|
Jane
Bell 1873 - 1959 hospital matron
Jane
Bell (1873-1959), hospital matron, was born on 16 March 1873 at
Middlebie, Dumfriesshire, Scotland, daughter of Helen (born Johnstone)
and William Bell, farmer. Before she was thirteen both parents and
four siblings had died of tuberculosis. Helped by their local Presbyterian
church, Jane and her surviving two sisters and brother emigrated
to Sydney in 1886. The sternly Cameronian background of Dumfriesshire
(where the most treasured historical traditions were the stories
of the persecutions), and Jane Bell's own personal tragedy, moulded
her determination to fight for the less privileged.
She trained at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, and went to
Queensland in 1903 as matron to the Bundaberg Hospital, and in 1904
to Brisbane General Hospital. Miss Bell went to London in 1906 to
undertake midwifery training at Queen Charlotte's Hospital and in
the following year was appointed senior assistant lady superintendent
of nursing at the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary. She returned to Australia
to take up appointment as lady superintendent at the Melbourne Hospital
(1910-34).
On the outbreak of war she was appointed principal matron of the
First Australian General Hospital. Her conflicts with the Army Medical
Service in Egypt over nurse staffing control foretold her future
struggle to advance the status of the nursing profession. When her
recommendations were rejected she asked to be returned to Australia,
and in October 1915 recommenced duty at the Melbourne Hospital.
An inquiry into the administration of the Australian General Hospital
vindicated her stand and paved the way for reorganisation of the
Australian Army Medical and Nursing Services in 1916.
Miss Bell combined unrelenting discipline, cleanliness and rigorous
nurse training with fairness and kindness. She overcame hospital
management obstruction, to introduce many reforms to nurses' conditions
and training. The appointment of a tutor sister to instruct trainees
in 1920, and the introduction of a six-week preliminary training
school in 1927, were two of her most notable achievements. Her responsibilities
included the hospital's domestic staff and she showed great enterprise
in alleviating their poor conditions and pay, caused by hospital
financial constraints and a lack of industrial guidelines.
As a relative of the famous Thomas Carlyle, yet deprived of all
but a basic schooling, Miss Bell placed great emphasis on education.
To realise her dream of giving nursing a professional status, she
devoted many years to restructuring nurse organisations and updating
qualifications. She was a foundation member in 1899 of the Australasian
Trained Nurses' Association, a member from 1910 of the Royal Victorian
Trained Nurses' Association (later Royal Victorian College of Nursing)
and the Nurses' Board from 1924-50. While president of the College
of Nursing (1931-34, 1935-46), she assisted in setting up the College's
postgraduate training courses (1934).
Efforts to change the lingering nineteenth century perception of
the nurse as the 'Lady with the Lamp' remained Miss Bell's greatest
challenge. She waged a continual battle for uniform conditions and
salaries, but objected to the sole emphasis placed on industrial
relations by nurse organisations in the 1930s. Her most significant
achievement was in persuading contemporaries that all aspects of
nursing - training, education, conditions and remuneration - were
equally important. Several of her recommendations for the future
organisation of the nursing profession, which formed the basis of
her evidence to the Commonwealth Parliamentary Joint Committee on
Social Security in 1944, were ultimately adopted.
Miss Bell was appointed OBE in 1944. She died at Royal Melbourne
Hospital on 6 August 1959.
Jennifer Williams
Jennifer A. Williams and Rupert D. Goodman Jane Bell, OBE, (1873-
1959), Lady Superintendent, The Royal Melbourne Hospital 1910-1934
1988.
|