INDIANAPOLIS — After five decades, Cheryl Hansell says nursing is "light years different," but one thing has stayed the same — the letter she wrote as a graduating senior in the 1972 IU School of Nursing Class.
On Friday, IU nursing faculty, staff, students and alumni unveiled what was inside the 1972 time capsule, which was located in the entryway of the School of Nursing Building at Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis.
Included in the time capsule was Hansell's letter projecting what IU nursing would be like in 2022.
"I think the technology has changed everything. It's gone from handwritten paper, if you copied it it was carbon paper. There were no Xerox machines," Hansell said. "The whole concept of the nurse has changed ... nurses have so much more involvement in patient care now."
Hansell says when she started, nurses didn't have stethoscopes and couldn't draw blood or start IVs. She went on to have a 30 year nursing career before retiring.
Other items in the time capsule included:
- A nursing cap and pin
- Newspaper clippings about the school
- Photographs of nursing students in their uniforms
- School newsletters and other announcements
"I think over the next 50 years we are going to see some remarkable things that create an impact to patients, to populations [and] to healthcare," Robin Newhouse, dean of the IU School of Nursing, said. "Nurses are important to the community because they are really the backbone of the healthcare system."
Contents of the time capsule will be managed and preserved by IU archivists.
-
12-year-old Indy racer breaking barriers on the track in the Soap Box Derby
Crossing the finish line first at the All-American Soap Box Derby in Akron, Ohio, is something Indy 12-year-old Shelton Taylor will never forget.City of Bloomington issues boil water advisory for Monroe County
The city says a water treatment plant was preparing a new water filter when the sand used in the filter spilled into the water tank.The Innocence Project launches in Indiana with the mission of helping exonerees
The Innocence Project launched its Indiana chapter on Saturday with a fundraising event in Indianapolis.Town hall hopes to solve increasing rate of opioid overdoses in Indianapolis
Filling communities with information and resources to help curb the increasing rates of opioid overdoses in Indianapolis was the goal of a town hall held on Saturday.