Provident Foundation

Provident Foundation

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In 1889, Emma Reynolds, a young woman who aspired to be a nurse, was denied admission by each of Chicago's nursing schools on the grounds that she was black. Her brother, the Reverend Louis Reynolds, pastor of St. Stephen's African Methodist Episcopal Church, approached the respected black surgeon, Dr. Daniel Hale Williams for help. Unable to influence the existing schools, they decided to launch

Chicago area nurse honored decades after discrimination at Elgin hospital 05/14/2022

Chicago area nurse honored decades after discrimination at Elgin hospital On Thursday, Advocate Sherman Hospital in Elgin honored a 90-year-old woman who decades ago was denied the chance to train at the hospital because she was Black.

Photos from Provident Foundation's post 02/08/2022

Thank you Melanie Palmer for this!🤓
Today's Black History Fact is about a South Carolina woman named Maude Callen. A year after graduating from the Georgia Infirmary she moved to Pineville, Berkeley County, South Carolina as an Episcopal missionary nurse. The position was intended to be temporary. She was one of only nine nurse–midwives in South Carolina at the time.

Callen operated a community clinic out of her home, which was miles from any hospital. "It is estimated she delivered between six hundred and eight hundred babies in her sixty-two years of practice. In addition to providing medical services, Callen taught women from the community to be midwives.

She provided in-home services to "an area of some 400 square miles veined with muddy roads", serving as "'doctor, dietitian, psychologist, bail-goer, and friend to thousands of poor (most of them desperately poor) patients.

Conditions in Berkeley County were difficult:

At the edge of Hell Hole Swamp in Pineville houses were still lit by oil lamps, not electricity. Not having power lines meant no telephones, and people went to town by wagon or buggy.
"Nurse Maude recalled that there were only two cars in Berkeley County and none of the roads were paved. Many of her patients arrived at her home in oxcarts in the middle of the night.
She frequently had to park her car and walk through mud, woods, and creeks to reach her patients.
Nurse Maude once refused an invitation by President Regan to the white house saying she couldn't just up and leave her patients. She died in SC at the age of 91.

"Let me live in my house by the side of the road and be a friend to man."

— Maude E. Callen
I wish medicine was still about taking care of your fellow man...not a business, not political , not nursing a computer.

Dietary Tips to Naturally Prevent Prostate Cancer 02/03/2022

Dietary Tips to Naturally Prevent Prostate Cancer The small walnut-shaped gland that sits behind the bladder in men is known as the prostate gland. This gland helps to produce semen during sexual activity. Most often, as men grow older, the prostate gland also gets enlarged. When a person has enlarged prostate certain foods would help by supporting...

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