Intensive and Critical Care Nursing
Volume 22, Issue 3 , Pages 130-137 , June 2006

Godzilla in the corridor: The Ontario SARS crisis in historical perspective

,Accepted 19 October 2005.

References 

  1. Adams C. Report of the Jacksonville Auxiliary Sanitary Association of Jacksonville, Florida. Concerning the work of the association during yellow fever epidemic, 1888. Jacksonville: Trent-Union; 1889.
  2. Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions. Submission to the National Advisory Committee on SARS and Public Health; 2003.
  3. Canadian Nurses’ Association. Brief to the National Advisory Committee on the SARS and Public Health: lessons learned and recommendations; 2003.
  4. CBC Online Staff. Nurse files $600 million SARs suit; 23 February 2004. http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2004/02/23/canada/sars_nurse040223 (accessed 1 August 2005).
  5. Collier R. The plague of the Spanish lady. London: MacMillan; 1974;
  6. Crosby A. America's forgotten pandemic: influenza. London: Cambridge University Press; 1918;
  7. Evans R. Death in Hamburg. Oxford: Clarendon Press; 1987;
  8. Humphreys M. Yellow fever and the South. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press; 1992;
  9. Globe and Mail. Is taken ill on short leave; 21 October 1918. p. 11.
  10. Johnson N, Mueller J. Updating the accounts: global mortality of the 1918–1920 “Spanish” influenza pandemic. Bull History Med. 2002;76(1):105–115
  11. Ontario Nurses’ Association. The Commission to Investigate the Introduction and Spread of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome; 2003.
  12. OPSEU/ONA. Joint report on the health and safety matters arising from SARS; 2003.
  13. Pettigrew E. The silent enemy: Canada and the deadly flu of 1918. Saskatoon: Western Producer Prairie Books; 1983;
  14. Registered Nurses Association of Ontario. SARS unmasked: celebrating resilience, exposing vulnerability; 2003.
  15. Rosenberg C. The cholera years. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 1962;
  16. Walton M, Connolly C. A look back: nursing care of typhoid fever: the pivotal role of nurses at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia between 1895 and 1910: how the past informs the present. Am J Nurs. 2005;105(4):74–78
  17. West L. Nurses on the frontline: Canada should recognise its fallen heroes of SARS; 2003. Contemporary Nurse 15 http://www.contemporarynurse.com/15.1/15-1p108.htm (accessed 1 August 2005).

PII: S0964-3397(05)00133-3

doi: 10.1016/j.iccn.2005.10.001

Intensive and Critical Care Nursing
Volume 22, Issue 3 , Pages 130-137 , June 2006