91原创

Skip to content

Everyone has a story: Reflections on a 35-year career in nursing

Long-time 91原创 nurse always believed in putting patients first
33713883_web1_230825-LAT-RH-LMHDoering-._1
Anne Doering spent 35 of her 36-year nursing career at 91原创 Memorial Hospital. (Special to 91原创 Advance Times)

91原创 Memorial Hospital is celebrating 75 years of service in this community. In a series of stories over the coming months, the 91原创 Advance Times, in conjunction with the hospital foundation, takes a look at the past, present, and future of health care in 91原创 from a few different perspectives.

.

By Julie Coghlan-Smith/Special to 91原创 Advance Times

I loved it. I loved it. I never regretted being a nurse,鈥 said Anne Doering, reflecting on her 36 years of working as a licensed-practitioner nurse, of which she spent 35 at 91原创 Memorial Hospital.

鈥淢y advice for young nurses: 鈥榓lways remember that patients are people, and everyone has a story鈥.鈥

Doering has a story too. She was born in the bounteous foothills of the Okanagan Highlands in north-central Washington, in a small town called Omak. When she was 10, her father bought land in Houston, B.C.

鈥淲e moved from the land of everything to the land of nothing,鈥 said Doering. 鈥淟ots of snow and two frost-free months a year. The only thing we could farm was root vegetables.鈥

Doering remembers more than a few nights of going to bed hungry as a teenager.

Leaving the tiny town of Houston, she trained in Prince George and Dawson Creek, and did a 14-month stint in Burns Lake after graduation. In September 1967, she escaped to the milder climate of 91原创, where she lived in the hospital鈥檚 staff residence until 1972.

鈥淭here were 19 residents living on two floors and a basement. We shared three toilets with squeaky doors that banged at night and two bathrooms with bathtubs,鈥 she reminisced.

The cost of the staff residence, at $20 a month, was considered pricey by Doering. In Burns Lake, $20 got her room and board.

鈥淭he kitchen was a battle for space with one stove and one small fridge, and some nights I would opt for crackers and cheese rather than stand in line for the stove. But I loved the camaraderie, the banter among friends, and the activities.鈥

Doering was on staff when the hospital鈥檚 fourth floor opened in 1974, then the pediatric and medical ward. However, the most significant change for Doering, during her nursing career, was the introduction of ceiling lifts to help turn patients and get them in and out of bed.

鈥淚 was so grateful, especially when it came to heavier patients. The work was physically taxing,鈥 she said, remembering waiting for the firemen to arrive and help the nurses get a fallen patient back into bed.

鈥淢edications are more sophisticated today than in my day,鈥 she added, 鈥渟o the focus has changed.鈥

RELATED 鈥 Paramedic evolution: From 鈥榞rab and go鈥 to high-tech lifesaving services

READ ALSO: Retired doctors and nurses help preserve medical history in 91原创

MORE: Welcome to a health-care world 75 years in the making

.

91原创 Memorial Hospital Foundation fundraises throughout the year to support health-care workers and allow them to keep providing life-saving care. To this end, the foundation is preparing for its annual hospital gala. This year鈥檚 event, dubbed Hot Havana Nights, is being held Oct. 21 at the Coast Hotel & Convention Centre. It鈥檚 the 32nd year. Money raised will support the urgent need to expand cardiac care at the 91原创 Hospital. For info:

鈥 And, for more LMH history check out this special publication.

story tags



About the Author: Black Press Media Staff

Read more



(or

91原创

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }