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Nursing in Conflict & Chaos

conflict

A Chechen boy soldier stands in the street during the battle for Grozny. In 1995. Photographer: Mikhail Evstafiev, used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. Photo accessed from Wikimedia Commons.

Across time, wherever the need, nurses have sought to bring comfort & support for the suffering from disaster, war & violence. Florence Nightingale is a famous example. In keeping with this legacy, NIGH seeks to bring stories of the challenges nurses & caregivers still face in this arena today.

 

The horrific cost of armed conflict for individuals, families, communities and nation states cannot be underestimated. According to some estimates, over 90 per cent of the victims of armed conflict are civilians. The catastrophic sophistication of modern weaponry has rendered our global village a potentially very dangerous place. We are all potential victims, regardless where the conflict begins.

The physical costs are easiest to see: the loss of life, limbs, and other horrible, disfiguring injuries. Less visible, but no less damaging, are other kinds of loss, children abruptly orphaned, mothers frantically searching for missing infants, entire villages simply disappearing from the map. And how do we begin to assess the loss experienced by adolescents who know how to use an assault weapon – and kill - even before they fully realize the meaning of life?

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UNICEF Executive Director, Ann M. Veneman, has expressed alarm at the high number of children affected by continuing violence in the northern area of Sri Lanka.

 

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Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing (JHUSON) alumnus Glen D. Lapp, was one of ten medical aid workers who was ambushed and killed in Afghanistan last week, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.

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GBC-mapparium2

Visitors at the Mapparium in the Mary Baker Eddy Library in Boston, Massachusetts. This was the site to launch Dr. Jean Watson's Million Nurse Project—during the 2010 International Year of the Nurse—to radiate heart-centered Love, Caring and Compassion through individual and collective global meditations. Photo Courtesy of the Mary Baker Eddy Library.