Nurses: Rose Kiwanuka and Subadhra Devi Rai
"The treatment, the machines were not primary, it's the person who's lying on the bed that's primary", nurses in Singapore and Uganda talk about the priorities of their profession
Subadhra Devi Rai started her nursing career in a busy intensive care unit of a hospital in Singapore. She has also dedicated her life to working with those in desperate need in countries where her skills are in short supply, including Thailand, Nigeria and Laos. Subadhra, who's now a senior lecturer in health studies, recently won the Florence Nightingale International Foundation's International Achievement Award.
Rose Kiwanuka isn't saving lives but helping patients as they die, she was Uganda's first palliative care nurse in the early 1990s. Rose, who is the national coordinator of the Palliative Care Association, has the momentous task of making patients and their families, in urban and rural communities, as comfortable as possible about death.
(L) Rose Kiwanuka, Palliative Care Nurse, Uganda. Picture Credit: Alan Hofmanis
(R) Subadhra Devi Rai, Nurse, Singapore. Picture credit: Nanyang Polytechnic
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Debate, interviews and opinion from the 100 Women season
Clips
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They thought I was committing career suicide!
Duration: 01:02
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Why patients are more important than machines
Duration: 00:53
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- Mon 23 Nov 2015 00:32GMT麻豆社 World Service
- Mon 23 Nov 2015 03:32GMT麻豆社 World Service Americas and the Caribbean
- Mon 23 Nov 2015 05:32GMT麻豆社 World Service except Americas and the Caribbean, Australasia, East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa
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- Mon 23 Nov 2015 18:32GMT麻豆社 World Service Australasia
- Mon 23 Nov 2015 19:32GMT麻豆社 World Service except Australasia
- Sun 29 Nov 2015 01:32GMT麻豆社 World Service Australasia
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