| Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
|banner_image=Diana_Grant-Mackie_Photo.jpg | |banner_image=Diana_Grant-Mackie_Photo.jpg | ||
|banner_image_caption=Diana Grant-Mackie | |banner_image_caption=Diana Grant-Mackie | ||
| − | |audio_description_one=The second of five children, Diana Grant-Mackie was born in Whakatane in 1937, and moved to a farm in Whangamata at the age of nine. She left school at age seventeen with school certificate having attended boarding schools in Hamilton and Auckland. Her interest in nursing came from reading a book about Marie Curie and Edward Jenner, as well as a brush with cow pox as a young girl. | + | |audio_description_one=The second of five children, Diana Grant-Mackie (nee Ley) was born in Whakatane in 1937, and moved to a farm in Whangamata at the age of nine. She left school at age seventeen with school certificate having attended boarding schools in Hamilton and Auckland. Her interest in nursing came from reading a book about Marie Curie and Edward Jenner, as well as a brush with cow pox as a young girl. |
|audio_file_one=Diana_Grant-Mackie_Audio_01.mp3 | |audio_file_one=Diana_Grant-Mackie_Audio_01.mp3 | ||
|audio_description_two=Diana entered nursing school in Auckland in 1956, aged eighteen. There were a lot of country girls in her cohort at Auckland Hospital because the private school city girls tended to go to Green Lane Hospital. During the preliminary training the girls were taught practical tasks like bed making and giving bed pans. Some of Diana’s early clinical experiences involved caring for children with tuberculosis and other diseases at Princess Mary Hospital. She enjoyed working with children, but some of the experiences of working with terminally ill children were upsetting, especially as a first year nurse. At the nurses’ home the student nurses tended to provide support for each other by talking late into the night. | |audio_description_two=Diana entered nursing school in Auckland in 1956, aged eighteen. There were a lot of country girls in her cohort at Auckland Hospital because the private school city girls tended to go to Green Lane Hospital. During the preliminary training the girls were taught practical tasks like bed making and giving bed pans. Some of Diana’s early clinical experiences involved caring for children with tuberculosis and other diseases at Princess Mary Hospital. She enjoyed working with children, but some of the experiences of working with terminally ill children were upsetting, especially as a first year nurse. At the nurses’ home the student nurses tended to provide support for each other by talking late into the night. | ||
Recording Details | ||||||||
| ||||||||
Abstract This link will take you to the abstract summarising the full interview with Diana Grant-Mackie: | ||||||||
Gallery | ||||||||