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Description
Mrs. Robinson describes her feelings on changing the professional name of nurses in the Armed Forces from Nursing Sisters to Nursing Officers. She recalls how and why the name was changed.
Transcription
Well it sort of changed with, with some of us feeling strongly about it at the time that were still in the forces, yeah, yeah. Because it's misleading. It, it indicates, nursing sister, sort of indicates that you're not on the forces, you're just sort of a nurturer, and all you're there for is to, cool the fevered brows of men and this, this is not what we're about. We were officers, we're officers first, nurses second, like every other classification in the armed forces. You don't, you don't hear the military engineers being called, engineers first, they're called by their rank, and because they're officers first and everyone in the forces has some sort of a trade or occupation. But the fact that they're in the forces takes priority over that. That's what makes them different from civilians, that's all. So that's why we felt strongly about changing it. But there's a great number that feel it shouldn't be changed yet. And you know, they're the ones, they're the older military nurses that don't want it changed and you know for obvious reasons I suppose. Because they still think of themselves as looking after our boys.