Article Text
Abstract
Beginning in 1924, the US Office of Indian Affairs sent public health or ‘field’ nurses to Native nations to provide preventative healthcare and education. The field nurse programme began under the US policy of assimilating Native Americans. To that end, field nurses championed ‘modern’ institutionalised medicine and opposed Indigenous health traditions. They taught an ethnocentric form of health education to Native mothers, and their work was complicit in the genocidal policy of removing Native children to federal boarding schools. However, Indigenous women resisted many of the interventions of the field nurse programme. They also exercised medical pluralism and sought other field nurse services relating to childbirth, prenatal and postpartum health, sometimes in defiance of the nursing programme’s professional boundaries. The history of the field nurse programme reveals the ways in which professionalised public health nursing served settler colonial policy, yet it also showcases Native women’s self-determination as pregnant patients and as nurses themselves.
- cultural history
- Medical humanities
- Nurse
- Public health
- Women's health
Data availability statement
No data are available.
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Data availability statement
No data are available.
Footnotes
Contributors Laurel Sanders is the sole author, researcher and guarantor of this article.
Funding The author completed this research with the support of the University of Iowa, where, as a graduate student, the author received student research and writing fellowships and travel funding. The American Association for the History of Nursing also awarded the author its predoctoral grant in 2018.
Competing interests None declared.
Patient and public involvement This study involves human participants. The author's sources concern events in the 1920s, 1930s and early 1940s. The author has omitted patient names and identifying details. The author conducted oral history interviews with the family members of a health care provider, with the permission of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians tribal government IRB. For reference, see Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians Tribal Council Resolution 2018–2456. Participants gave informed consent to participate in the study before taking part.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.