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Army nursing

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11-967: (Redirected from Army Nurse Corps ) Army nursing may refer to: By country [ edit ] Australia [ edit ] Royal Australian Army Nursing Corps Australian Army Medical Women's Service Australian Service Nurses National Memorial, Canberra Britain [ edit ] Queen Alexandra's Royal Army Nursing Corps Women's Royal Army Corps India [ edit ] Military Nursing Service (India) New Zealand [ edit ] List of New Zealand organizations with royal patronage Pakistan [ edit ] Pakistan Army Republic of Korea [ edit ] Republic of Korea military academies Sri Lanka [ edit ] Sri Lanka Army Medical Corps United States [ edit ] United States Army Nurse Corps Education [ edit ] Cadet Nurse Corps Uniformed Services University of

22-489: Is a 2005 television documentary directed by Polly Watkins . It tells the story of six Australian Army nurses who served in a field hospital in Vietnam between the years 1962 and 1972. The film won an Australian Film Institute award in 2006 and received a further 3 nominations. This article related to an Australian made-for-TV movie is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article about

33-641: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Royal Australian Army Nursing Corps The Royal Australian Army Nursing Corps (RAANC) is a Administrative Corps of the Australian Army . It was formed in February 1951 from the Royal Australian Army Nursing Service. A Corps Badge was introduced in 1951 with the motto Pro Humanitate (for Humanity). It embraces

44-675: The Boer war , when the New South Wales and Victorian governments arranged for a detachment of nurses to deploy with their troops to Africa. Groups and individual nurses from Western Australia, South Australia and Queensland also served in the Anglo-Boer War. Due to the performance of the nurses in that conflict, an order was given in 1902 for the formation of the Australian Army Nursing Service under

55-863: The AANS, including two George Medals . [1] [2] [3] In 1945, Princess Alice, Duchess of Gloucester , became the Honorary Colonel Princess Alice, Duchess of Gloucester , and in 1948 the service was renamed as the Royal Australian Army Nursing Service . It became part of the Australian Regular Army the following year, eventually becoming a corps in February 1951 - the Royal Australian Army Nursing Corps (RAANC). Vietnam Nurses Vietnam Nurses

66-677: The Health Sciences section USU Graduate School of Nursing Specific conflicts [ edit ] Timeline of nursing history Pre-1900s [ edit ] International Committee of the Red Cross International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement American Red Cross Nursing Service World War I [ edit ] Women in the First World War World War II [ edit ] Women's roles in

77-717: The QAIMNSR and at least 388 were decorated. In addition, more than 400 nurses served solely in Australia as part of the AANS Home Service (see Nurses on Home Service with AMF) In World War II , more than 3580 women joined the AANS (see Australian nurses in World War II) with 71 members losing their lives (23 in battle and 18 as a result of accident or illness). Thirty-eight nurses became prisoners of war . A total of 137 decorations were awarded to members of

88-3372: The World Wars Military nursing services [ edit ] Military nurse U.S. Navy Nurse Corps , a staff corps of the United States Navy U.S. Air Force Nurse Corps Army nursing in films [ edit ] Vietnam Nurses documentary about Australian nurse experience. China Beach (season 1) China Beach (season 2) China Beach (season 3) MASH (film) M*A*S*H (TV series) v t e Nursing Levels of practice Generalists Student nurse Clinical nurse leader Licensed practical nurse Registered nurse Graduate nurse Nurse scientist Advanced practice APNs by role Clinical nurse specialist Nurse anesthetist Nurse midwife Nurse practitioner NPs by population Family Adult-gerontology Pediatrics Women's health Neonatal Psych/mental health Education and licensure Nightingale Pledge Associate of Science in Nursing Bachelor of Science in Nursing Diploma in Nursing Doctor of Nursing Practice Master of Science in Nursing Board of nursing Nurse Licensure Compact Nursing credentials and certifications Nurse education Nurse registry NCLEX TEAS Specialties and areas of practice Ambulatory care Cardiac Correctional nursing Critical care Dental Education Emergency Faith community Flight Forensic Geriatrics Holistic Home health Hyperbaric Legal consultation Management Matron Medical-surgical Midwifery Women's Health Care Nurse Military Neonatal Nursing informatics Obstetrics Occupational health Oncology Orthopedics Pediatrics Perianesthesia Perioperative Psychiatric and mental health Private duty Public health School Space Surgical Telenursing Travel health nursing WOCN Nursing process Nursing assessment Nursing diagnosis Nursing care plan Nursing theory Classification systems NANDA Nursing Interventions Classification Nursing Minimum Data Set (NMDS) Nursing Outcomes Classification By country International Nurses Day Australia ( timeline ) Canada Germany Hong Kong India Iran Japan Kenya New Zealand ( timeline ) Pakistan Philippines Republic of Ireland South Africa Spain Taiwan United Kingdom ( history ) United States ( history ) [REDACTED] Category [REDACTED] Commons [REDACTED] WikiProject Topics referred to by

99-587: The control of the Federal Government . It is this order's promulgation, 1 July 1903, which is celebrated as RAANC Corps day. More than 2000 - and some say up to 2286 - AANS female nurses served overseas in the World War I with 423 serving in Australia, together with 130 Australians who had enlisted with the AANS but were transferred to work with Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service Reserve . 21 AANS died on service together with 2 from

110-420: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Army nursing . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Army_nursing&oldid=822720371 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

121-536: The values of compassion and service to others, reflecting the care and dedication provided to the wounded and sick. Approval for the Corps flag was granted on 7 February 1958. The history of RAANC can be traced back to the formation of the Australian Army Nursing Service on 13 August 1898 in New South Wales. At the time it was made up of one Lady Superintendent and 24 nurses. The service saw its first action in

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