Annie Altschul

{{Infobox person

| name = Annie Altschul

| honorific_suffix = CBE

| birth_date = {{birth date|1919|2|18|df=y}}

| birth_place = Vienna, Austria

| death_date = {{death date and age|2001|12|24|1919|2|18|df=y}}

| death_place = Edinburgh, Scotland

| education = BA, MSc, RGN, RMN, RNT

| occupation = Professor of Nursing

| known_for = mental health nursing research, education and advocacy

| notable_works = Psychiatric Nursing (1957)

Psychology for Nurses (1962)

| honours = CBE:Commander of the British Empire (1983)

Fellow of the Royal College of Nursing (1978)

}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2017}}

{{Use British English|date=September 2017}}

{{Short description|British mental health nurse and professor (1919–2001)}}

Annie Therese Altschul, CBE, BA, MSc, RGN, RMN, RNT, FRCN (18 February 1919 – 24 December 2001){{cite book |last1=Ewan |first1=Elizabeth |last2=Pipes |first2=Rose |last3=Rendall |first3=Jane |last4=Reynolds |first4=Siân |title=The new biographical dictionary of Scottish women |date=2018 |isbn=978-1-4744-3628-1 |pages=12–13}} was Britain's first mental health nurse pioneer;{{cite journal |title=Professor Annie T. Altschul CBE |journal=Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing |date=April 2002 |volume=9 |issue=2 |pages=130 |doi=10.1046/j.1365-2850.2002.05023.x |last1=Davis |first1=Bryn }}{{cite news |last1=Barker |first1=Phil |title=Annie Altschul |url=https://www.theguardian.com/society/2002/jan/08/mentalhealth |work=The Guardian |date=8 January 2002 }} a midwife, researcher, educator, author and a patient advocate, emeritus professor of nursing.

Early years and interests

She was born in Vienna, Austria on 18 February 1919 to Ludwig and Marie Altschul.{{cite book |doi=10.1093/odnb/9780198614128.013.112543 |chapter=Altschul, Annie Therese (1919–2001), psychiatric nurse and teacher |title=Oxford Dictionary of National Biography |year=2020 |last1=Nolan |first1=Peter |isbn=978-0-19-861412-8 }} She was five years old when her father was killed in a railway accident. Altschul was studying mathematics at the University of Vienna when she had to leave Austria in March 1939, then coming under Nazi rule.

Altschul came to London with her mother, sister and young nephew. Altschul worked first as a nanny to learn English before qualifying as a general nurse and midwife — initially in Ealing (which she described as “toffee-nosed”), later in Epsom County Hospital (where “a tutor treated students as idiots”). Altschul's career then took off after she trained as a nurse for the mentally ill in the early 1940s at the Army Mental Hospital which had been set up at Mill Hill school in London,{{cite journal |last1=Smoyak |first1=Shirley A |title=In Memoriam: Professor Annie Altschul |journal=Journal of Psychosocial Nursing and Mental Health Services |date=March 2002 |volume=40 |issue=3 |pages=6–7 |doi=10.3928/0279-3695-20020301-03 }} where she found staff and students were more motivated.

Altschul later said that psychiatric nurses "recruit themselves" and that "people who take to psychiatric nursing are different from those who want to be general nurses". Altschul believed that psychiatric nurses have an "affinity for the underdog".{{cite news |last1=Tierney |first1=Alison |title=Annie Altschul |url=https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/12226461.annie-altschul/ |work=HeraldScotland |date=5 January 2002 }} Altschul's thinking was influenced by John Bowlby and she continued her own lifelong learning and also encouraged education for all.

Later in life she unfortunately suffered mental health issues herself and was nursed back to health, in Edinburgh. Altschul used that experience to educate others as well, writing in a 1985 collection titled Wounded Healers: Mental Health Workers' Experiences of Depression. To relax, Altschul enjoyed music, especially opera, cooking and playing bridge.

Career

Altschul's formal training as a nurse and midwife began at Epsom County Hospital. She was entered on the register of nurses on 23 June 1943. In 1946, she became a staff nurse at the Maudsley Hospital, a psychiatric centre, later promoted to sister and then nurse tutor, completing her tutor's diploma at Battersea College of Technology (now Surrey University) and proud of being an alumna (an 'Old Bat'), and also took a degree in psychology at Birkbeck College. Altschul took to teaching nurse students outdoors at Mill Hill where the Maudsley and Bedlam psychiatric hospitals were evacuated to and remained into the 50's.{{cite journal |last1=Howard |first1=Robert |title=Psychiatry in pictures |journal=British Journal of Psychiatry |date=December 2003 |volume=183 |issue=6 |pages=A22 |doi=10.1192/bjp.183.6.477-a22 |doi-access=free }}

In 1957, Altschul published her perceptions of what mental health nursing should be in her first book Psychiatric Nursing, and in 1962 Psychology for Nurses, both of which were among the most frequently cited even at the time of her death in 2001. Altschul produced 35 editions and versions, translated into 3 languages,{{Cite web|title=World Cat Identities - Annie Altschul|url=http://worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n84008176/|access-date=3 May 2020}} based on the latest research thinking, with co-authors, publishing in 1994, Altschul's psychiatric and mental nursing.{{Cite book|last=McGovern, Margaret.|title=Altschul's psychiatric and mental health nursing|date=1994|publisher=B. Tindall|others=Whitcher, Sarah., Altschul, Annie T.|isbn=0-7020-1412-5|edition=7th|location=London|oclc=32501962}}

From 1962 to 1964, Altschul served on the Platt Committee on Nursing Education, for the Royal College of Nursing (RCN),. Led by Harry Platt it investigated the loss of trained nurses or the failure to attract new candidates, resulting in the influential Platt Report 1964 andadopted by RCN for the Reform of Nurse Education (1964).{{Cite web |date=1964 |title=A reform of nursing education first report of a special committee |url=https://rcn.access.preservica.com/uncategorized/IO_636f6543-6fe0-408d-a603-a6fa33a86bd5/ |access-date=2023-12-21 |website=RCN Digital Archive}} Altschul had taken a sabbatical in 1961–62, visiting the United States of America, funded by a British Commonwealth for Nurses Scholarship Fund to explore psychiatric nurse education and practices, which influenced her thinking.{{cite journal |last1=Tilley |first1=Stephen |title=Festschrift for Annie Altschul |journal=Journal of Psychosocial Nursing and Mental Health Services |date=March 2002 |volume=40 |issue=3 |pages=14 |id={{ProQuest|225554818}} |doi=10.3928/0279-3695-20020301-07 }}

In 1964, Altschul left the Maudsley to be a World Health Organisation funded{{Cite web|title=Scottish Review: Steve Tilley|url=https://www.scottishreview.net/SteveTilley420a.html|website=www.scottishreview.net|access-date=2020-05-03}} lecturer in the Department of Nursing Studies at the University of Edinburgh, where she became a senior lecturer then professor and head of unit, a leader in (then 'ground breaking') integration of degree level nursing education and practical studies, and research leadership, which met some resistance from the medical establishment.

Altschul's own MSc. thesis, entitled 'Measurement of patient-nurse interaction in relation to in-patient psychiatric treatment', was supervised by Elsie Stephenson in 1967.{{cite book |last1=Tilley |first1=Stephen |title=Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing: The Field of Knowledge |date=2008 |publisher=John Wiley & Sons |isbn=978-0-470-77743-5 |page=43 }} In 1972, Altschul wrote a book Patient-Nurse Interaction, and in 1976 she became Professor and Chair of Nursing Studies. Altschul was appointed to the Mental Health Commission in Scotland as patient advocate and in the same year (1978) was made one of the first Fellows of the Royal College of Nursing. Altschul remained at the University of Edinburgh until her retirement in 1983,{{Cite web|title=Annie Altschul|url=https://www.ed.ac.uk/equality-diversity/celebrating-diversity/inspiring-women/women-in-history/annie-altschul|website=The University of Edinburgh|date=28 March 2019 |language=en|access-date=2020-05-03}} developing nurse education further into post-graduate Masters in Nursing Administration, Nurse Education and Health Education, and expanded research portfolios up to higher levels in nursing and affiliated professions.

Altschul also did a mathematics degree at the Open University, was involved in assessing the joint education of architects and engineers, and was a volunteer teacher of mathematics at a local primary school (for under 11 year olds).

Observations

Professor Altschul observed the effects when patients were moved to smaller accommodations during the redecoration of the large wards at Dingleton Hospital in the Scottish Borders. Altschul observed that the closer interaction between nurses and patients resulted in less hyperactivity and less need for certain types of medications.{{Citation needed|date=May 2020}} Throughout her career and research work, Altschul emphasised the critical role of the patient-nurse relationship in the therapeutic environment to support improvements in health and wellbeing. Perhaps in advance of her day she debated patient-advocacy, a 'consumer's voice', in the role nursing staff play in psychiatric care in 1983.{{cite journal |last1=Altschul |first1=Annie T. |title=The consumer's voice: nursing implications |journal=Journal of Advanced Nursing |date=May 1983 |volume=8 |issue=3 |pages=175–183 |doi=10.1111/j.1365-2648.1983.tb00311.x |pmid=6553587 }}{{primary source inline|date=February 2024}}

Honours/legacy

Altschul was one of the first Fellows of the Royal College of Nursing in 1978. Altschul was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 1984 New Year Honours. She established the Professor Annie Altschul Publication Prize.

Five weeks before she died, the University of Edinburgh and the Royal College of Nursing UK Centre for the History of Nursing held a 'festschrift' celebration of writings, where Altschul joined in lively debates with current nurse researchers and professors, based on her 1961-62 papers.

Altschul's 'social inclusion and user involvement' in psychiatric treatment is still cited (2009).{{cite journal |last1=Winship |first1=Gary |last2=Bray |first2=Joy |last3=Repper |first3=Julie |last4=Hinshelwood |first4=Robert D. |title=Collective biography and the legacy of Hildegard Peplau, Annie Altschul and Eileen Skellern; the origins of mental health nursing and its relevance to the current crisis in psychiatry |journal=Journal of Research in Nursing |date=November 2009 |volume=14 |issue=6 |pages=505–517 |doi=10.1177/1744987109347039 |s2cid=144105196 }}

Altschul died on Christmas Eve (24 December) 2001 aged 82, and an obituary{{cite journal |id={{ProQuest|219829718}} |title=Obituary: Professor Annie Altschul |last1=Dopson |first1=Laurence |journal=Nursing Standard |volume=16 |issue=17 |date=January 2002 |pages=31 }} remarked that she had 'gained academic acclaim for mental health nursing' and 'inspired general as well as psychiatric nurses'. Another obituary noted that Altschul's 'contribution and intellect' was held as being 'of the highest order' also 'by eminent psychologists and psychiatrists'.

Altschul and a few other key nurses who fled the Holocaust{{Cite book|last=Weindling|first=Paul|title=Russian and Soviet Health Care from an International Perspective|chapter=Refugee Nurses in Great Britain, 1933–1945: From Place of Safety to a New Homeland|date=2017|work=Russian and Soviet Health Care from an International Perspective: Comparing Professions, Practice and Gender, 1880-1960|pages=243–254|editor-last=Grant|editor-first=Susan|publisher=Springer International Publishing|language=en|doi=10.1007/978-3-319-44171-9_11|isbn=978-3-319-44171-9}} were considered as making a 'defining impact' on Britain's health service.{{Cite web|title=Refugee nurses: The Jewish women who fled tyranny to become angels of the NHS|url=https://jewishnews.timesofisrael.com/refugee-nurses-the-jewish-women-who-fled-tyranny-to-become-angels-of-the-nhs/|last=Oryszczuk|first=Stephen|website=jewishnews.timesofisrael.com|language=en-US|access-date=2020-05-03}}

Altschul played a part in the history of mental health nursing{{Cite book|last=Nolan|first=Peter|title=A history of mental health nursing|publisher=Stanley Thornes|year=1998|isbn=0-7487-3721-9|location=Cheltenham|oclc=38924256}} and was described as 'one of the most outstanding mental health nurses of the 20th century'.{{cite journal |last1=Nolan |first1=P |title=Annie Altschul's legacy to 20th century British mental health nursing. |journal=Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing |date=August 1999 |volume=6 |issue=4 |pages=267–72 |doi=10.1046/j.1365-2850.1999.00209.x |pmid=10763662 }}

References