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Anesthesiology Nursing History

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Title: Anesthesiology Nursing History


1
Anesthesiology NursingPast to Present
Slide Series Highlighting the History of
Anesthesiology Nursing as told by Marianne
Bankert
2
Watchful Care
3
CHAPTER I
  • The MOTHER of Anesthesia

4
BARRIERS TO SUCCESSFUL SURGERY
  • Anesthesia
  • Infection

5
Virginia S. Thatcher
  • To women and to the discovery of germs must go
    the credit for the greatest contribution to the
    relief of human suffering during the years 1860
    and 1900.

6
GOLDEN AGE (after 1900)
  • MAYO CLINIC (1899)
  • Surgeons
  • Nurse Anesthetists

7
THE MOTHER OF ANESTHESIA
  • ALICE MAGAW
  • THE MOTHER OF ANESTHESIA Given that title by
    Dr. Charles H. Mayo

8
GERMS
  • 1850 - Surgical instruments were given no special
    cleaning (sterilization) from one case to another.

9
INFECTION
  • Sponges
  • Washing hands of surgeon
  • Clean cover gowns

10
INFECTIONLouis PasteurJoseph Lister1867
Atomizer with carbolic acidPost-op dressings
were soaked with antiseptic solutions
11
Surgeons still refused to wash their hands
Surgical instruments were not sterilized
12
ASEPSIS
  • Using sterile procedure to exclude
    microorganisms from the field of operation.

13
Asepsis - Continued
  • Steam and dry heat sterilization
  • Wearing of sterile gowns
  • Wearing of face masks to cover the nose and
    mouth
  • Use only sterile metal instruments

14
Increase in number of surgical procedures
  • Use of these procedures made it possible for the
    number of surgical procedures to increase.

15
Massachusetts General Hospital
  • 1841 - 1845 - 37 procedures
  • (The years immediately prior to Mortons
    successful demonstration of anesthesia)
  • 1847 - 1851 - 98 procedures
  • (The years immediately following Mortons
    demonstration of anesthesia)
  • 1898 3,700 surgical procedures

16
Massachusetts General Hospital
October 16, 1846, in the operating theater of
Massachusetts General Hospital, William T. G.
Morton, a Boston dentist, successfully
demonstrated the anesthetic use of ether during
surgery, providing a painless solution to an
otherwise fearful procedure. Within a year,
ether-a colorless, volatile, organic liquid-was
used worldwide to ease the anguish of surgery,
and the operating room became known as the Ether
Dome.
17
Who "discovered" anesthetics ?
In a tangled web of rivalry, collaboration,
ideas, and experiments, four men claimed to have
"discovered" anesthetics as a surgical
accompaniment, and throughout their lives
bitterly fought for recognition. Horace Wells, a
dentist and a colleague of Morton, used nitrous
oxide successfully on his dental patients, but
when invited to demonstrate his technique in 1845
at MGH, the patient cried out due to an
insufficient dose. Wells, humiliated, left town
and later committed suicide. Dr. Crawford W.
Long of Georgia claimed to have used ether as
early as 1841 for minor operations. And finally,
Charles Jackson, a Boston MD and chemist-and
sometime partner of Morton's-claimed to have
discovered ether's uses with Morton. Jackson also
claimed that Samuel Morse stole his idea for the
invention of the telegraph. Morton himself had a
personal history checkered by various forms of
chicanery and was found attempting to conceal the
chemical identity of ether in order to patent it,
calling it "letheon."
18
THE ROLE OF WOMEN
  • 1873 - Three nurses training schools in the
    United States
  • New York
  • New Haven
  • Boston

19
Nursing Training Schools
  • American schools followed the Nightingale model
    (1860 St. Thomas Hospital Nurses Training School,
    England)
  • Foundation on Clean Patient and Clean Environment.

20
Nursing
  • Nursing Made Medicine Look Good.

21
Nursing
  • Medicines ultimate success, technological
    advances, and subsequent impressive social power
    were achieved through hospitals, and nurses made
    those hospitals work.

22
Nurses - Hospitals
  • The whole spirit of hospitals changed, from a
    place to die, to a place to get well.
  • What is the current attitude of American citizens
    toward hospitals and medical centers in 1999?

23
Witness to 1846 demonstration of anesthesia stated
  • Anesthesia needs to be
  • Affect all patients similarly
  • Consistently lead to insensibility to pain
  • Have a predetermined length of duration
  • Safe

24
Early Administration of Ether and Chloroform
  • Ether - by a sponge
  • Chloroform - by a handkerchief
  • With both techniques, little air could pass
    through the wet sponge or handkerchief
  • Many cases of Ether pneumonia - death

25
EARLY ANESTHETISTS
  • Medical students
  • Surgery residents
  • Surgeons
  • Each were more interested in watching the surgery
    procedure than monitoring the anesthetic and the
    patient

26
ECONOMICS OF ANESTHESIA
  • Early surgeons did not want to share the credit
    or payment for their work.
  • The impression was that the anesthetists work
    were of little if any importance.
  • If a surgeon charged 100-200, the anesthetist
    was given 5.

27
Economics - Ghost Anesthesia
  • Patient would request the best anesthetist and
    told it would cost an extra 25. The surgeon
    collected 225 (200 for him and 25 for
    anesthetist).
  • Surgeon selected a student and gave him 5.

28
Ghost Anesthesia
  • Current use of term
  • Patient request a specific anesthetist and that
    anesthetists begins the anesthetic and then
    another anesthetist completes the anesthetic.
  • Could be an anesthesiologists or a Certified
    Registered Nurse Anesthetist.

29
Early Nurse Anesthetists
  • Sister Mary Bernard
  • St. Vincents Hospital
  • Erie, PA
  • DATE 1877

30
Sr. Mary Bernard
  • One of the religious communities, the 3rd.
    Order of the Hospital Sisters of St. Francis from
    Muenster, Germany. The Order established a
    community in Springfield, Il in 1875.
  • In 1879, they dedicated their St. Johns
    Hospital.

31
Hospital Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis
  • In 1912 - Mother Magdalene Wiedlocher, herself an
    anesthetist, organized a course in anesthesia at
    St. Johns Hospitals for Sisters who were
    graduate nurses.

32
Sr. Martha Lawler (1871-1935)
  • A member of the Daughters of Charity of St.
    Vincent de Paul started many schools of
    anesthesia for nurses, including the school at
    Charity Hospital in New Orleans in 1917.

33
ALICE MAGAW
  • Dinah and Edith Graham were the first nurse
    anesthetists at the Mayo Clinic. Alice Magaw, a
    friend of the Graham women was very skilled as an
    anesthetist and took over the anesthesia at the
    Mayo Clinic (est. in 1899)

34
ALICE MAGAW
  • The anesthetic technique of choice was open drop
    rather than pouring the ether.
  • (Cone and pouring v. open drop)

35
EARLY ANESTHESIA MACHINES
Foregger Machine with Copper Kettle
American Meter Company N20 Anaesthetometer
36
Morton Ether Inhaler 1846
Wm Morton Ether Demonstration at MGH 1846
37
Open Drop Technique
  • James E. Moore, a Minneapolis surgeon went to
    Germany Berlin in 1885 and brought back the
    open drop technique of the administration of
    ether.

38
Observations in Anesthesia by Alice Magaw
  • Anesthesia is an art.
  • Each patient is different (tilt of the head).
  • Watch for symptoms and prevent them.
  • Use hypnotic suggestion.
  • Surgeon stay with patient during induction.
  • Talk to the patient soothingly all the time.

39
Open Drop Technique
  • America continuous method for the
  • duration of the anesthetic, a drop on the mask
    every two seconds.
  • Britain Pour 2 dr. or 3 dr. on the mask, then
    stop for a few minutes and then pour a few more
    drachms on the mask.

40
Chapter 2
  • Up Against That Sort of Thing

41
Dr. George Crile
  • Known for his work in dealing with shock, he
    stated that the intern was not suited to be an
    anesthetist, because he was more interested in
    the surgical procedure.
  • Many patients died from the anesthetic when
    administered by an intern.

42
Dr. George Crile
  • In looking for an appropriate individual to be
    his anesthetist, selected a trained nurse.
  • He selected Agatha Hodgins. Born in Toronto in
    1877 to prosperous parents, who was a woman of
    vision and determination.

43
Miss Agatha Hodgins
  • Reported to be
  • Punctual
  • Frank
  • Tidy
  • Very patient
  • Took her work seriously
  • An excellent anesthetist

44
Miss Agatha Hodgins
  • In 1908, Dr. Crile selected Ms Hodgins as his
    special anesthetist. She is reported to have
    said to Dr. Crile to remember that she will
    always do her best.
  • Their work began with administering anesthesia to
    animals.

45
Agatha Hodgins
Cleveland Lakeside Hospital circa 1915 Agatha
Hodgins with Dr. Crile
46
Miss Agatha Hodgins
  • Miss Hodgins is reported to have read everything
    she could concerning anesthesia and walked the
    halls of the hospital wards at night listening to
    the breathing of the patients, in order that she
    might detect subtle differences.
  • She travel to the Mayo Clinical to observe the
    open drop technique.

47
Anesthetic Technique at the Cleveland Clinic
Lakeside
  • Dr. Crile noticed during his work with shock the
    deleterious effects of ether and chloroform
    anesthesia.
  • Nitrous Oxide with oxygen would become the
    anesthetic of choice at the Cleveland Clinic.

48
Dr. Mayo - Dr. Crile
  • Dr. Mayo reported the successful anesthetics
    administered by for Ms Magaw.
  • Dr. Crile reported the successful anesthetics
    administered by Miss Hodgins.
  • 1911 - reported the successful anesthetics
    administered by Miss Hodgins as 10,787.

49
Miss Agatha Hodgins
  • Just as visitors came to Mayo Clinical and Alice
    Magaw to learn open drop ether, so too they came
    to Lakeside for the nitrous oxide-oxygen
    technique used by Miss Hodgins.
  • More and more visitors sent their anesthetics to
    the Cleveland Clinic to learn from Miss Hodgins.

50
Lakeside School of Anesthesia
  • Dr. Crile and Miss Hodgins were proud of their
    school and believed it to be the first in the
    world. The school accepted trained nurses,
    dentists, and physicians. (1915)

51
Earlier Schools of Anesthesia
  • 1909 St. Vincents Hospital, Portland, OR
  • 1912 St. Johns Hospital, Springfield, IL
  • 1912 New York Post-Graduate Hospital
  • 1914 Long Island College Hospital, Brooklyn

52
Nurse Anesthetist Service in the Great War (WWI)
  • The Lakeside military unit went to France with
    the American Ambulance at Neuilly in 1914.
  • The Lakeside unit introduced gas-oxygen Nitrous
    Oxide anesthesia into war surgery and into
    England and France.

53
WWI - Lakeside Unit
  • Dr. Criles work with shock and the success of
    Nitrous Oxide-oxygen had positive results. He
    returned to the U.S. after 2 months to organize
    other units in the U.S. to go to France in
    support of troops.

54
Lakeside School of Anesthesia
  • Miss Hodgins returned from France in 1915 after
    training American, English, and French nurses as
    nurse anesthetists in the administration of
    Nitrous-Oxide-oxygen.

55
Lakeside School of Anesthesia
  • First graduating class (1916)
  • Six (6) physicians
  • Two (2) dentists
  • Eleven (11) nurses

56
WWI
  • P48
  • during the drives, patients same in so fast that
    all the surgeons could do was to remove bullets
    and shrapnel, stop hemorrhages and put iodoform
    packs in the wound and bandage it, then the next
    patient. Fast pace for the anesthetist.

57
British Nurse Anesthetists
  • British nurses were trained in the art of
    anesthesia during the war with the BEF and
    according to Dr. Crile, if the Great War had
    gone on another year, the British army would have
    adopted the nurse anesthetist right in the middle
    of the war.

58
Anesthesia as Womens Work
  • May 1918, Dr. R. Farr, a Minneapolis surgeon
    stated The war is going to have this influence.
    We are not going to have physicians enough to
    give anesthetics, and the nurses are being worked
    in to give anesthetics. And when the war is over
    they are coming back here, and they are going to
    continue to do it and we are up against that
    sort of thing.

59
Professional Anesthetists
  • From the beginning, the economic factor played a
    major role in attracting individuals, especially
    physicians to become anesthetists.

60
Professional Anesthetist
  • Anesthesia was born a slave and she has ever
    remained the faithful handmaid of her master
    surgeon.

61
Professional Anesthetist
  • P50 Not surprisingly, surgeons found these
    qualities, as the imagery suggests, in women. As
    hospital administrator Olson reminded his nurse
    anesthetist audience in 1940, American women were
    recruited into anesthesia, a field shunned by
    physicians.

62
Continued - Mr. Olsons address
  • A fact which should never be lost sight of by
    doctors, lawmakers, the laity, or the nurses
    themselves is, that nurses were drafted to give
    anesthetics under the instruction and supervision
    of surgeons, after it had been found that medical
    graduates were often inept and lacking the
    deftness and tender touch which patients

63
Continued - Mr. Olsons address
  • Required for a successful anesthetic, or they
    were too much interested in the operators
    procedure and therefore failed to give a
    satisfactory performance as anesthetists.

64
Gender Bias
  • Just as females were seen as the natural
    handmaidens of surgeons, females entering
    medicine were viewed acceptable my many for the
    economic gain.
  • The second class role for females helped them
    gain anesthesia but kept them from the economic
    gain they deserved.

65
Female Physicians
  • Early female physicians did not support the role
    of the female nurse anesthetist. They made every
    effort to distance themselves from the nurse
    anesthetist.

66
Dr. Eleanor Seymour (1920)
  • Stated concerning the first anesthetic It is
    cause for regret that there is no detailed
    account of the induction, maintenance of this
    first anesthetic but it is evident that the
    administration was considered of such importance
    as not to be entrusted even to the Angel Gabriel,
    much less an angelic nurse

67
Dr. Mary Botsford
  • Identified as probably the first female
    anesthesiologist.
  • Dominated the West Coast anesthesia for twenty
    years.
  • Trained at least 46 female physicians in
    anesthesia -The Childrens Hospital of San
    Francisco.

68
MDA - CRNA Conflicts
  • In California, a female anesthesia intern refused
    to take instruction from a female nurse
    anesthetist and was removed from her training
    program, on appeal, she was re-instated and the
    nurse anesthetist lost her job.

69
Chapter 3
  • A Very Personal Property Right

70
Continuing Conflict
  • Dr. Farr and his colleagues reflected the
    continuing frustration that economics made
    anesthesia unattractive to physician specialists.
    Nurse Anesthetists were also establishing
    themselves in the field, adding a competitive
    dimension to the already difficult economic
    situation.

71
Father of Academic Anesthesia
  • Dr. Ralph M. Waters, faculty at the medical
    school of the University of Wisconsin.
  • Gave three reasons for being interested in
    anesthesia
  • 1. The results of anesthesia which he observed
    were variable and offered something of a
    challenge.

72
Dr. Ralph M. Waters - continued
  • 2. Extra-curricular experience in the
    administration of anesthetics while a student in
    Cleveland, together with occasional opportunities
    to observe the use of nitrous oxide had
    developed in me an unusual interest in the
    subject.

73
Dr. Ralph M. Waters - continued
  • 3. One of the more surgical surgeons returned
    from an eastern trip in 1913 with a nitrous oxide
    apparatus (the first in Sioux City) the use of
    which he offered to me in other cases if I would
    anesthetize his patients.

74
Dr. Ralph M. Waters - continued
  • I hear that some surgeon in this state is using
    a nurse or an office girl-Im not sure which-to
    administer anesthetics to his patients. Do you
    know why? The only honorable reason he could give
    is because he believes that she can given an
    anesthetic better than any practitioner of
    medicine available in his community.

75
Dr. Ralph M. Waters - continued
  • surgeons with this handicap can be found in
    many communities in the United States today.
    It is not a nurses job which you must be
    ashamed to have to perform - to feel concerning
    it as you would at being caught giving a soapsuds
    enema. It is a physicians job an art, just as
    much as surgery is an art

76
Dr. Ralph M. Waters - continued
  • These comments are perhaps the most telling
    glimpse into the dilemma of a physician moving
    into a field associated with nursing.

77
Organized Anti-Nurse Anesthetist Activity
78
Professional Anesthetist
  • What was required to be an anesthetist
  • be satisfied with the subordinate role that the
    work required.
  • Make anesthesia their one absorbing interest.
  • Not look on the situation of anesthetist as one
    that put them in a position to watch and learn
    from the surgeons technique.

79
Professional Anesthetist - continued
  • What was required to be an anesthetist
  • Have the natural aptitude and intelligence to
    develop a high level of skill in providing the
    smooth anesthesia and relaxation that the surgeon
    demanded.

80
Organized Anti-Nurse Anesthetist Activity
  • The center of organized anti-nurse anesthetist
    activity rested in Dr. Francis Hoeffer McMechan,
    a native of Cincinnati, Ohio.

81
Francis McMechan
  • Third generation physician
  • Before medicine, was into journalism with the
    Cincinnati Post newspaper
  • Became interested in anesthesia in medical
    school
  • In 1911 he developed arthritis and was confined
    to a wheelchair for the rest of his life

82
Francis McMechan
  • Confined to a wheelchair, he became interested
    in better organizing the field of anesthesia
  • He used his journalism talents to publish his
    belief that there was no place in anesthesia for
    a nurse
  • He felt he had a property right to practice
    anesthesia

83
Francis McMechan
  • In 1935, he addressed the Council on Medical
    Education and Licensure of the A.M.A., Should
    the Radiologist, the Pathologist, and the
    Anesthetist be Licensed to Practice Medicine.
  • He argued that the practice of anesthesia was
    the practice of medicine.

84
Francis McMechan
  • McMechan argued that, every significant advance
    in its (anesthesia) science and practice has been
    contributed by doctors, dentists and research
    workers of similar standing. In contrast,
    technicians have added nothing of any
    consequence.

85
Francis McMechan
  • In 1911, McMechan helped found the New York
    Society of Anesthetists, which succeeded the Long
    Island Society of Anesthetists. In 1912, the New
    York society petitioned the A.M.A. to create a
    section on anesthesia at its annual meeting, but
    was not successful.

86
Interstate Association of Anesthetists
  • Organizers in 1915
  • Dr. McMechan - Ohio
  • Dr. McKession - Ohio
  • Dr. Long - Kentucky
  • This organization became the nucleus for further
    regional societies in the United States and
    Canada.

87
Physician Anesthesia Groups
  • 1921 Canadian Society of Anaesthetists
  • 1922 Pacific Coast Assoc. of Anesthetists
  • 1922 Southern Assoc. of Anesthetists
  • 1923 Eastern Society of Anesthetists
  • In 1926, the Interstate Assoc. of Anesthetists
    became the Midwestern Association of Anesthetists.

88
Political and Legal Challenges to Practice for
Nurse Anesthetists
  • In the early part of this century, McMehan was
    involved directly or indirectly in most of the
    political and legal challenges to the practice of
    anesthesia by nurses.
  • His articles in anesthesia journals were well
    written and pointed out that anesthesia was the
    practice of medicine.

89
Challenge to Practice
  • McMechans repeated public charge was that nurse
    anesthetists were violating medical practice acts
    (or, to use McMechans phrase, infringing on
    physicians very personal property rights).

90
Challenge to Practice
  • In New York, 1911, an opinion by the New York
    State Medical Society, declared that the
    administration of an anesthetic by a nurse was in
    violation of the law of the State of New York.

91
The Challenge to Lakeside Hospital
  • In 1912, action began in Ohio, home both to
    McMechan and Lakeside Hospital, against its nurse
    anesthesia program. Dr. Crile received a letter
    from the secretary of the Ohio State Medical
    Board informing him of its postion that no one
    other than a registered physician could
    administer an anesthetic.

92
The Challenge to Lakeside Hospital School of
Anesthesia
  • In 1916, the Interstate Assoc.. of Anesthetists
    (organized by McMechan) petitioned the Ohio State
    Medical Board to take action against Lakeside
    Hospital as the chief source of the
    nurse-anesthetist abuse.

93
The Challenge to Lakeside Hospital School of
Anesthesia
  • The Ohio State Medical Board issued a resolution
    that in effect said they would discontinue all
    recognition of the Lakeside Hospital as an
    acceptable Training School for Nurses and its
    graduates as Registered Nurses denied, unless the
    training of nurses in the administration of
    anesthesia stop.

94
The Challenge to Lakeside Hospital School of
Anesthesia
  • To prevent denial of recognition of its nursing
    school, Lakeside Hospital discontinued the
    anesthesia school.
  • Hearing were held followed by the withdraw of
    the edict.
  • In 1917 the program reopened with increased
    enrollment.

95
Frank v. South
  • (1916) The Interstate Association of
    Anesthetists adopted a resolution to bring to an
    end the administration of anesthetics by
    unlicensed persons in every state in the middle
    West in which such action can be secured.

96
Frank v. South
  • The Louisville (KY) Society of Anesthetists
    submitted a resolution that an anesthetic should
    be administered only by one who had medical
    knowledge and training to the Attorney General,
    who gave a supporting opinion.

97
Frank v. South
  • The House of delegates of the Kentucky State
    Medical Association subsequently passed a
    resolution sponsored by its Committee on Medical
    Ethics calling for an end to the evil of
    non-physician anesthetists.

98
Frank v. South
  • The call was for physicians to not refer
    patients to hospitals where nurse anesthetists
    were utilized.
  • Ironically, nurses, who were called into
    anesthesia because it was a field shunned by
    physicians, were now to be themselves shunned.

99
Frank v. South
  • A Louisville surgeon, Dr. Louis Frank, and his
    anesthetist, Miss Margaret Hatfield, a graduate
    nurse with special anesthesia training, insisted
    that the State Board of Health be party to a test
    court case.

100
Frank v. South
  • The original finding was against Frank and
    Hatfield. This was appealed and reversed. The
    opinion by Judge Hurt discussed the significant
    issues of property rights versus public good
    and the overlapping provinces of various
    healing professions.

101
Frank v. South
  • Appeals Court Opinion While the practice of
    medicine is one of the most noble and learned
    professions, it is apparent that such a
    construction ought not to be given to the
    statute, which regulates the profession, that the
    effects of it would be to invade the province of
    the professions of pharmacy, dentistry or trained
    nursing, all of which

102
Frank v. South - continued
  • are professions, which relate to the alleviation
    of the human family of sickness and bodily
    afflictions, and to make duties belonging to
    those professions, also the practice of
    medicine within the meaning of the statute.

103
Frank v. South - continued
  • We are of the opinion that in the performance of
    the services by appellant, Hatfield, in the way
    and under the circumstances as agreed upon, as
    being the facts in this case, that she is not
    engaged in the practice of medicine within the
    meaning of the statute laws upon that subject...

104
McMechan
  • Despite losses with Lakeside Hospital and in
    Frank v. South, he and other physician
    anesthetists continued their efforts
  • The issue continues, the right to practice as
    nurse anesthetists.

105
Chapter 4
  • A Matter for Felicitation

106
Chapter 4 - A Matter for Felicitation
  • 1930 - Adeline Curtis (Los Angeles)
  • I said we can get nowhere without an
    organization. Were in the minority, of course,
    but we must organize. And so that night started
    the organization of a Nurse Anesthetist
    Association.

107
Hilda Solomon
  • Miss Hilda Solomon organized a local group of
    nurse anesthetists at the Jewish Hospital in
    Philadelphia.
  • Compare notes among nurse anesthetists
  • Case presentations

108
Agatha Hodgins
  • In 1923, organized the Alumnae Association of the
    Lakeside School of Anesthesia.
  • Inactive for 3 years
  • 1926 re-organized as a local group

109
Agatha Hodgins
  • Re-organization of Alumnae group - 1931
  • At first meeting Hodgins presented her plans for
    a national organization of nurse anesthetists. A
    constitution and bylaws were written.

110
Agatha Hodgins
  • Proactive in organizing nurse anesthetists.
  • One of her chief problems was her impatience in
    dealing with the American Nurses Association.
  • Gunn called it a civil war.

111
Agatha Hodgins/ANA
  • 1909 Miss Henderson and Miss Hodgins were invited
    to present lectures at the ANA convention.
  • Henderson - Ether
  • Hodgins - Nitrous Oxide, Oxygen
  • Neither felt they received appropriate
    recognition for their presentations.

112
Agatha Hodgins
  • 1921 - League of Nursing Education meeting.
  • Hodgins spoke on Nurse Anesthetist Service to
    counter anti-nurse anesthetist publications
    (McMechan).
  • Hodgins did not feel adequately appreciated by
    the nurses at the meeting.

113
Agatha Hodgins/ANA
  • By 1930 - other nursing groups were organizing
    within the ANA.
  • Miss Beddow (Alabama) proposed Office Nurses and
    Nurse Anesthetists.

114
Agatha Hodgins/ANA
  • 1930 meeting
  • Hodgins presented a paper which she felt helped
    to make nurse anesthetists there present, realize
    the importance of nurse anesthesia service as a
    separate division of hospital service - not a
    section of nursing.

115
Agatha Hodgins/ANA
  • 1930 ANA meeting.
  • Resolution for Office Nurses and Nurse
    Anesthetists, was reviewed by the ANA and there
    was a call for further study.
  • The resolution subsequently died.

116
Agatha Hodgins/ANA
  • Following the 1930 ANA meeting, Ms Hodgins moved
    quickly to form a national organization.
  • May 1931, she invited Lakeside Alumnae as well as
    other nurse anesthetists from around the country
    to attend a meeting for the purpose of
    considering the organization of a national
    organization of nurse anesthetists.

117
Agatha Hodgins/NANA
  • June 17, 1931 - Forty (40) nurse anesthetists
    from twelve (12) states met in a classroom at
    Western Reserve University. They formed the
    National (International) Association of Nurse
    Anesthetists.
  • Name changed to AANA in 1939.

118
Seal of the AANA
  • If you are connected to the internet as you view
    this, click on the seal to read a brief history
    of the official seal of the AANA.

119
National (International) Association of Nurse
Anesthetists
  • President - Agatha Hodgins
  • First Vice President - Laura Davis
  • Second Vice President - Aida Allwein
  • Third Vice President - Helen Lamb
  • Treasurer - Miss McFadden

120
Agatha Hodgins/ANA
  • Miss Hodgins stated the call for the meeting and
    Mrs. Fyfe moved, seconded by Miss Allwein, that
    a National (International) Association of Nurse
    Anesthetists be formed. The motion passed
  • Assembly also decided to affiliate with the
    American Nurses Association.

121
Hodgins/NANA/ANA
  • Miss Hodgins felt certain that nurse anesthetist
    services did not belong in nursing service.
  • In November 1931, Hodgins began a lengthy
    correspondence with the ANA.
  • 1st. issue was the name, International Assoc. of
    Nurse Anesthetists and the ANA a national
    organization, name was changed.

122
Hodgins/ANA/NANA
  • March 1932, Hodgins again wrote to the ANA for
    acceptance of NANA.
  • April 9, 1932, at a meeting of the ANAs Board
    of Directors, Hodgins proposal for affiliation
    was rejected.

123
Hodgins/NANA/ANA
  • Hodgins stated to Miss Rice, a small
    organization with high standards will accomplish
    our objectives more successfully than a larger
    one half-heartedly concerned with anesthesia and
    nursing.

124
Hodgins/NANA/ANA
  • The ANA Boards position was that membership to
    the ANA was already available to nurse
    anesthetists through their alumnae and state
    association. That these established avenues
    should continue to be utilized. It took the ANA
    six (6) months to resolve the issue.

125
NANA/American Hospital Association (AHA)
  • John Mannix, Assistant Director of University
    Hospitals of Cleveland and Miss Fyfe working
    together in 1933, created a well organized and
    structured organization for the NANA.
  • AHA welcomed the Association to participate in
    annual meetings.

126
Objectives of the NANA
  • 1) To advance the science and art of
    anesthesiology.
  • 2) To develop educational standards and
    techniques in the administration of anesthetic
    drugs.
  • 3) To facilitate efficient cooperation between
    nurse anesthetists and the medical profession,
    hospital, and others.

127
Objectives of the NANA/Continued
  • 4) To establish and maintain a central bureau for
    information, reference, and assistance in matters
    pertaining to the science and art of
    anesthesiology.
  • 5) To promulgate an educational program to
    enlighten the general public as to the importance
    of the proper administration of anesthetics...

128
NANA - Additional Activities
  • 1) Call for committees to investigate all schools
    of anesthesia with the objective of creating a
    list of accredited schools.
  • Reason?
  • 2) There should be a national board examination
    for nurse anesthetists.
  • Reason?

129
State Associations of Nurse Anesthetists
  • 1st state to organize was
  • Alabama in in December 1931.
  • Florida (11th state to organize) was in
    December 1935.
  • Ref Textbook, page 207.

130
Chapter 5
  • Worlds At War

131
Chapter 5
  • Fueled by the economic pressures of the Great
    Depression, anti-nurse anesthetist activities had
    intensified.
  • Anti-nurse anesthetist activities culminated in
    1934 in the test court case of Dagmar Nelson in
    California.

132
Chapter 5Dagmar Nelson Case
  • The outcome of Dagmar Nelsons trial in
    California definitely established the legality of
    nurse anesthetists (1934).

133
Chapter 5
  • The Frank v. South case and the expert witness
    of surgeons were considered the major
    contributors to the outcome of the Dagman Nelson
    case.
  • - Implications for present CRNAs?

134
Chapter 5Medicines Internecine Conflict
  • Anesthetics, by the 1930s had reached
    significant economic proportions.
  • In 1938, Dr. Hedden observed Someone recently
    stated that there were probably 5 million
    paid-for anesthetics administered every year in
    the U.S. by nurse anesthetists.

135
Medicines Internecine Conflict
  • This represents a cash income of 50 to 75
    million, so is it any wonder that when doctors
    realize this, they should hope to recapture the
    field which they have spurned and scorned in a
    large measure as being unworthy of their
    professional attainments.

136
Medicines Internecine Conflict
  • In this war against nurse anesthetist, a unified
    physician front was never achieved. There were
    too many surgeons who favored, defended, and
    depended upon nurse anesthetists.
  • - Implication for current CRNAs?

137
Chapter 5
  • Editorial in the American Journal of Surgery,
    stated that the use of nurse anesthetist is a
    question to be answered by the surgeons. There
    is only one question, do surgeons desire nurse
    anesthetists to administer anesthetics, if the
    answer is yes then the laws should be changed to
    include this function in the nursing profession.

138
Chapter 5American Journal of Surgery
  • Cont. If surgeons are opposed to nurses as
    anesthetists, no legislation is needed. It
    merely remains for the profession (medicine)
    discontinue the use of nurses in this capacity
  • McMechan continued to write articles to the
    Anesthesia Supplement calling for the abolition
    of the present menace of N.A.

139
Chapter 5
  • McMechan challenged surgeons for fee-splitting
    with nurse anesthetists as a violation of the
    Medical Practice Acts and ethics.

140
Chapter 5 - California
  • Hodgins noted in 1922, that in California,
    pressure was being brought to bear in a great
    number of hospitals who were employing nurse
    anesthetists. Physician anesthetists objected
    most to those nurse anesthetists working on the
    fee basis.

141
Chapter 5 - California
  • Sophie Winton, moved to California following her
    service in WWI. Her reaction to anti-nurse
    anesthetist activity was to become an independent
    practitioner.
  • Became a partner in a private dental clinic
  • Published research on dental anesthesia
  • Opened an out-patient plastic surgery clinic in
    Hollywood

142
Chapter 5 - California
  • 1928 - California State Board of Medical
    Examiners.
  • Adopted a resolution calling for the end of the
    use of nurse anesthetists. The resolution was
    sent to surgeons and hospitals in California.

143
Chapter 5 - California
  • When Highland Hospital in Alameda County received
    this communication, challenging the right of its
    nurse anesthetists, Eva Wilson, it moved to
    defend her. Dr. Benjamin Black, director of the
    institute said she is acknowledge by all the
    surgeons as probably the best anesthetists in
    this section...

144
Chapter 5 - California
  • Dr. Black took the matter to the District
    Attorney and asked for a ruling on the legality
    of Eva Wilsons practice as a nurse anesthetist.
  • The result was a finding that, the anesthetist
    was under active orders while giving anesthetics,
    of the operating surgeon, and was not practicing
    medicine...

145
Chapter 5 - California
  • Dr. Black concluded
  • Dr. H. Smith, who specializes in anesthesia, is
    the chief of the department of anesthesia but
    except for demonstration and teaching purposes he
    does not give anesthetics but is quite satisfied
    as are the surgeons here, with the work of Miss
    Wilson.

146
Chapter 5 - California
  • Another case Miss Adeline Curtis, had been a
    staff anesthetist at the Johnson-Wickett Clinic,
    Anaheim, since 1921. She gave anesthetics for 3
    surgeons in 4 different hospitals.
  • When her clinic was notified by 1928 of the
    resolution of the State Board of Medical
    Examiners, she stopped giving anesthetics.

147
Chapter 5 - California
  • Miss Adeline Curtis. She hired her own attorney,
    Thomas McFadden of Anaheim, to discover the
    reality of the California law regarding the
    administration of anesthetics. He found her work
    was not in violation of California law and she
    was re-hired as a nurse anesthetist in December,
    1928.

148
Chapter 5 - California
  • Miss Adeline Curtis
  • Following her re-hire as a nurse anesthetist she
    spread the word and encouraged the formation of a
    state organization. In February 1930 the first
    meeting of the California Association of Nurse
    Anesthetists was held in Los Angeles

149
Chapter 5 - California
  • Miss Adeline Curtis
  • Agatha Hodgins did not want state associations
    to form until the formation of the national
    association with bylaws.
  • In 1935 the California State Association of
    Nurse Anesthetists became an official affiliate
    of the national group.

150
Chapter 5 - California
  • Mr. McFadden, Miss Curtis lawyer in 1931 asked
    the Attorney General had his office ever
    rendered a legal opinion to the State Medical
    Board to the effect that the giving of an
    anesthetic by an unlicensed person was a
    violation of the medical practice act.
  • The answer was, no, it had not.

151
Chapter 5 - California
  • The State Board of Medical Examiners were next
    to ask the Attorney General for an opinion.
  • The response from Mr. Webb, the Attorney
    General, on September 26, 1933, began by noting
    the specific questions posed

152
Chapter 5 - California
  • Questions asked
  • 1) Whether a registered nurse may administer
    anaesthetics for general surgical procedures in a
    hospital.
  • 2) May a registered nurse administer anaesthetics
    in the office of a physician or surgeon for minor
    work.

153
Chapter 5 - California
  • 3) May a registered nurse administer anaesthetics
    in homes for obstetric work.
  • The Attorney General stated that the preface to
    each question is that the administration of such
    anaesthetics shall always be under the
    supervising surgeon of the attending physician
    and surgeon.
  • What does this imply?

154
Chapter 5 - California
  • The opinion of the Attorney General cited in his
    response the precedent Frank v. South case from
    the Kentucky Supreme Court in 1917.
  • Nurse anesthetists were not practicing medicine.

155
Chapter 5 - California
  • Attorney General cont.
  • 1) Nurse anesthetists did not present themselves
    as physicians.
  • 2) Did not hold a medical license.
  • 3) Administered anesthetics at the direction of a
    surgeon.

156
Chapter 5 - California
  • Attorney General cont.
  • 4) Did not have an office or announce to the
    public her readiness to treat the sick or
    afflicted.
  • 5) Never prescribed for anyone.
  • 6) Did acknowledge that nurse anesthetists use
    their own judgment in the administration of
    anesthetics.

157
Chapter 5 - California
  • Attorney General cont
  • Attorney General Webb noted that there was no
    legal support for the position that the mere fact
    of being a physician conferred an expertise in
    the administration of anesthetics.
  • Missouri court case Spain v. Burch, that gave
    the same opinion as Frank v. South.

158
Chapter 5 - California
  • In 1933, the Anesthetic Section of the Los
    Angeles County Medical Association asked Dr. W.
    Chambers-Francis, to test legally, the right of
    nurse anesthetists to administer anesthetics.

159
Chapter 5 - California
  • The Nurse Anesthetist target was Dagmar Nelson, a
    graduate of the Mayo Clinic who had been invited
    by a surgeon, Dr. Verne Hunt to come to St.
    Vincents Hospital, Los Angeles to work as a
    nurse anesthetist.

160
Chapter 5 - California
  • Dr. Hunt had had the death of a patient from
    asphyxiation (a 23 year old patient for minor
    surgery) by an anesthetist with little training.
  • The physician anesthetists first sought an
    injunction to restrain permanently Dagmar Nelson
    from administering anesthetics.

161
Chapter 5 - California
  • Test case
  • Plaintiffs
  • Dr. W. Chambers-Francis
  • Dr. W. Wightman
  • Dr. A. Waller
  • Along with the Anesthesia Section of the Los
    Angeles County Medical Association.

162
Chapter 5 - California
  • Test case
  • Defendants
  • Miss Dagmar Nelson
  • Dr. V. Hunt
  • St. Vincents Hospital

163
Chapter 5 - California
  • Test case
  • Judge Roth of the Superior Court, (1934) ruled
    that the Anesthesia Section could not be part of
    the suit.
  • (Issue they as a group did not have property
    rights to contest)

164
Chapter 5 - California
  • Test case
  • July 12, 1934, Superior Court of Los Angeles,
    Judge Allen B. Campbell presiding, Miss Dagmar
    Nelson went on trial for violating the California
    Medical Practice Act practicing medicine without
    a license.

165
Chapter 5 - California
  • Test case
  • The physician anesthetists argument was that
    the administration of anesthetics was, in effect,
    the practice of medicine for the following
    reasons
  • 1) The surgeon, being separated from the
    anesthetist by a screen, could in no way
    supervise the actual adm. of an anesthetic.

166
Chapter 5 - California
  • Test case
  • 2) That an anesthetic was a drug. That in
    administering the drug the anesthetist used his
    own judgment as to the amount and that in so
    doing he was treating the patient.

167
Chapter 5 - California
  • Test case
  • 3) That in observing the signs of anesthesia and
    acting as those signs indicated he should, he was
    making a diagnosis of the patients condition.

168
Chapter 5 - California
  • Test case
  • The witnesses for the plaintiffs were physician
    anesthetists.
  • The witnesses for the defense depended chiefly
    on the testimony of surgeons.

169
Chapter 5 - California
  • Test case
  • The defense stated that it was an established
    practice within the law for registered nurses to
    give anesthetics as a nursing duty.

170
Chapter 5 - California
  • Test case
  • The 12-day trial ended on July 27, 1934. The
    judgment followed shortly.

171
Chapter 5 - California
  • Test case ruling
  • 1) That at the times mentioned in the complaint
    defendant Nelson was engaged as a nurse
    anesthetists under the direction and supervision
    of operating surgeons, and with the knowledge of
    defendant, St. Vincents Hospital, a corporation.

172
Chapter 5 - California
  • Test case ruling
  • 2) That the acts of the defendant Nelson under
    the evidence introduced in this case, do not
    constitute practicing medicine or surgery under
    the Medical Practice Act.

173
Chapter 5 - California
  • Test case ruling
  • 3) That the evidence in this case is insufficient
    to make out a case against defendants, or either
    of them, of practicing medicine without a license
    in violation of the Medical Practice Act.
  • Issued by Judge Allen B. Campbell on July 31,
    1934.

174
Chapter 5 - California
  • Test case ruling
  • The physician anesthetists appealed but the
    judgment was upheld by the Supreme Court of
    California, on May 18, 1936.

175
Chapter 5 - Agatha Hodgins
  • My Chief Interest Is in Education.
  • Agatha Hodgins, June 20, 1932

176
Chapter 5 - Agatha Hodgins
  • When the U.S. entered WWI in 1917, Ms Hodgins
    stayed behind to run the anesthesia school at
    Lakeside Hospital in Cleveland for physicians,
    dentists, and nurses in anesthesia.

177
Chapter 5 - Agatha Hodgins
  • Agatha Hodgins in a letter (1932) she stated
    that the need for establishing uniform and
    stringent criteria for the education of nurse
    anesthetists was the motive behind her drive for
    national organization.
  • There were nurses with little or no training
    giving anesthetics causing serious problems.

178
Chapter 5 - Agatha Hodgins
  • In a letter to Adeline Curtis regarding the
    national organization. Ms Hodgins wrote,
    although I am very willing indeed to do what I
    can in regard to the organization, my chief
    interest is in education and I do not feel that I
    would be able to accept responsibility of this
    sort for a long period of time. Ms Hodgins was
    in poor health.

179
Chapter 5 - Gertrude Fife
  • There were others than Ms Hodgins interested in
    the education of nurse anesthetists.
  • One was Miss Gertrude Fife.

180
Chapter 5 - Gertrude Fife
  • When Gertrude Fife addressed the first national
    convention of the National Association of Nurse
    Anesthetists in 1933, she called for a committee
    to investigate nurse anesthesia schools for the
    purpose of accreditation and for a national board
    examination for nurse anesthetists.

181
Chapter 5 - Gertrude Fife
  • Miss Fife stated that these steps would
    safeguard the surgeons interest, the interest
    of the hospitals, and the interest of the
    public.
  • What was not known at that time was the role
    that physicians had had in shaping the
    professional association and educational
    programs. Page 96

182
Chapter 5 - Gertrude Fife
  • Physician input. Ms Fife reported that a Dr.
    Karsner, Professor of Pathology at Western
    Reserve University, who had been involved in
    starting the national Board of Examinations for
    doctors, offered to help her with the
    establishment of standards for schools and a
    national examination for nurse anesthetists.

183
Chapter 5 - Gertrude Fife
  • Dr. Karsner had worked out a plan for Miss Fife
    on the subjects and asked her to put the plan
    into her own words because the members would
    accept it only if it came from a nurse
    anesthetist.
  • Miss Fife later administered an anesthetic to
    Dr. Karsner when he required surgery.

184
Chapter 5 - Gertrude Fife
  • Gaining acceptance for Ms Fifes plan of a
    national exam and accreditation of schools was
    not easy, chiefly because Hodgins favored another
    approach state registration.
  • Perhaps because of charges over the years from
    physicians that nurse anesthetists were not
    licensed.
  • A contest of wills Fyfe and Hodgins.

185
Chapter 5 School of Nurse Anesthesia
  • Minimum standards set by the NANA Board of
    Trustees at its first national meeting in 1933
  • Standards were revised in 1935 and 1936

186
Chapter 5Schools of Nurse Anesthesia
  • 1937 at the 4th Annual meeting of the NANA, a
    Recommended Curriculum was adopted and
    published.
  • Chairman of the education Committee was Miss
    Helen Lamb.

187
Chapter 5Schools of Nurse Anesthesia
  • 1937 - Education Committee
  • Issued a statement that schools must give to
    their students training both theoretical and
    practical which is equivalent to the curriculum
    that the Education Committee recommended.

188
Chapter 5Schools of Nurse Anesthesia
  • Minimum standards (1937)
  • Length of course - 6 months (1 year
    recommended)
  • Hrs of recorded classroom instruction - 45
  • Hours of recorded O.R. instruction - 18
  • Number of cases administered - 325

189
Chapter 5Schools of Nurse Anesthesia
  • Of the 325 cases
  • 250 must be general surgical
  • 25 should be obstetrical
  • 25 may be dental
  • 25 divided between spinals/locals

190
Chapter 5 - National Exam
  • 1935 Fyfe proposed a plan for a national exam to
    the NANA Board of Trustees
  • Select 7 people on the exam board.
  • Include 2-3 outstanding surgeons.

191
Chapter 5 - National Exam
  • This group would prepare the test questions and
    the exam. To be administered to every student
    before graduation from any school of anesthesia
    that wished to be recognized by the NANA. Those
    who passed would be issued a certificate.

192
Chapter 5 - National Exam
  • Miss Fyfe was correct in her predication that in
    a few years the superintendents and surgeons
    generally would require their anesthetist to be
    recognized by the National association.

193
Chapter 5Question of Happy Relationship
  • 1936 the Education Committee under Miss Helen
    Lamb proposed that the NANA join with
  • American Board of Surgery (ABS)
  • American Hospital Association (AHA)

194
Chapter 5
  • The American Board of Surgery tried to obtain a
    working relationship between the NANA and the
    American Board of Anesthesiology (formed in
    1937).
  • The American Board of Anesthesiology rejected
    any relationship with the NANA.

195
Chapter 5The Department of Education
  • May 1940 Hodgins, announced in the Bulletin of
    the AANA a new AANA Department of Education
    representing the educational teaching programs of
    the Association.
  • The Bulletin was to be used to present articles
    on physiology of respiration, etc. to upgrade the
    knowledge of members.

196
Chapter 5 - Nurse Anesthetist Service in World
War II
  • 1920 - Beatrice Quin, RN of the Army Nurse Corps
    spoke at the annual meeting of the NANA. She
    stated that the Army gave nurses relative rank.
    It was many years later the nurses in the Army
    Nurse Corps obtained the right to retire.

197
Chapter 5 - WWII
  • During WWII, the U.S. Army opened programs for
    nurse anesthetists in Washington, D.C. and at
    other Army hospitals.
  • The army sent Army nurses to civilian school
    for training in anesthesia.
  • 50 nurse anesthetists were on duty in the Army
    Nurse Corps.

198
Chapter 5 - WWII
  • Quin stated, these nurses are not appointed
    for assignment to special duties, but any nurse
    having special training is usually given the
    opportunity of using this knowledge.

199
Chapter 5 - WWII
  • It was this lack of assurance that the nurse
    anesthetist would serve as a nurse anesthetist
    that caused difficulties between the Army Nurse
    Corps and the American Association of Nurse
    Anesthetists.

200
Chapter 5 - WWII
  • There was the problem of maintaining morale
    among overworked nurse anesthetists in the Army.
  • Worked 8 hours or more days.
  • 16 - hours of on-call.
  • Other Army nurses worked 8 hour days with 16
    hours off.

201
Chapter 5 - WWII
  • Major Julia Flikke, Superintendent of the Army
    Nurse Corps (ANC) wrote the following statement
    to the AANA Nurse anesthetists in the ANC in
    the grade of nurse, with the relative rank of
    2nd. Lieutenantsince there is a need for
    anesthetists in the Nurse Corps at present, they
    are usually assigned to that duty.

202
Chapter 5 - WWII
  • Major Flikke continued
  • However, in some of the smaller Army hospitals,
    where more than one nurse anesthetists is on
    duty, they may be assigned to duties other than
    those of anesthetist.

203
Chapter 5 - WWII
  • From the U.S. Navy, Rear Admiral Ross McIntire,
    Surgeon General, provided the following
    statement
  • under existing Navy regulations there is no
    provision whereby nurses may be appointed in the
    Nurse Corps of the Navy or Naval Reserve for duty
    limited to the administration of anesthetics

204
Chapter 5 - WWII
  • The AANA made the following recommendation to its
    members
  • with the critical need before us for supplying
    more well trained nurse anesthetists to service
    the acute shortage which exists in civilian
    hospitals throughout the United States, the AANA
    is reluctant to urge the individuals of this
    highly trained

205
Chapter 5 - WWII
  • AANA statement continued
  • group to forsake their specialized and badly
    needed service in these civilian hospitals, for
    possible general nursing service in the military
    forces, under the regulations as they now exist.

206
Chapter 5 - WWII
  • March 1942 AANA President Helen Lamb wrote to the
    heads of both the Army and Navy Nurse corps,
    urging that nurse anesthetist be assigned to
    anesthesia service and given an appropriate rank.
  • Because of the critical need for nurse
    anesthetists for the war effort, the Army agreed.
    The Navy Nurse Corps refused.

207
Chapter 5 - WWII
  • The nurse anesthetists would have to wait until
    the end of WWII for such recognition.
  • In August 1947, LTC Katherine Baltz, Education
    Consultant to the ANC, published in the Journal
    of the AANA an essay title, The Value of Special
    Training In Anesthesia For the Army Nurse.

208
Chapter 5 - WWII
  • LTC Katherine Baltz admitted mismanagement for
    nurse anesthetists in the Army Nurse Corps during
    WWII.

209
Chapter 5 - The Diversity of Anesthesia Tng. in
the Military
  • The AANAs additional concern that its
    educational programs and plans not be compromised
    was well-founded.
  • The demand for nurse anesthetists in both the
    military and civilian spheres were so great that
    the AANA could not contain the growth of
    emergency-training programs.

210
Chapter 5 - WWII
  • The Army had programs which were little more
    than on-the-job training programs, some as short
    as three months.

211
Chapter 5A High Type of Service
  • Nurse anesthetists received citations for
    meritorious service in both the Army and Navy
    during WWII.
  • Army nurse anesthetists served in front line
    hospitals in the Army as the war progressed.
  • - (Major M. Jernigan)

212
Chapter 5 - WWII
  • The AANAs wartime pursuit of educational goals.
  • In May 1942 the AANA published an 8 page
    recruiting brochure (written by Gertrude Fyfe)
    title, Anesthesia A Career for the Graduate
    Nurse. in it she presented the AANAs position
    in the face of the wartime emergency. The need
    for nurses

213
Chapter 5 - WWII
  • cont. Anesthetists both in civilian and Army
    hospitals is becoming increasingly urgent. In
    order to meet the situation, many schools of
    anesthesia have increased the student bodythe
    AANA has been opposed to lowering the standards
    by allowing students to be graduated with less
    clinical experience than necessary to prepare her

214
Chapter 5 - WWII
  • cont. properly for working in active surgical
    clinics. The Association has therefore
    encouraged the establishment of schools in
    hospitals equipped to offer training in this
    field.
  • During this same time (1942) was the call for a
    qualifying examination.

215
Military CRNAs 100 Year History
  • http//www.aana.com/bookstore/videos/Army_wmf/AANA
    100c.wmv

Click link above to launch Windows Media Player
Video
216
Chapter 6
  • Everything is Under Control

217
Chapter 6
  • AANA President Lucy Richards reflected in 1947
  • When the war came to an end, we all hoped that
    many of our problems would quickly disappear.
    The end of the war has brought forth not only a
    hangover of many of our old problems, but many
    new ones.

218
Chapter 6
  • With the growth of the AANA an Executive
    Director was appointed in 1948.
  • Miss Florence A. McQuillen, who had been a staff
    anesthetist and instructor of anesthesia at the
    Mayo Clinic.
  • No single assoc. leader before or after Miss
    McQuillen would exercise comparable control over
    all facets of its business.

219
Chapter 6An
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