The New Nurses is a period drama set in a nursing school in the 1950s. It follows the lives of a group of male nurses who face rivalry, love, and the challenges of the time period.
Pinky, an African-American medical doctor, faces racial tension and prejudice in the old South. She navigates interracial love and friendship while dealing with a heart failure patient. As she grapples with the racial identity and confusion, Pinky discovers her own strength and fights against racism.
After a devastating storm damages her house, a widow named Miranda meets Bray, a stranger who brings hope and positivity into her life. As they grow closer, Miranda learns to let go of her past and embrace new beginnings, while Bray encourages her to pursue her dreams of becoming an inventor. Together, they navigate life's challenges and discover the importance of love, hope, and the power of the mind.
In 1970s Beverly Hills, a teenage girl navigates through the challenges of growing up amidst a dysfunctional family. She faces class conflict, explores her sexuality, and discovers her own identity.
In Victorian England, Florence Nightingale's heroic measures slowly change the attitude towards nurses when it was considered a disreputable profession.
The title represents the hopeful, ambitious students at a hospital training school and is primarily a story of the stern discipline and laborious physical and mental toil they endure in order to become nurses and join the White Parade. It is told mainly through the character of June Arden who finds romance with Ronald Hall III on the way, with side stories of the other girls who find failure, success, laughs and tears on the way.
A man commits a series of murders due to his dual personalities and his zodiac birth sign.
Kitty Reily (Patsy Kelly) and Lena Marchetti (Lyda Roberti) meet each other at an amateur Radio Show. Kitty quickly learns to greatly dislike incompetent Lena. They keep running into each other until Kitty resigns to being friends with Lena when they become hospital nurses and share a dorm room.
Psychiatric Nursing: The Nurse-Patient Relationship is a 1958 American documentary film directed by Lee R. Bobker. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.
This RKO-Pathe Screenliner short looks at the duties of the modern nurse. The story tracks the education of a student nurse as she works toward graduation and shows the earning of her cap during her student days, in retrospect. At the beginning, she wears the Student Nurse uniform dress and apron only, with no cap. She appears later in the movie as a more experienced Senior student with her cap already wearing a stripe. This was frequently done in the three year hospital programs to differentiate the Junior level students from the Seniors, more experienced and closer to Graduation. The capping ceremony illustrated shows the bare headed students receiving their plain white cap, and addressing it as something from her past that she will remember fondly.
Young Women go through Nursing School together, each with their own motivation for being there. They learn more than how to be a Nurse.
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