Facts to know about Florence Nightingale, the first woman who started modern nursing
More than 100 years after her death, Florence Nightingale is still well known for her reforms that shaped the nursing profession, as well as her work.
READ ALSO: Covid-19: WHO to begin drug trial in FCT, Lagos, Ogun, others-Ehanire
Nightingale was born in 1820 in Florence, Italy, and died on August 13, 1910, at her home in London. Her birthday is also International Nurses Day. We remember the extraordinary contributions by remembering Florence Nightingale on her birthday, which is the same day that we celebrate International Nurses Day: May 12.

She took on a significant role during the Crimean War. Florence worked in London in the early 1850s, but in 1854, the British Secretary of War asked her to organize a nursing corps to serve the wounded soldiers in Crimea. The region was the center of a war between Russia and an alliance of England, France, Sardinia and Turkey. At the time, there were no women working as nurses in the hospitals in Crimea, but that changed when Florence arrived with her newly formed group of nurses.
Her nickname is “Lady with the Lamp.” When Florence Nightingale arrived with a team of nurses at a British field hospital during the Crimean War, the injured soldiers were almost overwhelmed with gratitude for the care they received. She was known for patrolling the hospital wards at night with her lamp. Some also called her “the Angel of Crimea.”
She is considered the founder of modern nursing. During the Crimean War, Florence was concerned that some of the soldiers in the field hospitals near the battlefields seemed more likely to succumb to infectious disease than their war wounds. She proposed solutions such as improving sanitation, which are considered effectively the foundation of modern nursing. She also advocated for nursing education to elevate the profession’s reputation, which in turn enabled more women to enter the nursing profession.
A training school for nurses was established in her honor. In 1860, a new nursing school opened at the St. Thomas Hospital in London. Although she did not take on the role of superintendent of the new Nightingale School and Home for Nurses, she supported its development and the principle of training well-educated, professional nurses who would have a specific role in the health care system. Today, the school is known as the Florence Nightingale School of Nursing and Midwifery.
She has her own museum. If you ever find yourself near the St. Thomas Hospital in London, just a short walk away from the Houses of Parliament, be sure to visit the Florence Nightingale Museum. London is also home to the Florence Nightingale Foundation, which supports the professional development of nurses and midwives. (Travel nursing.com)





