Dame Cicely Saunders, Founder of Modern Hospice

Dame Cicely Saunders
Founder of Modern Hospice

Women and Adversity: Dame Cicely Saunders

Founder of Modern Hospice

Hospice has comforted millions of people worldwide, thanks to the persistence, determination and research of Dame Cicely Saunders. This woman was born in England in 1918 of a wealthy family. At six feet tall, she was an imposing figure. Despite family objections, she entered nursing school but developed back pain and was told she couldn’t finish the training because the duties of the nurse would leave her in constant pain.

She loved the patients and became a Lady Almoner, now known as a medical social worker. In this capacity she realized that dying patients not only needed relief from severe pain but from mental anguish. They questioned their accomplishments through their lives, worried about their families and felt helpless.

Dame Saunders decided being a doctor was the way she could help dying patients. She researched ways to control pain and began to give morphine orally. Since her findings proved beneficial, she and her colleagues opened St. Christopher’s Hospice for the terminally ill. They then taught other medical professionals how to care for dying patients and the Hospice movement spread. Dean Florence Wald of Yale University Nursing School picked up the cause in America.

In 1980 at the age of 61 Dame Saunders married Marian Bohusz-Szyszko, who was 79. He died in 1995, having spent his last days at St. Christopher’s Hospice. Dame Saunders died in 2005.

More about Dame Cicely Saunders:

http://cicelysaundersinternational.org/dame-cicely-saunders-a-brothers-story

http://www.bmj.com/content/suppl/2005/07/18/331.7509.DC1

http://www.biography.com/people/cicely-saunders-9472419

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1179787

Article By: Jo Ann Mathews

I published three ebooks in 2020: Women and Adversity, Honoring 23 Black Women; Women and Adversity, Recognizing 23 Notable Mothers; and Women and Adversity, Saluting 23 Faithful Suffragists to commemorate the hundredth anniversary of the passage of the 19th Amendment giving women the right to vote. These books are meant to be study guides for all students from grade school through college to help in choosing topics for assignments and to learn more about these noteworthy women. Go to amazon.com, barnesandnoble.com and goodreads.com to learn more.

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