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Timeline of nursing history in Australia and New Zealand

The timeline of nursing history in Australia and New Zealand stretches from the 19th century to the present.

18th–19th century

1780s

1810s

1820

  • 1821 – Benevolent Asylum opened to care for destitute aged and others.

1830s

  • 1838 – The first trained nurses arrive in Sydney, five Irish Sisters of Charity.

1840s

  • 1840 – Settlement of New Zealand as a colony and the establishment of state hospitals.
  • 1841 – People considered to be mentally ill were considered criminals. The first case of insanity in New Zealand's society was recorded in 1841.
  • 1847 – Wellington Hospital was established, The first New Zealand Hospital.
  • 1848 – The Yarra Bend Asylum was opened so that those mentally ill could be moved out of gaol. This Asylum was later known as Melbourne.

1850s

  • 1852 – Ex-convict Bathsheba Ghost appointed Matron of Sydney Infirmary.
  • 1854 – The first lunatic asylum was built, in Wellington, New Zealand.
  • 1857 – Sisters of Charity under Mother Mary Baptist De Lacy established St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney.
  • 1860–1883 – Approximately 16,378 single women emigrated to New Zealand; 582 identified their occupation as a nurse, monthly nurse, sick nurse, trained nurse, nurse girl, midwife, hospital nurse or professional nurse.
  • 1868 – Lucy Osburn and her four Nightingale nurses arrived at Sydney Infirmary (to become Sydney Hospital). They soon start the first nursing school.

1870s

  • 1870 – New Zealand had 37 hospitals as a result of the population increase of the gold rush.
  • 1879 – Sister Mary Jane West Armfield serves in Zulu War.

1880s

  • 1884 – Little Sisters of the Poor begin aged care in Melbourne.
  • 1885 – following the Hospital and Charitable Aids Act conditions improved.

1890s

20th century

1900s

  • 1901 – Royal Victorian Trained Nurses' Association is formed.
  • 1902 – Ellen Dougherty of New Zealand becomes the first registered nurse in the world on 10 February.
  • 1902 – Australian Army Nursing Service formed.
  • 1904 – Queen's Memorial Infectious Diseases Hospital opened in Fairfield, initially as a 'fever' hospital.
  • 1906 – Sisters of Mercy establish Mater Misericordiae Hospital, North Sydney.
  • 1907 – Indigenous woman May Yarrowick receives nursing certificate in Sydney.
  • 1907 – First of Karitane hospitals for training neonatal nurses opened in Dunedin.
  • 1908 – Ākenehi Hei, of the Whakatohea and Whanau-a-Apanui tribes, was the first Maori registered nurse in New Zealand.
  • 1908 – Kai Tiaki, the first New Zealand nursing journal, is published.
  • 1909 – A new role called 'backblocks' nursing was introduced to New Zealand providing services to rural parts of the country
  • 1909 – Waterfall State Sanatorium opened.

1910s

  • 1916 – Narrelle Hobbes serves on Mesopotamian front.
  • 1916 – Hundreds of Australian Army nurses sent to work in India.
  • 1917 – Alice Ross-King and three other nurses awarded Military Medal for bravery in hospital bombing, Flanders.
  • 1918 – Death of Edith Blake when hospital ship Glenart Castle torpedoed.
  • 1919 – Deaths of a number of nurses in the Spanish flu influenza pandemic.
  • 1919 – Victorian Government refuses Archbishop Mannix's offer of nuns to nurse Spanish Flu patients.
  • 1919 – Opening of Westwood Sanatorium for miner's phthisis and tuberculosis.

1920s

  • 1920 – South Australia the first state to set up a Nurses Registration Board.
  • 1925 – New Zealand attempts to have a degree nursing programme available at the University of Otago.

1930s

  • 1930 – Cecily Maude O'Connell founds Grey Sisters to look after poor mothers and children in Melbourne.
  • 1936 – Sr Mary Gertrude establishes Derby Leprosarium.
  • 1937 – Four Australian nurses serve in Spanish Civil War, and three from New Zealand including René Shadbolt.
  • 1938 – The New Zealand Social Security Act of 1938 marks the introduction of a comprehensive health system that mandated the provision of free care for all.
  • 1939 – Registering of nursing aides commenced in New Zealand
  • 1939 – St Anne's Guild of Catholic Nurses formed.
  • 1939 – Elouera House nurses home opened in Wollongong.
  • 1939–1945 – Australian and New Zealand nurses serve outside their countries in World War II.

1940s

1950s

  • 1950–1953 – 153 Australian nurses serve in Korean War.
  • 1950 – Publication of Scarlet Pillows: An Australian nurse's tales of long ago by Mrs Arthur H. Garnsey (Ann Stafford Bird).
  • 1954 – Betty Jeffrey's memoir White Coolies describes her captivity in Sumatra in World War II.
  • 1958 – Completion of Napier Waller's stained glass windows in Hall of Memory, Australian War Memorial, including one of nurse symbolising "Devotion".

1960s

1970s

  • 1971 – The Carpenter Report was released; a review released by New Zealand centred around the nursing education system, the report advocated training nurses in an educational environment. The government however decided that polytechs, not universities, were more appropriate for this; however the consequences of this were that nurses were only diploma level not degree level.
  • 1971 – Australian Nurses' Journal (later Australian Nursing Journal, later Australian Nursing and Midwifery Journal) founded.
  • 1973 – Christchurch and Wellington Polytechnics offer diploma-level nursing education; Massey and Victoria Universities (Wellington) start their post-registration bachelor's degrees.
  • 1975 – First nursing diploma programme in Australia in a College of Advanced Education (CAE) in Melbourne, followed quickly by programs in New South Wales, South Australia and Western Australia.
  • 1975 – First National Mental HealthNurses Congress.

1980s

1990s

21st century

2000s

  • 2000 – Review of undergraduate nursing education by New Zealand Nursing Council
  • 2000 – Air Force nurses deployed with Australian forces in Timor.
  • 2002 – Deborah Harris, New Zealand's first Nurse Practitioner.
  • 2003 – Anna Rogers' While You're Away tells the story of New Zealand nurses at war.
  • 2004 – The Health Practitioners Competence Assurance (2003) Act comes into full power on 18 September, in New Zealand, these cover the requirements for nurses to have current competences relating to their scope of practice.
  • 2005 – The Nursing Council of New Zealand published a comprehensive guideline on cultural safety in nursing education and practice.
  • 2006 – SBS TV drama series RAN Remote Area Nurse portrays nursing in Torres Strait.
  • 2008 – Peter Rees' The Other ANZACs tells the story of World War I nurses.

2010s

  • 2010 – A national registration for all nurses and midwives comes into force in Australia in July 2010.
  • 2010 – Nurses' Health Study 3 begins enrolling: Female RNs, LPNs, and nursing students 20–46 are encouraged to join this long-term women's health study. Study remains open until 100,000 nurses are enrolled.
  • 2010 – Sisters of War telemovie portrays Australian nurses captured in Rabaul in World War II.
  • 2011 – 11 residents die in Quakers Hill Nursing Home fire, deliberately lit by nurse.
  • 2012 – Australian College of Nursing formed from amalgamation of earlier bodies.
  • 2013 – Annabelle Brayley's Bush Nurses tells the story of remote nursing.
  • 2014 – TV drama series ANZAC Girls portrays nurses in World War I.
  • 2014 – Thea Hayes' An Outback Nurse describes nursing at Wave Hill, Northern Territory in the 1960s.
  • 2015 – Publication of Ruth Rae's 4-volume History of Australian Nurses in the First World War.
  • 2016 – Murder of remote area nurse Gayle Woodford in APY Lands.

2020s

  • 2020 – Nurses in front line of response to COVID-19 pandemic.
  • 2021 – Nurses help provide mass COVID-19 vaccinations.

References

Bibliography

  • Allan, V. (2004). A new way of living: the history of the Spinal Injuries Unit in Christchurch. The Guttmann Story (pp. 7). Christchurch, New Zealand: Canterbury District Health Board.
  • Bullough, Vern L. and Bullough, Bonnie. The Care of the Sick: The Emergence of Modern Nursing (1978).
  • Craven, Ruth F., & Hirnle, Constance J. (2007). Fundamentals of nursing: Human health and function (5th ed). Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
  • Craven, R F., & Hirnle, C J. (2009) Fundamentals of nursing: Human health and function (6th ed). Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
  • Crisp, J., & Taylor, C. (2009). Potter & Perry's fundamental of nursing (3rd ed.). Chatswood, Australia : Elsevier Australia.
  • Crisp, J., Taylor, C., Douglas, C., Rebeiro, G. (2013). Potter & Perry's fundamentals of nursing (4th ed.). Elsevier Australia.
  • Dingwall, Robert, Anne Marie Rafferty, Charles Webster. An Introduction to the Social History of Nursing (Routledge, 1988)
  • Donahue, M. Patricia. Nursing, The Finest Art: An Illustrated History (3rd ed. 2010), includes over 400 illustrations; 416pp
  • Harris, Kirsty. Girls in Grey: Surveying Australian Military Nurses in World War I History Compass (Jan 2013) 11#1 PP 14–23, online free, with detailed bibliography
  • Papps, E., (2002). Nursing in New Zealand. Auckland, New Zealand: Pearson Education New Zealand.
  • Papps, E., & Ramsden, I. (1996). International Journal for Quality Healthcare. Vol 8, No 5, pp. 491–497
  • Wood, Pamela J. and Maralyn Foureur. "Exploring the maternity archive of the St Helens Hospital, Wellington, New Zealand, 1907–22," in New Directions in the History of Nursing: International Perspectives ed by Barbara Mortimer and Susan McGann. (Routledge, 2004) pp 179–93 online

Further reading