Overview
The OIA attempted to improve conditions by professionalizing women’s health work within its ranks, but the new field nurses were also agents of forced assimilation, a project with deep roots in the public health field as well as US federal Indian policy. Few field nurses, including Gloyne, were Indigenous themselves. In bringing their experiences to light, Sanders show the overlap between the profession of nursing and the ancient importance of women’s leadership, the tensions between federal paternalism and Native nations' goals, and the central role of community connection in public health.
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Nurses and a Beloved Woman: Eastern Cherokee Sovereignty and Federal Public Health in Interwar America
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