Elizabeth Cockayne

Dame Elizabeth Cockayne, DBE (29 October 1894 – 4 July 1988) was Chief Nursing Officer from the inception of the National Health Service in 1948 until her retirement a decade later in 1958.[1] She was succeeded by Dame Kathleen Raven.

Elizabeth Cockayne

DBE
TitleChief Nursing Officer
AwardsFlorence Nightingale Medal

Career

Born in Burton-on-Trent,[1] Cockayne decided to become a nurse due to her own experiences with ill health, such as smallpox and scarlatina. She was trained in Plymouth and Sheffield. In 1954 she chaired the World Health Organization's Expert Committee on Nursing.[2]

Awards/honours

She was awarded the Florence Nightingale Medal by the International Council of Nurses. In 1955 she was appointed a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE).

Death

Dame Elizabeth Cockayne died at Rushett Cottage, Littleheath Lane, Cobham, Surrey on 4 July 1988, aged 93.[1]

gollark: It's just that stuff supports CUDA more for some reason?
gollark: OpenCL can do baaaasically the same things.
gollark: CUDA is just Nvidia's GPU computing language/platform.
gollark: What, RTX?
gollark: I don't really like Nvidia because of their high prices ("justified" by useless-to-me stuff like RTX), the whole thing with CUDA only being available on their platforms, and their use of artificial segmentation of product lines.

References

  1. Staff (6 July 1988). "Dame Elizabeth Cockayne obituary". The Times. London, England, UK. p. 14.
  2. UK Online - 1894 Archived 2004-07-05 at the Wayback Machine, ukonline.co.uk; accessed 7 April 2016.


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