The Trained Nurse and Hospital Review, Volume 62Lakeside Publishing Company, 1919 A monthly magazine of practical nursing, devoted to the improvement and development of the graduate nurse. |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
18 United acid Advertisers please mention American Red Cross Anna Association Base Hospital bill boiling boric acid Camp Canteen charge City clinic coffee Colgate's Talc Comfort Powder committee constipation course cripples Department disease dispensary Doctor dressings drugs efficiency epidemic Fire Island France give graduate nurse Grape-Nuts head nurse heat influenza institution intestinal January Jell-O Kate O'Neill Mary ment mention THE TRAINED methods milk Miss Naval Hospital Navy Nujol operation organization patients person Philadelphia physicians pital pneumonia practical present private duty nurse public health nurses Red Cross Nurse registered nurse Samaritan Hospital sent served sick skin sleep Social Service soldiers sphagnum Sputum standards steam sterilizer superintendent supervising nurse supplies surgical Talc thing tion TRAINED NURSE training schools treatment tuberculosis U. S. Army ward women workers wounded write Advertisers York
Popular passages
Page 79 - I do the very best I know how — the very best I can ; and I mean to keep doing so until the end. If the end brings me out all right, what is said against me won't amount to anything. If the end brings me out wrong, ten angels swearing I was right would make no difference.
Page 123 - Especially useful in ANEMIA of All Varieties: CHLOROSIS: AMENORRHEA: BRIGHT'S DISEASE: CHOREA: TUBERCULOSIS: RICKETS: RHEUMATISM: MALARIA: MALNUTRITION: CONVALESCENCE: As a GENERAL SYSTEMIC TONIC After LA GRIPPE, TYPHOID, Etc. DOSE: One tablespoonful after each meal. Children in proportion.
Page 203 - By direction of the President, under the provisions of the act of Congress approved July 9, 1918...
Page 170 - ... character and initiative and have, in general, made their way in spite of employers rather than because of them. Too many employers are ready to give the cripple alms, but not willing to expend the thought necessary to place him in a suitable job. This attitude has helped to make many cripples dependent. With our new responsibilities to the men disabled in fighting for us, the point of view must certainly be changed. What some cripples have done, other cripples can do — if only given an even...
Page 268 - Applications should be properly executed, excluding the medical and county officer's certificates, and filed with the Commission at Washington in time to arrange for the examination at the place selected by the applicant.
Page 268 - Applicants must submit to the examiner on the day of the examination their photographs, taken within two years, securely pasted in the space provided on the admission cards sent them after their applications are filed. Proofs or group photographs will not be accepted.
Page 74 - MORAL. Beware of too sublime a sense Of your own worth and consequence. The man who dreams himself so great, And his importance of such weight, That all around in all that's done Must move and act for Him alone, Will learn in school of tribulation The folly of his expectation.
Page 170 - Professor of Diseases of Children in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Baltimore.
Page 268 - Applicants should at once apply for Form 1312, stating the title of the examination desired, to the Civil Service Commission, Washington, DC; the Secretary of the United States Civil Service Board...
Page 198 - A point one and one-half inches from the right anterior superior spine, on a level with a line connecting the two superior spines, is selected for the beginning of a vertical incision which extends directly downward for two to three inches to a point just above, and to the inner side of the internal abdominal ring. ADVANTAGES: Traction to expose the appendix is avoided, because this incision, in the external oblique and its aponeurosis, the most resistant structures, is directly over the base of...