomo, RD. When you need something sweet, suck on a red-hot fireball candy. It's sweet, spicy, and low in calories.


    7: Stock your kitchen with healthy convenience foods.

    Having ready-to-eat snacks and meals-in-minutes on hand sets you up for success. You'll be less likely to hit the drive-through or call in a pizza order if you can throw together a healthy meal in five or 10 minutes. Here are some essentials to keep on hand: frozen vegetables, whole-grain pasta, reduced-fat cheese, canned tomatoes, canned beans, pre-cooked grilled chicken breast, whole grain tortillas or pitas, and bags of salad greens.

    8: Order children's portions at restaurants.

    Ordering a child-size entree is a great way to cut calories and keep your portions reasonable. This has become such a popular trend that most servers won't bat an eye when you order off the kids' menu. Another trick is to use smaller plates. This helps the portions look like more, and if your mind is satisfied, your stomach likely will be, too.

    9: Swap a cup of pasta for a cup of vegetables.

    Simply by eating less pasta or bread and more veggies, you could lose a dress or pants size in a year. "You can save from 100-200 calories if you reduce the portion of starch on your plate and increase the amount of vegetables," says Cynthia Sass, RD, a spokeswoman for the American Dietetic Association.



    Monday, February 21, 2011

    Nursing Care Plan for Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia (ALL)

    Nursing Care Plan for Pleural Effusion

    A sample of nursing care plan for pleural effusion with actual and potential problems.

    Ncp for Pleural Effusion

    Case Study on Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia

    Here is another case study on Acute Lymphocytic or Lymphoblastic Leukemia.


    Case Study on Acute Lymphocytic/Lymphoblastic Leukemia

    Case Study on Pleural Effusion

    Our group was divided into 9 groups where each and every group must come up 2 different case studies either about respiratory, GIT, cardiovascular and hematopoietic system disorders.  Our group chose respiratory and hematopoietic system.  It was conducted on January 2011 at the General Hospital of Malacca, Malacca, Malaysia. 
    Pleural Effusion - Case Study

    Saturday, February 19, 2011

    Roles and Functions of a Professional Nurse

    Nursing encompasses autonomous and collaborative care of individuals of all ages, families, groups and communities, sick or well and in all setting. Nursing includes the promotion of health, prevention of illness, and the care of ill, disabled and dying people. With these nurses work in a large variety of specialties where they work independently and as part of a team to assess, plan, implement and evaluate care.


    These nursing practices have been influenced by the nursing leaders in the past. Among the few of them were Clara Barton, Lavinia Dock, Lillian Wald, Margaret Sanger, Florence Nightingale and Virginia Henderson. Florence Nightingale, often considered as the first theorist, earned her title as “The Lady of Lamp” and was the Founder of Nursing while Virginia Henderson is considered as the “First Modern Nurse”.

    In this paper, we are going to discuss what is nursing, nurses’ roles and functions and the two visionary leaders and their contributions to nursing.

    Nursing and its Definition.

    According to Virginia Henderson, “the unique function of the nurse is to assist the individual, sick or well, in the performance of those activities contributing to health or its recovery (or to peaceful death) that he would perform unaided if he had the necessary strength, will, or knowledge”.
    She emphasized that nurses should be concerned on both healthy and ill individuals and interacts with clients even when recovery may not be feasible. She also mentioned that nurses may act as a client advocate and should provide education about the client’s health condition and nursing activities to be performed to improve client’s health condition.

    The nurses’ goal is to assist the sick and healthy individual to gain independence as rapidly as possible in performing nursing activities. Moreover, nurses can either be a substitutive (work for the person) to the fully dependent patient, supplementary (helping the person) to the partially-able patient and complementary (working with the person) to the able patient.

    Roles and Functions of a Professional Nurse.

    Nurses are expected to perform a variety of roles in health care institutions whenever care is provided to the clients. They maybe carried out simultaneously depending on the need of the client in a particular situation and case.


    1. Caregiver.  As a caregiver, nurses are expected to assist the client’s physical, psychological, developmental, cultural and spiritual needs. It involves a full care to a completely dependent client, partial care for the partially dependent client and supportive-educative care, in order to attain the highest possible level of health and wellness.
    2. Communicator. Communication is very important in nursing roles. It is vital to establish nurse-client relationship. Nurses who communicate effectively get better information about the client’s problem either from the client itself or from his family. With better information nurses will be able to identify and implement better interventions and or nursing care that promotes fast recovery, health and wellness. 
    3. Teacher. Being a teacher is an important role for a nurse. It is her duty to give health education to the clients, families and community. However, the nurse must be able to assess the knowledge level, learning needs and readiness of the clients, families and community to give appropriate and necessary health care education they need to restore and maintain their health. 
    4. Client Advocate. A nurse may act as an advocator. An advocator is the one who expresses and defends the cause of another or acts as representative. Some people who are ill maybe too weak to do on his own and or even to know hi rights to health care. In this instance, the nurse may convey is client’s wish like change of physician, change of food, upgrade his room or even to refuse a particular type of treatment. 
    5. Counselor.  A nurse may act as a Counselor. She provides emotional, intellectual and psychological support. She helps a client to recognize with stressful psychological or social problems, to develop and improved interpersonal relationship and to promote personal growth.
    6. Change Agent.  As a change agent, oftentimes a nurse change or modify nursing care plan based on her assessment on the client’s health condition. This change and modification will only happen when the intervention/s does not help and improve a client’s health.
    7. Leader.  Nurse often assumes the role of leader. Not all nurses have the ability and capacity to become a leader. As a leader it allows you to participate in and guide teams that assess the effectiveness of care, implement-based practices, and construct process improvement strategies. You may hold a variety of positions like shift team leader, ward in-charge, board of directors, etc.
    8. Manager. As a Manager, a nurse has the authority, power, and responsibility for planning, organizing, coordinating and directing work of others. She is responsible for setting goals, make decisions, and solve problems that the organization may encounter. It is also her responsibility to supervise and evaluate the performance of
    9. her subordinates. The manager always ensures that nursing care for individuals, families and communities are met.
    10. Case Manager.  In some hospitals, a case manager is a primary nurse who provides direct care to the client or family e.g. case manager for diabetic client, she has the responsibility to give health education, measure the effectiveness of the nursing care plan and monitor the outcomes of intervention whether effective or not.
    11. Research Consumer. Nurses often do research to improve nursing care, define and expand nursing knowledge.

    Biography and Contribution of Florence Nightingale and Virginia Henderson in Nursing.

    Florence Nightingale (1820 - 1910)

    She was the younger daughter of William Edward Nightingale of Embley Park, Hampshire, and Lea Hurst, Derbyshire, was born at Florence on the 15th of May 1820, and named after that city, but her childhood was spent in England, chiefly in Derbyshire. 

    Born to a comfortable family, Florence Nightingale was educated by governesses and then by her father, with her older sister, Panthenope. She was familiar with the Greek and Latin classical languages, and modern languages of French, German, and Italian. She also studied history, grammar, philosophy and mathematics.

    By 1844, over parental objections, Florence Nightingale chose a different path than the social life and marriage expected of her by her parents -- she chose to work in nursing, which was then not quite a respectable profession for women. She went to Kaiserwerth, Prussia in 1847, where she received 3 months training in nursing. In 1853 she studied in Paris with Sisters of Charity, after which she return to England to assume the position of superintendent of London's Institution for the Care of Sick Gentlewomen.

    She came to prominence during the Crimean War for her pioneering work in nursing, and was dubbed "The Lady with the Lamp" after her habit of making rounds at night to tend injured soldiers. Nightingale laid the foundation stone of professional nursing with the principles summarized in the book Notes on Nursing.  The Nightingale Pledge taken by new nurses was named in her honor, and the annual International Nurses Day is celebrated around the world on her birthday (wikipedia).
    In later life Florence Nightingale suffered from poor health and in 1895 went blind. Soon afterwards, the loss of other faculties meant she had to receive full-time nursing. Although a complete invalid she lived another fifteen years before her death in London on 13th August, 1910 (John Simkin).

    Her Contributions

    Her improvements in improving the standards for the care of war casualties in the Crimean earned her the title “Lady with the Lamp”. Her efforts in reforming hospitals and producing and implementing public health policies also made her an accomplished political nurse: She was the first nurse to exert political pressure on government.

    She is recognized as the first nursing’s scientist-theorist for her work on “Notes on Nursing: What It Is and What It Is
    Not” and “Notes on Hopitals”. She published these books in 1859 with the support of wealthy friends and John Delane at The Times and was able to raise £59,000 to improve the quality of nursing.

    In 1860, she founded the Nightingale School & Home for Nurses at St. Thomas's Hospital. The school served as a model for other training schools. Its graduates traveled to other countries to manage hospitals and institute nurse-training programs. 

    She also became involved in the training of nurses for employment in the workhouses that had been established as a result of the 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act.

    Virginia Henderson (1897 - 1996)

    She was born in Kansas City, Missouri on Nov. 30, 1897, the fifth of eight children of Daniel B. and Lucy Minor (Abbot) Henderson. Her father was an attorney for Native American Indians. Her mother came from the state of Virginia to which Miss Henderson returned for her early schooling. She was educated at the U.S. Army School of Nursing (1921) and Teachers College, Columbia University where she completed her B.S. (1932) and M.A. (1934), then taught from 1934 until 1948.

    Virginia Avenel Henderson died on March 19, 1996 at the age of 98. Her ending had the warmth, style, and graciousness of her life. After partaking chocolate cake and ice cream and saying goodbyes to her family and friends, she passed from one dimension to another. Miss Henderson, and she always preferred Miss to Ms., left behind a quantity of work that is the soul of modern nursing.

    Her Contributions:

    Virginia Henderson has been called the "first lady of nursing" and the "first truly international nurse." Her writing, presentations and her research and contacts with nurses have profoundly affected nursing and impacted the recipients of care by nurses throughout the world. Among them are as follows:
    1. She began her career in public health nursing in the Henry Street Settlement and in the visiting nurse service in Washington, D.C.
    2. She was the first full-time instructor in nursing in Virginia when she was at Norfolk Protestant Hospital in Norfolk and was active in the Graduate Nurses Association of Virginia. She designed a plan to create district organizations within the state. She was an early advocate for the inclusion of psychiatric nursing in the curriculum and served on a committee to develop such a course at Eastern State Hospital in Williamsburg, Virginia in 1929.
    3. During her years at Teachers College, Columbia University, Henderson was an outstanding teacher and drew students from many countries to study with her. Nurses through the United States studied with her without ever leaving their home schools when her revision of Bertha Harmer's Textbook of the Principles and Practice of Nursing became widely use.
    4. Other important publications grew out of Henderson's years at Yale University including Nursing Research a Survey and Assessment in collaboration with Leo Simonds. She also directed a twelve-year project entitled Nursing Studies Index, four volumes recognized as an essential reference for many years.
    5. Her book, Nature of Nursing, published in 1966 expressed her belief about the essence of nursing and influenced the hearts and minds of those who read it. 
    6. At the age of 75, Henderson directed her career to international teaching and speaking. This enabled another generation to reap the benefits of contact with this quintessential nurse of the twentieth century.
    7. In 1953, she joined Yale School of Nursing, a particularly fitting association, since the first dean, Annie Warburton Goodrich, had served as her mentor in her early professional years. The Yale years were a time of great productivity.
    Conclusion

    Florence Nightingale and Virginia Henderson were among the visionary leaders in the past who have greatly influenced the nursing practice and contributed much to the improvement of nursing status worldwide. Though nursing have a lot of definition, yet it all boils down to caring of the clients as a holistic being. Nurses also assume variety of roles and functions such as caregiver, leader, change agents, teacher, manager, case manager, counselor, client advocate, and consumer research.

    References
    Berman, Audrey, Erb, Glenora Lea, Kozier, Barbara, and Snyder, Shirlee. 2008. Fundamentals of Nursing: Concepts, Process, and Practice. New Jersey: Pearson Education, Inc., 8th Edition, 460 – 483.

    John Simkin. Spactus Educational. Retrieved from http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk

    Florence Nightingale. In Wikipedia. Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org

    Angela Barron McBride. Virginia Henderson. Retrieved from http://www.nursinglibrary.org