Mabel Keaton Staupers Research Paper

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Nurse of Change: Mabel Keaton Staupers Samiah Ross-Wheatley Howard University College of Nursing Mabel Keaton Staupers is an extraordinary example a leader who works tirelessly to accomplish her goals. With much ambition, determination, and resilience, Staupers made it her mission to shatter the barriers of segregation for black nurses in America. And with the intent to also improve the health care of black Americans, she was a key organizer in the first private facility for black patients to be treated by black physicians. Born on February 27, 1890, in Barbados, West Indies, Mabel Keaton Staupers was the first child of Pauline and Thomas Doyle. She was raised on her native island until 1903 when, at the age of thirteen, Staupers…show more content…
Training schools were majorly segregated and organizations like the American Nurses Association and the National League of Nursing Education did not accept black nurses in certain locations in America. Hit with these circumstances, Staupers pledged that she would not stop until black nurses had equal rights and black patients were afforded improved health care. In 1920, along with Louis T. Wright and James Wilson, Staupers contributed to the establishment of the first hospital in America to treat black citizens with tuberculosis called Booker T. Washington Sanitarium in Harlem, New York. In the Washington Sanitarium, Staupers worked as the director of nurses for a year before taking another job in Philadelphia catering to blacks with tuberculosis. In 1934, Staupers made history by becoming the first paid executive secretary for the National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses and during her twelve years on board, she made huge strides toward her goal of the advancement of black nurses. In the course of her time at the NACGN, Staupers boosted the enrollment total, founded a citizens advisory committee, and developed alliances with groups of…show more content…
Staupers, the only thing that I would have done to expand on her legacy is to fight for more benefits and resources for black nurses at that time. During the period of her work, nurses were not even welcomed into mainstream nursing, let alone supported financially and emotionally. The black nurses who paved the way for us were so strong and unwavering in their determination to be recognized in the medical field. Even without proper compensation or acknowledgement, they were eager to do their jobs. And so, for nurses like Mabel Keaton Stauper and her colleagues I would have fundraised for financial resources to make their fight a little

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