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Angela Boškin

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Occupation
  
nurse

Years active
  
1914-1944


Full Name
  
ca. 1914 at her graduation

Born
  
21 May 1885 (
1885-05-21
)
Piuma, Princely County of Gorizia and Gradisca, Austria-Hungary

Known for
  
first professionally trained Slovenian nurse

Died
  
28 July 1977, Gorizia, Italy

Angela Boškin (1885-1977) was the first professionally trained Slovenian nurse and social worker in Yugoslavia. After training in Austria, she worked as a military nurse during World War I. At the end of the conflict, with her housing and work permits made invalid, she was transported to the new Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, where she became the first public health nurse. Designing programs to teach basic courses in maternity and child care, Boškin was able to reduce infant mortality rates. She founded and served as president of the first nursing association of Slovenia.

Contents

Early life

Boškin was born on 21 May, 1885 in Piuma, in the Princely County of Gorizia and Gradisca of Austria-Hungary. Her father was a blacksmith, but was able to find little work to feed his nine children. After completing her primary education in Piuma, at age 20, Boškin was sent to Vienna to keep house for her older brother and help him in his store. After seven years, she decided she wanted her own career. Boškin enrolled in nursing school in 1912 and did her practical training at Ernst Wertheim's clinic, graduating in 1914.

Career

After completing her training, Boškin became an assistant to Dr. Wagner, senior gynecologist at Wertheim's clinic, and worked with maternal and baby care until the war broke out. She was initially assigned to a military reserve clinic and then was posted with a medical team of the Swedish International Red Cross. In 1917, she became the head nurse at the military reserve clinic. Continuing her studies, she completed the course for social and health work in Vienna, passing her examination and preparing to go to work in Trieste. However, with the dissolution of Austria-Hungary, Slovenes and Croatians who had been residing in Austria were transported to the new Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (Slovene: Kraljevina Slovenaca, Hrvata i Srba (SHS)) because their housing and working permits were no longer valid. Initially she was unable to find work, but in 1919, she agreed to go to Jesenice. The area was very poor and initially she served primarily as a home care nurse, advising mothers on child care. Realizing how little education on hygiene her patrons had, Boškin began preparing lectures on basic sanitation, child care, infection prevention, and nutrition.

Boškin began nursing at a workers' center as the first social welfare nurse in SHS and in 1921 founded the first Advisory Centre for Mothers and Babies. Focusing her work on maternal hygiene and infant care, she distributed baskets containing necessary hygienic aids and basic bed linens to new mothers. Her work gained the attention of the pioneering pediatrician Matija Ambrožič, who invited Boškin to move to Ljubljana in 1922 to help in an orphanage. The following year she began working at the Institute of Social Hygiene for the Protection of Girls, lecturing on home nursing services, which was the first training program for care nurses in SHS. In 1927, Boškin founded the first professional organization of nurses, naming it the Organisation of Pre-graduate Students of the School for Nursing Sisters in Ljubljana. The organization was renamed the following the Organization of Graduate Protective Nurses of Ljubljana and Boškin was elected as its president. When the country was reorganized into Yugoslavia in 1929, the organization became known as the Association of Yugoslav Nurses.

Boškin was soon transferred to the mining town of Trbovlje, which was facing a high infant mortality in which 1/3 of all babies born died within four days. The area was plagued with extreme poverty, illiteracy, many abandoned children and juvenile prostitution. Working as she had before, she established an Advisory Centre, teaching basic care and sanitation, and began to reduce the mortality rate. In 1939, she returned to Ljubljana and began giving traveling exhibitions on hygiene for the Hygiene Institute. Simultaneously, she took a position in Škofja Loka working in the health center for mothers and children and the anti-tuberculosis service. She retired in 1944 and returned to her home town to live with her sister.

In 1969, Boškin received the Order of Merits for the People with silver rays. Later, she was awarded the Gold Medal of the Nurses and Midwives Association of Slovenia. Boškin died on 28 July, 1977 in Piuma.

She is honored by "Angela Boškin Day" held annually in the city of Jesenice by the General Hospital Jesenice and the College of Nursing. A documentary film was made about Boškin and aired in 2008.

References

Angela Boškin Wikipedia