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{{Short description|American nurse (1917–2008)}}
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'''Florence Wald''' (April 19, 1917 &ndash; November 8, 2008) was an American [[nurse]], former Dean of [[Yale School of Nursing]], and largely credited as "the mother of the American [[hospice]] movement".<ref name=Calling/><ref name=HallofFame>[http://www.cwhf.org/browse_hall/hall/people/wald.php Florence Wald], Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame. Accessed November 13, 2008.</ref> She led the founding of Connecticut Hospice, the first hospice program in the United States. Late in life, Wald became interested in the provision of hospice care within prisons.
'''Florence Wald''' (April 19, 1917 &ndash; November 8, 2008) was an American [[nurse]], former Dean of [[Yale School of Nursing]], and largely credited as "the mother of the American [[hospice]] movement".<ref name=Calling/><ref name=HallofFame>[http://www.cwhf.org/browse_hall/hall/people/wald.php Florence Wald] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090105182104/http://www.cwhf.org/browse_hall/hall/people/wald.php# |date=2009-01-05 }}, Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame. Accessed November 13, 2008.</ref> She led the founding of Connecticut Hospice, the first hospice program in the United States. Late in life, Wald became interested in the provision of hospice care within prisons. In 1998, Wald was inducted into the [[National Women's Hall of Fame]].<ref>[https://www.womenofthehall.org/inductee/florence-wald/ National Women's Hall of Fame, Florence Wald]</ref>


==Biography==
==Biography==
===Early life===
===Early life===
Wald was born as '''Florence Sophie Schorske''' in [[New York City]] on April 19, 1917. Due to a chronic respiratory ailment, she spent several months as a child in a hospital, This hospitalization experience led her to pursue a career in nursing.<ref name=WashPostObit>Sullivan, Patricia. [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/12/AR2008111202953.html "Florence S. Wald, 91; U.S. Hospice Pioneer"], ''[[The Washington Post]]'', November 13, 2008. Accessed November 13, 2008.</ref> Wald received a B.A. from [[Mount Holyoke College]] in 1938 and an M.N. from [[Yale School of Nursing]] in 1941.
Wald was born as '''Florence Sophie Schorske''' in [[New York City]] on April 19, 1917. Due to a chronic respiratory ailment, she spent several months as a child in a hospital. This hospitalization experience led her to pursue a career in nursing.<ref name=WashPostObit>Sullivan, Patricia. [https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/12/AR2008111202953.html "Florence S. Wald, 91; U.S. Hospice Pioneer"], ''[[The Washington Post]]'', November 13, 2008. Accessed November 13, 2008.</ref> Wald received a B.A. from [[Mount Holyoke College]] in 1938 and an M.N. from [[Yale School of Nursing]] in 1941.


After World War II, she became a staff nurse with the [[Visiting Nurse Service of New York]], a research assistant at the [[Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons]], and was an instructor at the [[Rutgers University]] school of nursing. She received a second master's degree from Yale University in mental health nursing in 1956 and became an instructor at the school's the nursing program. She became Dean of Yale School of Nursing in 1959, after being named to the position on an acting basis the previous year.<ref name=WashPostObit/><ref name="ysnhistory">[http://www.med.yale.edu/library/nursing/historical/deans/wald2.html Florence Wald], [[Yale School of Nursing]]. Accessed November 13, 2008.</ref> A short time later, she reconnected with Henry Wald, who she met initially while she was conducting a study with the [[Signal Corps (United States Army)|United States Army Signal Corps]]. The couple married later that year.<ref name=Calling/>
After World War II, she became a staff nurse with the [[Visiting Nurse Service of New York]], a research assistant at the [[Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons]], and was an instructor at the [[Rutgers University]] school of nursing. She received a second master's degree from Yale University in mental health nursing in 1956 and became an instructor at the school's nursing program. She became Dean of Yale School of Nursing in 1959, after being named to the position on an acting basis the previous year.<ref name=WashPostObit/><ref name="ysnhistory">[http://www.med.yale.edu/library/nursing/historical/deans/wald2.html Florence Wald], [[Yale School of Nursing]]. Accessed November 13, 2008.</ref> A short time later, she reconnected with Henry Wald, whom she met initially while she was conducting a study with the [[Signal Corps (United States Army)|United States Army Signal Corps]]. The couple married later that year.<ref name=Calling/>


===Hospice movement===
===Hospice movement===
Line 29: Line 30:
Following the Saunders lecture, Wald worked to update the nursing school's curriculum to encourage students to focus on the patient and their family, and to keep all of them involved in the patient's care.<ref name=WashPostObit/> She left her position as dean in 1966, with plans to develop a hospice in the United States similar to the one Saunders was developing in England.<ref name=Calling/> Though she stepped down as dean, Wald retained a faculty position as a research associate and as a member of the clinical nursing faculty, and was promoted to a full professor there in 1980.<ref name=HallofFame/> Despite the financial impact on their family, she continued her goal of building a program and visited England twice with her husband to visit Dr. Saunders. St. Christopher's Hospice opened in 1967; Wald worked there for a month in 1969.<ref name=Calling/><ref name=WashPostObit/>
Following the Saunders lecture, Wald worked to update the nursing school's curriculum to encourage students to focus on the patient and their family, and to keep all of them involved in the patient's care.<ref name=WashPostObit/> She left her position as dean in 1966, with plans to develop a hospice in the United States similar to the one Saunders was developing in England.<ref name=Calling/> Though she stepped down as dean, Wald retained a faculty position as a research associate and as a member of the clinical nursing faculty, and was promoted to a full professor there in 1980.<ref name=HallofFame/> Despite the financial impact on their family, she continued her goal of building a program and visited England twice with her husband to visit Dr. Saunders. St. Christopher's Hospice opened in 1967; Wald worked there for a month in 1969.<ref name=Calling/><ref name=WashPostObit/>


Her husband left his engineering form and enrolled at [[Columbia University]] in 1971 with a major in hospital planning. It was his master's degree thesis that provided the framework for the Connecticut Hospice. Wald conducted a two-year research program studying how terminally ill patients fared at home or in a healthcare facility, and tracked how patients and their families felt throughout the process.<ref name=Calling/> After returning to the United States, she organized a team of doctors, clergy and nurses to investigate the needs of dying patients. In 1974, she, along with two [[pediatrician]]s and a Yale medical center [[chaplain]], founded the first hospice in the United States at the Connecticut Hospice, located in [[Branford, Connecticut]].<ref name="The Hospice Experiment">[http://americanradioworks.publicradio.org/features/hospice/a4.html The Hospice Experiment &ndash; American RadioWorks]</ref> Initially the program provided home care, and had its first inpatient location in 1980, a 44-bed facility in Branford. Disagreements had been brewing within the board about her vision for the hospice program, and she was forced to resign shortly after its opening.<ref name=Calling/>
Her husband left his engineering firm and enrolled at [[Columbia University]] in 1971 with a major in hospital planning. It was his master's degree thesis that provided the framework for the Connecticut Hospice. Wald conducted a two-year research program studying how terminally ill patients fared at home or in a healthcare facility, and tracked how patients and their families felt throughout the process.<ref name=Calling/> After returning to the United States, she organized a team of doctors, clergy and nurses to investigate the needs of dying patients. In 1974, she, along with two [[pediatrician]]s and a Yale medical center [[chaplain]], founded the first hospice in the United States at the Connecticut Hospice, located in [[Branford, Connecticut]].<ref name="The Hospice Experiment">{{Cite web|url=http://americanradioworks.publicradio.org/features/hospice/a4.html|title=The Hospice Experiment - American RadioWorks|last=Media|first=American Public|website=americanradioworks.publicradio.org|access-date=2018-03-14}}</ref> Initially the program provided home care, and had its first inpatient location in 1980, a 44-bed facility in Branford. Disagreements had been brewing within the board about her vision for the hospice program, and she was forced to resign shortly after its opening.<ref name=Calling/>


Other hospice programs were created building on Wald's innovation at Branford. By 1980, [[Medicaid]] began to pay for care provided at a hospice, which led to a sharp rise in such facilities. By the time of her death in 2008, there were more than 3,000 hospice programs in the United States, serving some 900,000 patients annually.<ref name=WashPostObit/>
Other hospice programs were created building on Wald's innovation at Branford. By 1980, [[Medicaid]] began to pay for care provided at a hospice, which led to a sharp rise in such facilities. By the time of her death in 2008, there were more than 3,000 hospice programs in the United States, serving some 900,000 patients annually.<ref name=WashPostObit/>


===Later life===
===Later life===
Well into her 80s, Wald traveled to prisons in Connecticut performing a research project on behalf of the National Prison Hospice Association, an organization founded in 1991 and based in [[Boulder, Colorado]]. Wald served on the organization's board of directors. Wald worked on considering ways to make hospice care available to those incarcerated in the prison system, including training inmates to become hospice volunteers for dying inmates or arranging for outside hospice care for inmates granted compassionate leave given their medical condition. Wald noted that training prisoners to provide such care would assist the terminally ill and help rehabilitate the volunteers at almost no cost to the prisons.<ref name=Calling>Rierden, Andi. [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=health&res=9507E4DA173CF93AA25757C0A96E958260 "A Calling for Care Of the Terminally Ill"], ''[[The New York Times]]'', April 19, 1998. Accessed November 13, 2008.</ref> he was awarded an honorary doctorate in 1996 from [[Yale University]], Wald was introduced as "the mother of the American hospice movement".<ref name=Calling/>
Well into her 80s, Wald traveled to prisons in Connecticut performing a research project on behalf of the National Prison Hospice Association, an organization founded in 1991 and based in [[Boulder, Colorado]]. Wald served on the organization's board of directors. Wald worked on considering ways to make hospice care available to those incarcerated in the prison system, including training inmates to become hospice volunteers for dying inmates or arranging for outside hospice care for inmates granted compassionate leave given their medical condition. Wald noted that training prisoners to provide such care would assist the terminally ill and help rehabilitate the volunteers at almost no cost to the prisons.<ref name=Calling>Rierden, Andi. [https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=health&res=9507E4DA173CF93AA25757C0A96E958260 "A Calling for Care Of the Terminally Ill"], ''[[The New York Times]]'', April 19, 1998. Accessed November 13, 2008.</ref> She was awarded an honorary doctorate in 1996 from [[Yale University]], Wald was introduced as "the mother of the American hospice movement".<ref name=Calling/>


Speaking of her interest in prison hospice care in 1998, Wald said, "People on the outside don’t understand this world at all. Most people in prison have had a rough time in life and haven’t had any kind of education in how to take care of their health. There is the shame factor, the feeling that dying in prison is the ultimate failure."<ref name=Hevesi>{{cite news|last=Hevesi|first=Dennis|title=Florence S. Wald, American Pioneer in End-of-Life Care, Is Dead at 91|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/14/health/14wald.html?_r=0|accessdate=November 4, 2013|newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|date=November 14, 2008}}</ref>
Speaking of her interest in prison hospice care in 1998, Wald said, "People on the outside don’t understand this world at all. Most people in prison have had a rough time in life and haven’t had any kind of education in how to take care of their health. There is the shame factor, the feeling that dying in prison is the ultimate failure."<ref name=Hevesi>{{cite news|last=Hevesi|first=Dennis|title=Florence S. Wald, American Pioneer in End-of-Life Care, Is Dead at 91|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/14/health/14wald.html?_r=0|access-date=November 4, 2013|newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|date=November 14, 2008}}</ref>


Florence Wald died at age 91 on November 8, 2008 at her home in [[Branford, Connecticut]].<ref name=WashPostObit/>
Florence Wald died at age 91 on November 8, 2008, at her home in [[Branford, Connecticut]].<ref name=WashPostObit/>


==See also==
==See also==
Line 51: Line 52:
* Friedrich, M.J. (1999) "Hospice Care in the United States: A Conversation With Florence S. Wald". '' JAMA''. 281: 1683&ndash;1685.
* Friedrich, M.J. (1999) "Hospice Care in the United States: A Conversation With Florence S. Wald". '' JAMA''. 281: 1683&ndash;1685.
* [http://www.med.yale.edu/library/nursing/historical/ History and contributions of Yale School of Nursing]
* [http://www.med.yale.edu/library/nursing/historical/ History and contributions of Yale School of Nursing]
* [http://www.cwhf.org/browse_hall/hall/people/wald.php Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090105182104/http://www.cwhf.org/browse_hall/hall/people/wald.php Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame]
* [http://americanradioworks.publicradio.org/features/hospice/a4.html The Hospice Experiment]
* [http://americanradioworks.publicradio.org/features/hospice/a4.html The Hospice Experiment]
* [http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/mssa.ms.1659 Florence and Henry Wald Papers (MS 1659). Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library.]
* [http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/mssa.ms.1659 Florence and Henry Wald Papers (MS 1659). Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library.]



{{Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame}}
{{Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame}}
{{National Women's Hall of Fame}}
{{National Women's Hall of Fame}}
{{Authority control}}


{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = Wald, Florence
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = American nurse
| DATE OF BIRTH = April 19, 1917
| PLACE OF BIRTH = [[New York City]]
| DATE OF DEATH = November 8, 2008
| PLACE OF DEATH = Branford, Connecticut
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Wald, Florence}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Wald, Florence}}
[[Category:1917 births]]
[[Category:1917 births]]
[[Category:2008 deaths]]
[[Category:2008 deaths]]
[[Category:Scarsdale High School alumni]]
[[Category:American nursing administrators]]
[[Category:American nursing administrators]]
[[Category:Mount Holyoke College alumni]]
[[Category:Mount Holyoke College alumni]]
[[Category:Yale University alumni]]
[[Category:Yale School of Nursing alumni]]
[[Category:People from New York City]]
[[Category:Educators from New York City]]
[[Category:People from Scarsdale, New York]]
[[Category:People from Scarsdale, New York]]
[[Category:Disease-related deaths in Connecticut]]
[[Category:20th-century American Jews]]
[[Category:American Jews]]
[[Category:Living Legends of the American Academy of Nursing]]
[[Category:Nursing school deans]]
[[Category:Nursing school deans]]
[[Category:Yale University faculty]]
[[Category:Yale University faculty]]
[[Category:Yale University administrators]]
[[Category:Rutgers University faculty]]
[[Category:Rutgers University faculty]]
[[Category:Hospice]]
[[Category:American nursing educators]]
[[Category:Palliative care]]
[[Category:20th-century American women]]
[[Category:Nursing educators]]
[[Category:20th-century American people]]
[[Category:Women in health professions]]
[[Category:American women academics]]
[[Category:21st-century American Jews]]
[[Category:21st-century American women]]
[[Category:20th-century American academics]]

Revision as of 05:51, 8 April 2024

Florence Wald
Born
Florence Sophie Schorske

April 19, 1917
DiedNovember 8, 2008(2008-11-08) (aged 91)
Alma materMount Holyoke College
Yale School of Nursing
OccupationDean of the Yale School of Nursing
Known forPioneering the American hospice movement

Florence Wald (April 19, 1917 – November 8, 2008) was an American nurse, former Dean of Yale School of Nursing, and largely credited as "the mother of the American hospice movement".[1][2] She led the founding of Connecticut Hospice, the first hospice program in the United States. Late in life, Wald became interested in the provision of hospice care within prisons. In 1998, Wald was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame.[3]

Biography

Early life

Wald was born as Florence Sophie Schorske in New York City on April 19, 1917. Due to a chronic respiratory ailment, she spent several months as a child in a hospital. This hospitalization experience led her to pursue a career in nursing.[4] Wald received a B.A. from Mount Holyoke College in 1938 and an M.N. from Yale School of Nursing in 1941.

After World War II, she became a staff nurse with the Visiting Nurse Service of New York, a research assistant at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, and was an instructor at the Rutgers University school of nursing. She received a second master's degree from Yale University in mental health nursing in 1956 and became an instructor at the school's nursing program. She became Dean of Yale School of Nursing in 1959, after being named to the position on an acting basis the previous year.[4][5] A short time later, she reconnected with Henry Wald, whom she met initially while she was conducting a study with the United States Army Signal Corps. The couple married later that year.[1]

Hospice movement

Wald's interest in the care of the terminally ill was piqued in 1963 when she attended a lecture at Yale University presented by the English physician Cicely Saunders, an innovator in the field who later created St. Christopher's Hospice, the world's first purpose-built hospice. Dr. Saunders spoke that day about her methods of using palliative care for terminally ill cancer patients, with the intention of allowing those in the latest stages of their disease to focus on their personal relationships and prepare themselves for death. An "indelible impression" was made by Dr. Saunders, with Wald noting that "until then I had thought nurses were the only people troubled by how a terminal illness was treated".[4]

Following the Saunders lecture, Wald worked to update the nursing school's curriculum to encourage students to focus on the patient and their family, and to keep all of them involved in the patient's care.[4] She left her position as dean in 1966, with plans to develop a hospice in the United States similar to the one Saunders was developing in England.[1] Though she stepped down as dean, Wald retained a faculty position as a research associate and as a member of the clinical nursing faculty, and was promoted to a full professor there in 1980.[2] Despite the financial impact on their family, she continued her goal of building a program and visited England twice with her husband to visit Dr. Saunders. St. Christopher's Hospice opened in 1967; Wald worked there for a month in 1969.[1][4]

Her husband left his engineering firm and enrolled at Columbia University in 1971 with a major in hospital planning. It was his master's degree thesis that provided the framework for the Connecticut Hospice. Wald conducted a two-year research program studying how terminally ill patients fared at home or in a healthcare facility, and tracked how patients and their families felt throughout the process.[1] After returning to the United States, she organized a team of doctors, clergy and nurses to investigate the needs of dying patients. In 1974, she, along with two pediatricians and a Yale medical center chaplain, founded the first hospice in the United States at the Connecticut Hospice, located in Branford, Connecticut.[6] Initially the program provided home care, and had its first inpatient location in 1980, a 44-bed facility in Branford. Disagreements had been brewing within the board about her vision for the hospice program, and she was forced to resign shortly after its opening.[1]

Other hospice programs were created building on Wald's innovation at Branford. By 1980, Medicaid began to pay for care provided at a hospice, which led to a sharp rise in such facilities. By the time of her death in 2008, there were more than 3,000 hospice programs in the United States, serving some 900,000 patients annually.[4]

Later life

Well into her 80s, Wald traveled to prisons in Connecticut performing a research project on behalf of the National Prison Hospice Association, an organization founded in 1991 and based in Boulder, Colorado. Wald served on the organization's board of directors. Wald worked on considering ways to make hospice care available to those incarcerated in the prison system, including training inmates to become hospice volunteers for dying inmates or arranging for outside hospice care for inmates granted compassionate leave given their medical condition. Wald noted that training prisoners to provide such care would assist the terminally ill and help rehabilitate the volunteers at almost no cost to the prisons.[1] She was awarded an honorary doctorate in 1996 from Yale University, Wald was introduced as "the mother of the American hospice movement".[1]

Speaking of her interest in prison hospice care in 1998, Wald said, "People on the outside don’t understand this world at all. Most people in prison have had a rough time in life and haven’t had any kind of education in how to take care of their health. There is the shame factor, the feeling that dying in prison is the ultimate failure."[7]

Florence Wald died at age 91 on November 8, 2008, at her home in Branford, Connecticut.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Rierden, Andi. "A Calling for Care Of the Terminally Ill", The New York Times, April 19, 1998. Accessed November 13, 2008.
  2. ^ a b Florence Wald Archived 2009-01-05 at the Wayback Machine, Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame. Accessed November 13, 2008.
  3. ^ National Women's Hall of Fame, Florence Wald
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Sullivan, Patricia. "Florence S. Wald, 91; U.S. Hospice Pioneer", The Washington Post, November 13, 2008. Accessed November 13, 2008.
  5. ^ Florence Wald, Yale School of Nursing. Accessed November 13, 2008.
  6. ^ Media, American Public. "The Hospice Experiment - American RadioWorks". americanradioworks.publicradio.org. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
  7. ^ Hevesi, Dennis (November 14, 2008). "Florence S. Wald, American Pioneer in End-of-Life Care, Is Dead at 91". The New York Times. Retrieved November 4, 2013.

Sources