Pearl McIver RN, BS, MS | |
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Born | Pearl McIver June 23, 1893 Lowry, Minnesota, United States |
Died | June 3, 1976 82) | (aged
Education | School of Nursing |
Occupation | 1933-1957 US |
Years active | 1918-1957 |
Employer | United States Public Health Service |
Organization | United States Public Health Service |
Known for | Leadership |
Pearl McIver (June 23, 1893 – 1976) was an American nurse and public official. She was noted for her work with the United States Public Health Service (USPHS) and was the first nurse to be employed by the body in providing consultation services on nursing administration. McIver later served with various health organizations, and retired in 1957 after being the USPHS' Chief of the Division of Public Health Nursing. She was inducted into the American Nurses Association Hall of Fame in 2014.
McIver was born on June 23, 1893, in Lowry, Minnesota. She was the daughter of a Scottish immigrant father and her mother, from Minnesota, was of Norwegian descent. She began her career as a school teacher in North Dakota. [1]
McIver attended the University of Minnesota's School of Nursing. She nursed children during the 1918 flu pandemic, and cared for them by removing her mask and cap. McIver then wrapped the child in cloth and rocked them in her arms until they calmed down and consumed fluids. She graduated from the school in 1919, and remained at the university to work in the hospital for the next three years. [2] [3] : 63, 136 McIver later obtained Bachelor of Science and Master of Arts degrees in administration from Teachers College, Columbia University. [1]
McIver was one of the first students to attend the initial training program in Public Health at the University of Minnesota in 1919, taught by Louise Powell. It was established in cooperation with the Minnesota Public Health Association, the first of its kind in the state. [4] : 25
McIver was also the director of public health nursing in the Missouri State Health Department. [1] [5] : 1162
In 1933, she was employed by the United States Public Health Service (USPHS) in their Division of Public Health, as the first US Public Health Nurse. [4] : 136 She worked as a public health nursing analyst to concentrate on the national health needs of the people. The USPHS hired other nurses to help McIver in providing consultation to all states regarding issues relating to nursing. [6] She was the first nurse to be employed by the USPHS to provide consultation on nursing administration. [5] : 1162 [7] McIver was convinced that the strengths of each individual director of public health nursing of each state would influence its scope and quality. [8] Her goal was to have an experienced nursing director in the health department of every state. [5] : 1164 She later continued with the service by working in their Division of Domestic Quarantine. McIver worked closely with the Director of Nursing in the U.S. Children's Bureau, Naomi Deutsch, to support community nursing services in a coordinated way. [5] : 1164
In 1944 McIver was made chief of public health nurses. [1] McIver had the honor of administering the oath to the Minnesota Nursing Cadet Corps members at their induction in May, 1944 at Northrop Auditorium in Minneapolis. [3] : 146–149
McIver was the chief of the Nursing Unit of the Children’s Bureau, and was responsible for training and assigning public health nurseries to various departments in the health sector. [6] After serving as the USPHS Chief of the Division of Public Health Nursing, she retired in 1957, after 22 years of service. [2] [4] : 136 [9]
She also worked with the American Nurses Association (ANA) for nearly 20 years, and was its president between 1948 and 1950. McIver was the editor of the American Journal of Nursing and served as the Vice-President of the American Public Health Association where she oversaw the foundation of the organization's nursing section. She was the chairperson of the Federal Nursing Council, was a member of the Expert Panel of Nursing for the World Health Organization, was the chairperson of the International Council of Nurses Constitution Committee, and was the Vice-Chairperson of the American Nurses Foundation. [10]
McIver died on June 3, 1976, at the age of 83. [10] [11] : 38
McIver helped to influence a greater than 40% increase in employment in the local public health sectors of each state. [8] She received the Outstanding Achievement Award from the University of Minnesota in 1951. [12]
In 1955 the Lasker Foundation jointly awarded the Mary Woodland Lasker Public Service Award to McIver along with Margaret Arnstein and Lucile Petry Leone. [13] [7] [5] : 1168
The inaugural Public Health Nurse Award was awarded to McIver by the Public Health Nurses Section of the ANA in 1956, which was later renamed in her honor. [10]
She was awarded the Florence Nightingale Medal by the American Red Cross on May 8, 1961. [14] McIver was inducted into the American Nurses Association Hall of Fame in 2014. [10]
Sister Elizabeth Kenny was a self-trained Australian bush nurse who developed an approach to treating polio that was controversial at the time. Her method, promoted internationally while working in Australia, Europe and the United States, differed from the conventional one of placing affected limbs in plaster casts. Instead she applied hot compresses, followed by passive movement of the areas to reduce what she called "spasm". Her principles of muscle rehabilitation became the foundation of physical therapy or physiotherapy in such cases.
Diane Carlson Evans is a former nurse in the United States Army during the Vietnam War and the founder of the Vietnam Women's Memorial Foundation, which established the Vietnam Women's Memorial located at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. In 1984, with the help of Minneapolis Sculptor Rodger M. Brodin, and Vietnam veterans Donna-Marie Boulay and Gerald C. Bender, the Vietnam Women's Memorial Project was founded. Evans initiated and led the effort to completion.
The United States (U.S.) Cadet Nurse Corps (CNC) for women was authorized by the U.S. Congress on 15 June 1943 and signed into law by president Franklin D. Roosevelt on 1 July. The purpose of the law was to alleviate the nursing shortage that existed before and during World War II. The legislative act contained a specific provision that prohibited discrimination based upon race, color, or creed. The United States Public Health Service (USPHS) was named the supervisory agency; it was answerable to Thomas Parran, Jr. the surgeon general of the United States. The USPHS established a separate division to administer the CNC program and Parran appointed Lucile Petry a registered nurse (RN) as its director.
The Lasker–Bloomberg Public Service Award, known until 2009 as the Mary Woodard Lasker Public Service Award, is awarded by the Lasker Foundation to honor an individual or organization whose public service has profoundly enlarged the possibilities for medical research and the health sciences and their impact on the health of the public. The award, worth $250,000, is presented in odd-numbered years to a winner selected from among policy makers, journalists, philanthropists, advocates, scientists, and public health professionals. It is named after the philanthropists Albert Lasker and Michael R. Bloomberg.
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Lucile Petry Leone was an American nurse who was the founding director of the Cadet Nurse Corps in 1943. Because the Nurse Corps met its recruiting quotas, it was not necessary for the US to draft nurses in World War II. She was the first woman and the first nurse to be appointed as Assistant Surgeon General of the United States Public Health Service.
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Sarah Tarleton Colvin was an American nurse and women's rights advocate who served as the national president of the National Woman's Party in 1933. Jailed for her activism while picketing the White House in 1918 and 1919, Colvin later wrote her autobiography about the suffrage movement and her nursing career.
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