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Social History of Medicine Advance Access published online on November 3, 2009

Social History of Medicine, doi:10.1093/shm/hkp057
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© The Author 2009. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for the Social History of Medicine. All rights reserved.

‘The Most Important Problem in the Hospital’: Nursing in the Development of the Intensive Care Unit, 1950–1965

Robert E. Bulander, Jr*

* Department of Surgery, University of Minnesota, 420 Delaware St. SE, MMC 195, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA. E-mail: bulan002{at}umn.edu


   Abstract

Modern intensive care units (ICUs) have been described as unique spheres within the hospital environment, where advanced technology and specialised medical practice intersect in the care of physiologically unstable patients. Early ICUs in the United States, however, were a far more modest phenomenon. Faced with a mismatch of available nursing labour to growing demand for hospital services, hospital administrators in the 1950s seized upon the idea of the ICU as a means of concentrating the sickest patients in an area where they could be efficiently managed by a trained corps of specialist nurses. This article addresses the planning, staffing, and construction of ICUs in the United States during the 1950s.

Keywords: intensive care unit; nursing; ICU


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