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In reply to the discussion: Women in science they mysteriously don't teach you about [View all]csziggy
(34,189 posts)41. My Mom was a Navy Nurse - she was recruited out of nursing school in 1942
According to her, the nurses were like head nurses are now and mostly administered the care rather than did the direct care. Corpsmen did all the hands on work. Now what the corpsmen did is work done by aides.
What is interesting is that as a Navy Nurse she mostly cared for Marines. She was among the first group of nurses sent to the brand new Naval Hospital at Camp Pendleton and was the first nurse for the Communicative Disease Ward - when penicillin was very rarely seen or used.
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Well, hell, that's a vanishing population. I've known "computer scientists" who don't know Knuth
Recursion
May 2014
#4
Cosmos has been doing a nice job of highlighting some of the overlooked women in science.
NutmegYankee
May 2014
#9
I have a science curriculum I developed on History of Science that includes women
kmlisle
May 2014
#14
Don't be dismayed. Today, the males aren't taught about, either. Too many "facts" to be "memorized."
WinkyDink
May 2014
#18
When I was a kid mom went to the library with me and told me I would learn to read about
toby jo
May 2014
#28
I would have thought that these days, she is more well known for her scientific contributions
cemaphonic
May 2014
#52