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|audio_description_nine=Margaret met her husband while he was a patient at the hospital. They became engaged towards the end of her training in 1956 and married soon after. After Margaret had three children, she and her husband separated. As she had not done a year as a staff nurse after her training, she found it difficult to get a job. In addition, she found employers were unwilling to hire a single mother. | |audio_description_nine=Margaret met her husband while he was a patient at the hospital. They became engaged towards the end of her training in 1956 and married soon after. After Margaret had three children, she and her husband separated. As she had not done a year as a staff nurse after her training, she found it difficult to get a job. In addition, she found employers were unwilling to hire a single mother. | ||
|audio_file_nine=M_Faulkner_9.mp3 | |audio_file_nine=M_Faulkner_9.mp3 | ||
| − | |audio_description_ten=Margaret worked at the Nursing Bureau for a while before being contacted to help fix up a rest home and being taken on there to run it full-time. When Margaret remarried, she opened her own rest home. She recalls that she paid her staff higher than other rest homes in Christchurch as this ensured she had good staff, and she helped to establish a pay award for rest home carers. After her second marriage ended, she moved to Wellington in 1974, and recalls it was difficult to get a home loan as a single woman. She did community and district nursing in Porirua before becoming the New Zealand Nurses Association representative on the Whitereia Polytechnic Board when it opened in the 1980s. She did her Community Health Nursing Certificate through Wellington Polytechnic in 1987, and completed a Bachelor’s degree in Nursing in 1989. Margaret’s career developed further when she was appointed to manage the care of veterans through the War Pensions section of the Department of Social Welfare. From 2000, she also spent 13 years in health governance as an elected member of the Capital & Coast District Health Board. Her experience as a nurse was an important factor in her approach to each of these roles. | + | |audio_description_ten=Margaret worked at the Nursing Bureau for a while before being contacted to help fix up a rest home and being taken on there to run it full-time. When Margaret remarried, she opened her own rest home. She recalls that she paid her staff higher than other rest homes in Christchurch as this ensured she had good staff, and she helped to establish a pay award for rest home carers. After her second marriage ended, she moved to Wellington in 1974, and recalls it was difficult to get a home loan as a single woman. She did community and district nursing in Porirua before becoming the New Zealand Nurses Association representative on the Whitereia Polytechnic Board when it opened in the 1980s. She did her Community Health Nursing Certificate through Wellington Polytechnic in 1987, and completed a Bachelor’s degree in Nursing in 1989. Margaret’s career developed further when she was appointed to manage the care of veterans through the War Pensions section of the Department of Social Welfare. From 2000, she also spent 13 years in health governance as an elected member of the Capital & Coast District Health Board. Her experience as a nurse was an important factor in her approach to each of these roles. |
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| + | Margaret believes the modern tertiary nurse training to be very different from the training she received and difficult to compare, but considers it a flaw that the practical component of her training is missing from modern training. She has also noticed changes in the way nurses approach their patients: nowadays they see only the illness, whereas Margaret was taught to see the illness as part of the whole life of the patient. She reflects on the community ethos of her family, and considers nursing to be about making a difference to lives of others. | ||
|audio_file_ten=M_Faulkner_10.mp3 | |audio_file_ten=M_Faulkner_10.mp3 | ||
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Recording Details | ||||||||
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This link will take you to the abstract summarising the full interview with Margaret Faulkner: | ||||||||
Gallery | ||||||||