Blog

Honoring Our Nurses During National Nurses Week

Written By
BrightStar Care of Santa Barbara County
Published On
May 6, 2026
In the mid-19th century, the Civil War served as the ultimate catalyst. Trailblazers like Clara Barton and Dorothea Dix proved that organized nursing saved lives. Shortly after, in 1879, Mary Eliza Mahoney became the first African American licensed nurse, paving the way for a more inclusive and professionalized workforce.

Taking Care to the Community

The late 1800’s saw the rise of public health nursing. Lillian Wald moved care from hospital wards to city streets, establishing the Henry Street Settlement. This era proved that nurses were essential not just for treating illness, but for preventing it. This philosophy remains the backbone of home care today.

The Modern Clinical Leader

Throughout the 20th century, the profession exploded in complexity:
Specialization: The 1960’s saw the birth of the Nurse Practitioner, granting nurses the power to diagnose and prescribe.
Technology: Nurses transitioned from manual monitoring to mastering advanced ICU tech and digital health records.

Nursing in 2026

Today, we celebrate "The Power of Nurses™." Whether in a hospital or in a BrightStar Care patient’s home, modern nurses are high-tech clinicians and high-touch advocates. They are the bridge between complex medical data and the human heart, continuing a legacy of resilience that began over 150 years ago.