194 adjectives to describe nursing

That we should go out of our way to take pains to obtain embroidered sheets and lace-edged pillows, absolved us in their eyes from all the want of surgical nursing.

Properly speaking, there are two nurses,the nurse for the mother and the nurse for the child, or, the monthly and the wet nurse.

One day after she had lain for a long time in silence, she looked up at her faithful nurse and the grey eyes shone like stars.

Into this place the parson and M. St.-Ange entered, the little nurses jumping up from the sills to let them pass in.

Pediatric nursing.

"She can get a professional nurse, and that is worth a dozen friends.

At first the doctors said he would not get over it, then that if he got over it he would be an idiot; but finally their surgical skill and careful nursing were rewarded, and he came out well in every respect, except for an awful scar along one side of his head.

She had nursed Birkendelly's mother, and been dry-nurse to himself and sister; and having more than a mother's attachment for the latter, when she was married, old Lucky left her country to spend the last of her days in the house of her beloved young lady.

In some of his hours of delirium he dictated to his careful nurses, Fletcher and the Countess, a number of verses, which she assures us were correct and sensible.

As the sufferer's own home was at some distance, Dorothy willingly received him under her roof, and became his tender and careful nurse.

The choice of a monthly nurse is of the utmost importance; and in the case of a young mother with her first child, it would be well for her to seek advice and counsel from her more experienced relatives in this matter.

A female nurse . . . . . . .

After a child has lived three years it then breaks away from the tender nursing of its parents.

" "Most certainly, you are trying to deceive me, my child," returned the aged nurse, "and you seem not to reflect how serious a matter it is to attempt to lead persons of experience to believe one thing because it is couched in words and to disbelieve the opposite, although it is made plainly evident by deeds.

Obstetrical nursing.

It is a city of the sickof healing, ratherand on a bright day, with crowds of convalescents sitting about in their linen pajamas in the sun, stretcher-bearers going back and forth, the capable-looking surgeons with their strong, kind faces, pretty nurses in nun-like white, it all has the brisk, rather jolly air of any vigorous organism, going full blast ahead.

Husband and wife, in many cases; husband, wife and children in many others; a grandmother and two grandchildren on one occasion, and on yet another, a venerable gray-haired nurse came with four of the family in which she had served for many years, and the five entered the baptistry together.

R97400, 8Jul52, Ella F. Dake (W) & J. S. Brown (A) DAKIN, FLORENCE. Simplified nursing.

Nizza was placed in the best apartment of the doctor's house, and attended by an experienced and trustworthy nurse.

The right plan of proceeding is plain enough; only let attention be paid to the ordinary laws of health, and the mother, if she have a sound constitution, will make a better nurse than by any foolish deviation founded on ignorance and caprice.

I would not recommend, however, nor even tolerate, for one moment, the absurd practice of jolting, so common with a few ignorant nurses and, mothers, as if they could jolt down the food in the stomach with just as much safety as they can shake down the contents of a farmer's bag of produce.

All that medical skill and affectionate nursing of devoted relatives, friends, and a qualified nurse, could do towards saving the patient was done, and hopes were entertained of recovery till almost the last; but three days before the fatal end, hemorrhage of the intestines set in, and then the medical attendants despaired.

Gentle nurses of the Universities' English Mission, missionary ladies who devoted a lifetime in the service of the Huns and the natives in German East, locked up behind barbed wire for two years, without privacy of any kind, constantly spied upon in their huts at night by the native guard, always in terror that the black man, now unrestrained, even encouraged by his German master, should do his worst.

Westminster Bank, Ltd. (E); 16May57; R192287. DAVIS, DAVID N. Urological nursing.

Still more erroneous is the practice of some careless nurses, of carrying the child quite upright a part of the time, almost without any support at all.

194 adjectives to describe  nursing