Kirstin Walters
Mrs. Trahan
English 2 Period 4
29 September 2015
Nursing during the Wars The roles of nurses changed drastically from World War I to World War II. Nurses were the ones responsible for continuing the care of wounded men. Although it is not truly known, it is thought war has had a great impact on medicine. The history of nursing in World War I and World War II had rarely covered the basic information on it. A key element of healthcare during the war is nursing which can be the difference between life and death. The phrase “nursing work” is used to describe a nurse’s role other than nursing. The nurses more traditional role was restoring cleanliness, peace, and order. As time went on, a nurse’s role became more crucial. Even though war service was hard, uncomfortable, and heartbreaking, and nurses worked under tough conditions, there has been over one-hundred thousand nurses that served during World War I and World War II. Some of those nurses had to pay the ultimate sacrifice.
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At first, nurses did not have to undergo additional training, but that changed in 1943. Nurses then had to learn field sanitation, psychiatry and anesthetics, and physical training for their endurance. The only nurses allowed to receive this additional training were the white nurses. The training taught new skills that the nurses would need to know for the field. The roles of doctors and nurses were not clearly defined. The nurses were in extreme danger as they tended to the wounded soldiers. The actions the nurses were performing in the war zone outweighed the risk the nurses were