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Isla Stuart Blomfield (9 July 1865 – 16 August 1959) was an Australian nurse, sanitary inspector, and health visitor. She spent her career helping to reduce the high infant mortality in New South Wales, advising mothers about breastfeeding. She was the only woman health inspector in Sydney's health department, and she was an executive member of the Royal Society for the Welfare of Mothers and Babies.


Life

Blomfield was born near Mudgee in New South Wales. She was the first of eight children of Margaret (born Cox) and Henry Wilson Blomfield, who was a grazier. Her parents were both born in Australia, and it is presumed that they employed a governess for her. In January 1896, she started training as a nurse at the (later Royal) Prince Alfred Hospital. Susan McGahey was the matron. McGahey would co-found the
Australasian Trained Nurses Association Australasian is the adjectival form of Australasia, a geographical region including Australia, New Zealand, and New Guinea. Australasian may also refer to: Institutions Commercial * Australasian Correctional Management, private company running p ...
(ATNA). Blomfield left for a holiday after qualifying, and she was at London's Queen Charlotte's Lying-in Hospital in 1901 learning about midwifery. She went on a tour of American hospitals with McGahey, before returning to her former employees. At some time, she learned about treating diseases in China for three years and joined the ATNA. In 1909, she took a train through Siberia, and continued to London where she was a fraternal delegate of the ATNA at the third congress of the International Council of Nurses in July in Westminster. In the following year, she was the nurse-in-charge at the Alice Rawson School for Mothers in Darlington. Sydney's Health Officer
William George Armstrong William George Armstrong, 1st Baron Armstrong, (26 November 1810 – 27 December 1900) was an English engineer and industrialist who founded the Armstrong Whitworth manufacturing concern on Tyneside. He was also an eminent scientist, inventor ...
had decided that half of the babies dying in NSW could be saved by good advice, and he employed Blomfield as a health visitor. He felt that additional artificial food was a poor supplement for breastfeeding. Blomfield visited young mothers at a rate of 1,400 per year until Baby Centres began in 1915. She advocated that young mothers should receive cheap milk so that they could better feed their babies. The Royal Society for the Welfare of Mothers and Babies was formed in 1918 by the New South Wales government to address the continuing high infant mortality rate at a time when many young mothers were widows, and of the flu pandemic. Blomfield became an executive member. In March 1930, she retired as the only woman health inspector in Sydney's health department. William George Armstrong claimed that the work with mothers had been the contributing factor to the later observed reduction in infant mortality. Blomfield died in her flat in 1959 in the Sydney suburb of
Potts Point Potts Point is a small and densely populated suburb in inner-city Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Potts Point is located east of the Sydney central business district and is part of the local government area of the City of Sydney. Potts Po ...
, where she had taken up sculpture, and was cremated with Christian Science forms.


References


External links


Biography at ADB
{{DEFAULTSORT:Blomfield, Isla Stuart 1865 births 1959 deaths People from Mudgee Australian women nurses Health professionals Australian nurses 19th-century nurses 20th-century nurses