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Mary Breckinridge (1881 - 1965) By Gina Castlenovo, MSN, MPH, RN
In the early 1900s, many women in rural areas of the United States had no access to health care. Most women gave birth to their children at home, with only the help of family members or neighbors. For every 100,000 live births, over 800 resulted in maternal death (vs. 7.7 per 100,000 in the US today), and 100 out of 1000 children died before their first birthday (vs. 7.2 per 1000 in the US today).1
In 1906, Breckinridge was widowed at age 26. Following the death of both her children at an early age, Breckinridge dedicated her life to improving the health of women and children. She became a registered nurse in 1910, at St. Luke's Hospital in New York. While working in France during World War I, she was exposed to new healthcare ideas: "After I had met British nurse-midwives, first in France and then on my visits to London, it grew upon me that nurse-midwifery was the logical response to the needs of the young child in rural America...My work would be for them.2"
The Frontier Nursing Service (FNS) was established in 1925 as a private charitable organization serving an area of about 700 square miles in southeastern Kentucky. Through her influential connections and speaking engagements, Breckinridge raised over $6 million dollars to support the organization. The staff was initially composed of nurse-midwives trained in England. They traveled on horseback and on foot to provide quality prenatal and childbirth care in the clients' own homes, functioning as both midwives and family nurses. Clients could pay the low fees in money or goods, and no one was turned away.4 In the area served, both maternal and infant mortality rates decreased dramatically.
Today, the FNS still serves southeastern Kentucky, with a hospital in Hyden, four rural health clinics, a home health agency, and the FNS School of Midwifery and Family Nursing.7 People have come from around the world to study this model of rural health and social service delivery.
1. Centers for Disease Control. (1999). Achievements in public health, 1900-1999: healthier mothers and babies. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 48 (38); 849-858. 2. Breckinridge, Mary. (1952). Wide neighborhoods, a story of the frontier nursing service. Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky, cited in Deloughery, G. (1998). Issues and trends in nursing, 3rd Ed. St. Louis: Mosby; p. 353. 3. United States Department of the Interior, National Register of Historic Places. History of frontier nursing service. Accessed: February 19, 2003. 4. Kentucky Tales. Angel on horseback: Mary Breckinridge. Accessed: February 19, 2003. 5. United States Department of the Interior, National Register of Historic Places. History of frontier nursing service. Accessed: February 19, 2003. 6. American Nurses Association. Hall of Fame: Mary Breckinridge. Accessed: February 19, 2003. 7. Frontier Nursing Service. Mary Breckinridge healthcare. Accessed: February 19, 2003. 8. American College of Nurse Midwives. A brief history of nurse-midwifery in the U.S. Accessed: March 20, 2003. Also see Stamp on History and the United States Post Office official stamp page. Last updated November 2003. See more pioneer biographies here
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The URL for this page is www.nursingadvocacy.org/press/pioneers/breckinridge.html |
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