{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","CatalogueRecord":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isReferencedBy","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","Creator":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/creator","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","Extent":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/extent","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Subject":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/subject","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"CatalogueRecord":[{"@value":"http:\/\/resolve.library.ubc.ca\/cgi-bin\/catsearch?bid=1191321","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"History of Nursing in Pacific Canada","@language":"en"}],"Creator":[{"@value":"British Columbia. Provincial Board of Health","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2015-03","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1924-10","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nursing\/items\/1.0211789\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"Extent":[{"@value":"10 pages","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Issued by the\nPROVINCIAL BOARD OF HEALTH, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nPublic Health Nurses' Bulletin\nOCTOBER, 1924\nV.\n\/     >t-\u00a9.    \/\nIT is the purpose of the Provincial Board of Health to assist the Public\nHealth Nurses to issue a bulletin which will be a medium for the\nexchange of ideas in connection with their daily work.\nWe all profit by experience gained when applying our theoretical\nknowledge to problems that arise and which may be classed as purely\nlocal. Yet similar conditions in other districts may have to be met, and\none nurse's experience when told through the bulletin may be of great\nhelp to others.\nWith this object in view the nurses have been asked to send in from\ntime to time an account of their trials and tribulations, giving or asking\nfor advice.\nSuch an interchange of ideas will be of great benefit to all; not only\nto the nurses, but to the women's organizations, who are so much interested in the work and who are the main support of the service.\nWe wish the public to understand and appreciate the difficulties\nwhich the nurses have to contend with and we also wish to have the\nbulletin be a means of educating the public to the fact that a nation can\nonly exist and progress on a firm foundation of health.\nWe owe such-4. service to the rising generation.\nMiss Jeffares, Public Health Nurse at Duncan, has kindly edited the\npresent issue.\nWe have reserved material, from centres not mentioned, for a later\nissue.\nSPEAKING OF RESULTS.\nThe actual figures are often beyond our greatest hopes, which is\nanother way of saying that the report of my first year's school-work in\nNanaimo surprises even myself. |p|\nThe results from bur dental campaign are very gratifying; the\nteachers and the parents, as well as the members of our medical staff,\nhave united in making dental work and the routine care of the teeth the\npopular thing. In two classes one-half the pupils have already been to\nthe dentist, and in a school of 146 pupils we could only find two boys\nwho did not have perfectly clean teeth. , \u2022\n The children were asked to sign lists in the class-rooms, giving the-\ndate they began and the date they completed dental treatment.    Class\nrivalry was stimulated by the promise of a star on the longest list.   This\nalso gave me an excellent record of the dental work.\nM. J. Woods (Nanaimo).\nCOMMUNITY SERVICE.\nMiss McClung, Kelowna, reports that she is a\" member of a Relief\nCommittee, the object of the committee being to raise sufficient money\nto enable Miss McClung to make arrangements for the necessary medical\nand surgical attention required by children whose parents cannot afford\nit. We must ask Miss McClung to let us have a report of the work of\nher committee and the result of their general appeal to the public for\nfunds.\nSCHOOL-WORK IN VERNON.\nThere are four schools in the town, with about 1,000 children in\nattendance. The majority of the children are suffering from defects\nwhich have been reported on by the previous nurse, and are still uncorrected.   The great difficulty seems to be a financial one.\nI found the Women's Institute very helpful, and through them was\nable to get a dental chair installed in one of the schools, with a view to\narranging for a dental clinic shortly.\nIn visiting the homes of the children, I find the parents are very\npleased to get any advice with regard to the health of the children I am\nable to give them.\nJean A. Dunbar (Vernon).\nCOLWOOD.\n\u2022 In a large district, such as the one in which I am operating as nurse\nin charge of the Esquimalt Rural Nursing Service, the service necessary\nto bring about the desired results of educating the people to a realization\nof the benefits derived from supporting such a service in their midst is\nvery varied.\nApart from the usual aims and objects of a Public Health Nurse,\nwhich include the dissemination of all information tending to check the\nspread of infectious and contagious diseases, and the inculcation of habits\nof right living amongst the people, child-welfare, etc., social service must\nplay a very important part in the daily life of a nurse in charge of such\na service.\nIf all the work accomplished by a Public Health Nurse could be made\npublic, there would be no difficulty in obtaining the vote of the people at\nthe annual ratepayers' meetings for the extra small assessment towards\n2 I\n the upkeep of the service in their midst, but much of her work has of\nnecessity to be kept confidential, and therefore much of the benefits of\nthe service are known to only the few.\nI will quote one case of many, withholding, of course, names and\nanything which may lead to identification, whereby the State has been\nsaved, potentially, many thousands of dollars; the State, and thereby the\npeople.\nThe case deals with the Social Service Branch of the work. I\nlearned of a family living away back in the bush, where there were three\nboys who, owing to them living outside the 4-mile limit, had never attended\nschool. Accompanied by the vicar of the parish, I went to investigate\nthe case. Taking my little car up miles of rough trail with barely room\nat times to pass, we eventually located the place where the family in\nquestion were living. There we found a shocking condition of things in\ngeneral. The three boys, ages 6, 8, and 10, had not only never been inside\na school, but were unable to speak properly, owing to the fact that the\nfather was almost stone-deaf and the mother on the verge of a mental\ncollapse through loneliness and lack of association with her fellow-\ncreatures.\nWithin two weeks we had the family moved to the village of ,\nand very soon after that had collected sufficient clothing for the boys to\nattend the school there. This was some months ago, and the boys are\nnow doing well at their studies and show fine promise, and the mother,\nthough still suffering more or less from her terrible experience of loneliness in the bush, shows great improvement, and no reason at all why\nshe should not become a normal healthy woman. The father, a good\nworkman, but severely handicapped by his extreme deafness, will have\nthe chance to become a useful self-supporting citizen, as I succeeded in\ninteresting the local Women's Institute and the Nursing Association to\nthe extent of procuring an ear-trumpet for him.\nThat is oiilyybne case from one portion of the district; but it will\nserve to show how necessary it is for a Public Health Nurse, when in\ncharge of a district, to give and have a wide view of the opportunities of\nservice, and for the people to realize this service and support it liberally,\nand thereby save themselves increased taxation in the future. It will\nnot require a very vivid imagination to realize what a burden such a\nfamily would have become to the State eventually had they been left to\ntheir own devices.\nWith regard to the progress of the Nursing and Public Health Branch\nof the work, we have by. dint of perseverance, and with the co-operation\nof the Public Health Department and the Saanich Health Centre,\nto whom we are indebted for the loan of a dental chair, established a\ndental clinic for children of school age and under\u2014a service which has\nproved itself to be of undeniable benefit and which is greatly appreciated\nby the parents. We held our first clinic during the Easter holidays and\nare continuing the work to completion during the midsummer vacation.\nThere is no better foundation for health than in a clean mouth, with\n3\n well-preserved teeth that will masticate the food required to build up a\nhealthy child, and ensure a good digestion and assimilation of the same.\nOf my pre-natal work, first-aid work, etc., I need say very little, but\nit is very gratifying to note the growing confidence with which mothers\nwill appeal to the nurse for advice regarding the slight ailments of their\nchildren, and the welcome extended when making those numerous \" home \"\nvisits, which mean so little to the casual observer when reading of the\nnumber of | home 1 visits made in the monthly report, but which mean\nso much to the nurse and to the parents and to the future realization\nof the achievement of the aims and objects of the public-health movement. ^\nI have Girls' Health Clubs established in several of my districts,\nand hope before very long to have Boys' Health Clubs established 'as\nsuccessfully. My dreams for the future include a real health centre,\nwhere boys and girls and men and women and babies will come to\n\"play\" and learn to be healthy; not come because they are sick, but\ncome to learn how to keep well; space will not permit of detailed descriptions of my \" dream health centre,\" but in time I hope to achieve my\nobject. A Public Health Nurse's object and that of a Nursing Service\nshould be that of promoting public health; not merely the attending of\nsick people at so much per visit, but by giving advice privately, and\nin public-health talks show them how to keep well so that they won't\nrequire the services of the nurse for sickness, but be glad to pay for her\nupkeep in their midst because they recognize their need of her.\nI have a splendid committee to work with, one whose motto is\n\" progress,\" for which I am very thankful, and who are, one and all,\nin absolute sympathy with the movement and who encourage and do not\nhinder.\nHelen Kelly.\nDUNCAN.\nCowichan Lake School Fair.\nI had accepted an invitation to attend the School Fair at Cowichan\nLake, our most rural school, about 20 miles from) the Health Centre headquarters, and present the prizes for the Health-book Competition, which\nwere given by the Provincial Board of Health. Cowichan Lake School\nis in the centre of a logging community and most of the children come\nfrom the different camps.\nOn arrival at the school we found the judges were busy in the\nschool-house with the exhibits, and sports in progress on the grounds; a\ngroup of about forty parents being accommodated on roughly put-up\nbenches or on the desks from the school-house.\nIn the school-house the different exhibits were arranged attractively,\nour interest, of 'course, being centred on the \" Health Books.\" Last\nFebruary it had been suggested to the teacher that, if she cared to take\nthe matter up, a prize would be given for the best essay, poster, or book\non any health topic taken up by the School Nurse during the term.\n4\n About eighteen books and several posters were sent in competition; some\nof them were a great surprise. The majority of the books were illustrated with cut-outs, while some had little pencil or water-colour sketches,\nall of them being made to look as much like a book purchased in a shop\nas possible. One clever little book on \" Milk \" had an amiable-looking\ncow on the front cover and a very tiny milk-bottle in the centre of the\nback cover.\nAfter the sports had been run off and the judges had completed their\ntask, the pupils put on a little health playlet, in which there was paraded\nbefore a little, pale, thin | City Boy \" all the good things he could procure\nmore easily by living in the country. The children were dressed to look\nthe part of the article they represented; for instance, \" Egg \" was a tiny\ngolden-haired girl, carried in a large basket covered with white crepe\npaper. When all the 1 Good Things \" were arranged around the little\nboy and he was considering their real value, in walked a procession of\nhis old-time I Enemies,\" headed by a large \u00a7 Coffee-pot,\" and followed\nclosely by | Pie \" and \"Candy.\" It was not very long, however, before\nthe superior strength of 1 Milk \" and his faithful supporters was felt,\nthe | Enemies \" chased afar off, and thin, little 1 City Boy \" left to his\nnew friends.\nI. M. Jefpares (Duncan).\nGood-health Competitions in Rural Schools.\nRealizing that it was possible to arouse interest in health-teaching\nin rural schools by way of a good-health competition, We decided to put\non this year a competition among all the rural schools in our district.\nThe rules of the competition are simple and as follows:\u2014\nBetween the rural schools visited by the Public Health Nurses from\nthe Health Centre, Duncan, this year we are going to have the most wonderful competition for the best HEALTH POSTER, HEALTH BOOK,\nand for the best ESSAY on any HEALTH TOPIC.\nThere, arevgoing to be SIX PRIZES offered, as follows:\u2014 .\nPrize for the BEST POSTER made by a girl.\nPrize for the BEST POSTER made by a boy.\nPrize for the BEST HEALTH BOOK made by a girl..\nPrize for the BEST HEALTH BOOK made by a boy.\nPrize for the BEST ESSAY written by a girl.\nPrize for the BEST ESSAY written by a boy.\nThe poster is to illustrate a I Health Talk \" given by the nurse.   The\nessay may be upon any | Health Topic \" taken up by the nurse during the\nschool term.   The \" Health Book \" must tell and illustrate the story of\nI Good Health.\"\nSpecial Prizes.\u2014A special prize will be given in each school for the\nBEST POSTER,  HEALTH  BOOK,  OR  ESSAY,  the  age and  school\nstanding of the competitor to be taken into consideration by the judges.\nCompetition to close May 31st, 1925.\nThe Provincial Board of Health has kindly offered to see that we\nhave prizes and we are looking forward to a great many entries.\n5\n In order to conduct the competition with as little confusion as possible, we drew up the outline of \" Health Talks,\" given below, for the year,\nso that all the children will receive the same instruction and have an\nequal opportunity to send in the best poster, health book, or essay.\nMonth. Topic. Story.\nSept Cleanliness, fresh air, and sunshine The Pig Brother.\nOct Proper food and drink The Milk-bottle.\nNov Teeth Old Grouchyman Toothache.\nDec Proper clothing, posture, and exercise..The Crooked Man.\nJan School ventilation and common cold Mary had a Little Cold.\nFeb Germ-life\u2014common    cold    and   sore\nthroat Billy's Pal.\nMarch .The need of green vegetables and fruit,\nalso neatness and cheerfulness The Two Houses.\nApril Talk on annual physical examination,\nthe reason and why defects found\nshould   be   corrected,   leading   up,\nespecially with interest to the older\nchildren, to the need of a healthy\nrace physically, mentally, and morally in Canada.\nMay Flies, home and school sanitation !.The Diary of the F,ly.\nJune General   review   and  presentation  of\ncompetition prizes. ;\nI. M. Jepfares (Duncan).\nPERSONAL ITEMS.\nWhen a nurse is making a change from one district to another, it is\nvery pleasant to be able to carry away the knowledge that the people of\nthe district appreciate your work among them, not only professionally,\nbut from the community standpoint as well. Such must be the knowledge\nof Miss Gawley when she looks back on July last, when the people\nof the Malakwa District met together to make her a presentation, and to\nsay I Farewell\" to her on the eve of her departure.\n*****\nMiss Ada Benvie has resigned her position on the staff of the\nCowichan Health Centre, as she finds it is necessary for her to remain\nwith her mother, who is ill at her home in Nova Scotia.\nMiss E. Naden, B.Sc. (Nursing), U.B.C. '24, has been appointed to\nCowichan Health Centre.\n*    *    *    *\nMiss E. N. Bodenham has left Keremeos for the \" Old Country,\"\nwhere she expects to remain indefinitely.\n6\n CONVENTION NOTES.\nDuring the past summer there have been several conventions held\nin the East of interest to Public Health workers, and being fortunate\nenough to obtain a copy of notes taken by a Public Health Nurse attending three of the conventions, I thought perhaps some of the other nurses\nmight enjoy reading'them also, as it is surely interesting for us to have\nan idea of what the leaders of our profession are thinking and of the\nwork that is being carried on elsewhere.\nAt the Biennial National Nursing Convention held in Detroit in\nJune, Dr. Lockwood, of the Pasadena Hospital, spoke on \" The Role of\nthe Physician in the Education of the Nurse,\" after which there was a\nvery heated discussion, at which it was admitted that more and more the\neducation of the nurse should be turned over to the nurse. Dr. Lock-\nwood said that medical men were too busy to properly prepare their\nlectures, and consequently the lectures were often either too advanced\nand technical or too elementary to be of much value. He admitted that\nmany doctors felt that the pupils should receive only such teaching as\nthey chose to give them, but he felt that the nurses themselves should be\nequipped to give most of the teaching, and he felt sure that the doctors\nwould very soon realize the value of such a step and would be glad to\nrelinquish the teaching to the nursing profession.\n*****'\nIn giving an address on | Communicable Disease \" at a general session, Dr. Chas. Emerson, Dean, Indiana University School of Medicine,\nsaid he thought it was the duty of every Public Health Nurse to teach on\nevery possible occasion to individuals and to groups the value of serums,\nvaccines, and antitoxins as preventive measures against communicable\ndisease. He also felt that, unless the nurse herself was a firm believer\nin all preventive measures, she should not pretend to be teaching preventive medicine as a Public Health Nurse. He felt that a nurse who\ncould not believe thoroughly and implicitly in preventive measures that\nhad proved to be successful should find some other line of work.\nAt the Child Welfare Section of the National Organization of Public\nHealth Nursing, the general thought of the meeting was that in most\ncases too little attention was being paid to the pre:school child. While\nrealizing that at present the school-child needed a great deal of care and\nattention, it was felt that most organizations should lay more stress on\nthe necessity of allowing more time for work with the preschool, and\nthat much of the health-teaching in the schools would need to be given\nby the teachers, thus leaving the nurse free for more intensive pre-natal\nand preschool work.\nThe question of continued visits to mothers who failed to co-operate\nwith baby clinics and welfare organizations came in for lengthy discussion, some of the nurses maintaining that after a period of two or\nthree months such mothers should be dropped and the nurses' time and\nenergy given to those willing to co-operate.   Finally, however, the meeting\n7\n decided that this was not the wisest course, and that the mothers who\nwould not co-operate were those who were most in need of education,\nand that there should be no limit to the time of carrying such patients.\nIt was also suggested that a change of nurses visiting a particularly non-\nco-operative individual might bring about the desired results, as very\nfew of usin this world can deal satisfactorily with every question.\nAt another meeting, Dr. Haven Emerson, speaking on 1 Meeting the\nDemands for Community Health Work,\" emphasized the thought that\ncommunity health is, after all, primarily an individual problem; that\nwe must seek to educate people to their responsibilities towards maintaining the health of themselves and their children and of guarding\nagainst communicable disease by the preventive measures that are now\navailable. When this is done, community health will be cared for to a\ngreat extent by the people themselves. Dr. Emerson felt that this should\nbe the end towards which we should all strive, to make people realize and\nadmit their individual responsibility for the health of their community.\nMiss Crandall, of the American Child Health Association, took a\nview almost opposed to Dr. Emerson, and laid the responsibility for the\ncommunity health almost entirely on the State or Federal Government.\nShe advocated communistic methods of obtaining medical and hospital\naid and of pensions, etc., for old age, sickness, unemployment, etc. She\ndid not feel that the individual was primarily the one to undertake the\nwork of raising standards of community health.\nMr. William J. Norton, Secretary of Detroit Community Fund, said\nthat so often Public Health Nurses and doctors'were so interested and\nenthusiastic about their work that very often they failed to realize that\nthe public at large did not understand clearly just what they were trying\nto accomplish with the money they asked for.\nHe said that we should remember that, after all, it is the lay people\nwho provide the money, and we should take greater care to see that they\nunderstand just what we are trying to accomplish before we ask for\nmoney, and we should invite their co-operation in the spending of their\nmoney more often than we do.\nDr. Dixon, Director of V.D. Clinics, Detroit, spoke on 1 Milestones\nin Progress, of Social Hygiene from a Medical Standpoint.\" He emphasized the fact that venereal disease can be both cheaply and satisfactorily treated if we can only educate people to the necessity.\nHe said that in his opinion sex education should be given in the\nhome, but deplored the fact that so few people have a vocabulary which\nis at all adequate for such teaching. Dr. Dixon said he made it a practice\nto ask the mothers and fathers who came to him for some considerable\nperiod just what they knew about such matters and what they could\ntell their children, and he said very few of them had words which could\nbe used without embarrassment. Dr. Dixon said he felt it was the duty\nof every physician to teach parents in simple dignified English what\n they hand on to their children, and maintained that such teaching could\ny never be undertaken until the people were provided with a vocabulary of\nsimple dignified words.\n*    *    *    *    *\nEfforts to prevent crime among foreigners should be along lines of\nshowing them the opportunities the new land has in store rather than\nendeavouring to make them forget their own national traditions and\nideas.\nThe Employment Service in Canada was reviewed by Professor Jackson, Toronto University. In 1923 about 377,000, or about one-eighth of\nthe working population of Canada, obtained work through this service.\nStabilization of employment by public expenditure was complicated by\nthe fact that the Federal Government does not consider unemployment\nprimarily its problem, although willing to help the municipalities to a\ncertain extent. Up to the present, Professor Jackson said, the method\nhas been haphazard and in future must be considered on broader lines.\nConference on Social Work, Toronto, June 25th to July 2nd.\nAt a luncheon of police-women, Mrs. Wooley, of the Merrill-Palmer\nSchool, Detroit, spoke on 1 Pre-delinquency,\" emphasizing the fact that a\ngreat many of the -lasting impressions are recorded on a child's mind\nbefore the age of 5 years. She is convinced that the seeds which later\nbring a harvest of disgrace are sown very early in life and are planted\nsometimes by parents, who are not evil-minded but merely injudicious,\nand are ignorant of methods of wisely training children. She believes\nthat back of every crime lies a mistake in training and that the innocent\nbeginning of many an evil habit lies in mistaken training methods of\nparents.\nThe telling of diplomatic lies was strongly denounced. Many parents\nconsider it an (easy way of dealing with children, but it is unsafe, particularly in dealing with the ages of 3 and 4, when the imagination is\napt to run riot.\nm\nMr. K. C. McLeod, of Edmonton, was the principal speaker at a\nmeeting when the problem of the underdeveloped child was discussed.\nHe was of the opinion that the time had come for drastic measures. He\nthought that many of the children could be socialized and if put in the\nright kind of home could be taught certain routine duties. Those incapable of being taught should, in his opinion, be chloroformed. Mr. McLeod\nthought that a country which was already overburdened with taxation\nshould not be asked to provide expensive institutional care for such\ncases. He also maintained that all definitely feeble:minded persons\nshould be sterilized, thus cutting off at the source the supply of feebleminded children.\nTwo resolutions were adopted at this meeting:\u2014\n(1.) To the effect that the association strongly disapproves of any\nnewspaper publishing any details of any criminal offence by children\n\u00a71111! 9\n before such a time as their cases have been disposed of by the Juvenile\nCourt; the theory being that the notoriety of any case injures the child\nand adds to the possibility of future delinquency.\n(2.) To advise the various Provincial Governments that they should\nharmonize and co-ordinate as far as possible those branches of the public\nservice dealing with the supervision and inspection of children in foster\nhomes, and the inspection conducted by the school, health, and other\norganizations, to avoid undue multiplication of expenses.\n*****\nDr. Bernstein described the development of the last thirty years in\nthe care and education of the feeble-minded as carried out by the institution at Rome, N.Y. All of the inmates (as far as possible) are trained\nfor some manual work. On some of the farms where the boys are taught\nthey are entirely self-supporting, and the simple environment of the farm\nis the best possible for them. Considerable success has been attained in\nstarting some homes for girls in small cities where they can go out and\nperform domestic duties during the day and return to the home at night.\nDr. Chas. Johnson was another speaker at the same meeting. He\ndeplored the feeling of antagonism which had arisen between many public\nand private agencies. He urged all social workers to go back with the\nresolve to educate legislators out of the belief that posts of responsibility\nin welfare-work should be regarded as\npolitical plums.\"\nAt the meeting of the Immigration Session, Dr. Barnes in his address\nsaid the immigrant should be taught English, but should also use their\nmother-tongue, and the best customs of their own land should be maintained and blended with our customs.\nVICTORIA, B.C.:\nPrinted by Chakles P.  Banfiebd, Printer to the King's Most Excellent Majesty.\n1924.\n1M-1024-7638\n10\n  ","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Periodicals","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"W1.PU2378","@language":"en"},{"@value":"WI_PU2378_V01_01","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0211789","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver: University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Victoria, B.C. : King's Printer","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the University of British Columbia Library.","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1924-10-31 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1924-10-31 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"University of British Columbia. Library. Woodward Library. Storage. W1 .PU2378","@language":"en"}],"Subject":[{"@value":"Nursing","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"Public health nurses' bulletin [vol.1, no.1]","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0211789"}