Blessing nurse embraced change, transforming hospital

Lauretta Eno moved to Quincy in 1957, when she accepted the position of director of nursing service and director of nursing education at Blessing Hospital.
At age 42, she had already had a lifetime of experiences. She was born in Michigan in 1915 but spent most of her early life in Minnesota.
She wanted to go to college to be a physical education teacher, but the family had little money. She opted to go to nursing school at St. Mary Hospital in Duluth, Minn., graduating in 1936. She decided to join the U.S. Navy in 1938.
The Navy Nurse Corps was small with only 400 nurses and had just opened up for new recruits. Navy nursing was supervisory with a formula of three nurses for 1,000 men. The Navy corpsmen were trained to do most of the care. A Quincy Herald-Whig article in 1998 quoted her saying, "We had just come out of the depression and there weren't too many opportunities for women." Plus, she wanted to see the world.
There was no formal training for the Navy, just orientation at the Portsmouth Naval Hospital in Virginia. Nurses had military status but no rank until 1942 when they were given relative rank, which meant a title as an ensign and a uniform. At Portsmouth, Eno was in charge of the operating room and also an anesthetist.
Her next assignment was transport duty for Navy personnel and their families who were traveling from the East Coast to the West Coast through the Panama Canal with stops at bases along the way. The destination was Hawaii and then back again. On Eno's second trip in 1941, her orders were changed, and she was assigned to the Naval Hospital at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii. At that time, the hospital had 28 nurses and about 300 staff members. She was again assigned to the operating room.
On Sunday Dec. 7, 1941, there were few patients in the hospital. Eno was checking supplies when explosions were heard. The hospital staff went outside, and when they saw the rising sun on the planes, they knew they were under attack.
She described patients arriving within 15 minutes from all directions. The memories of that day stayed with Eno, the sights, sounds and smells. The burn cases were the most difficult. She reported to the operating room. By the next day the staff was organized into eight-hour shifts with four hours off around the clock, even performing surgeries in the hall.
On Dec. 17, 1941, Eno and two other nurses left Hawaii on the ocean liner SS Coolidge for San Francisco. The ship carried evacuees from China and the Philippines. The three nurses took care of 175 war casualties from Pearl Harbor. After many days at sea dodging submarines, they docked at Mare Island. Volunteers from the Salvation Army and the Red Cross helped transfer the patients. The next day the nurses boarded a transport with 10,000 troops to return to Hawaii.
Eno's next assignment was the USS Solace, a hospital ship in the South Pacific. After many weeks of travel, she joined the ship in Wellington, New Zealand. While on the Solace she was in charge of the operating room and later became chief nurse with the rank of lieutenant junior grade. After a year, she was ordered to return to the United States. Her assignment was at Great Lakes Naval Base in Illinois where she trained corpsman to work in an operating room.
When the war ended, Eno decided it was time to try something new. She was discharged in September 1945. She joined her sister and worked as an office nurse in Moscow, Idaho. At that time, an office nurse took X-rays, did physical therapy, compounded drugs and provided anesthesia for office surgeries.
In 1951, she entered Washington State College on the G.I. Bill. She later transferred to the University of Minnesota, where earned a master's degree in nursing administration. Her first postdegree job was at Ryburn Hospital in Ottawa, Ill. It was here that she first considered on-site child care because of the difficulty of hiring and retaining nurses.
Working at Blessing Hospital from 1957 until she retired in 1980, Eno was a change agent and an innovator. She was reluctant to take the position, but the board wanted change and talked her into taking the job. She once said, "There was nothing but change the entire time I was at Blessing and I loved it."
Her first goal was changing the nursing school from service-centered to a sound academically centered school. She thought the students were doing too much service and were on call too much, particularly in the operating room.
Eno changed the curriculum, hired more instructors, eliminated out-of-town affiliations, removed physicians and head nurses as instructors and replaced them with trained nursing faculty.
She began a course for surgical technicians and removed students from that operating room function. She actively recruited male students, married students and black students, all of whom had not previously been admitted, mostly because of the restriction of living in the nursing dorm. Non-traditional students could live anywhere. The school's reputation grew under Eno, and discussions were beginning to turn the school into a college.
In nursing service Eno was just as active and said, "The board was often unhappy because I spent money."
She retrained the licensed practical nurses on staff and hired more nurses. She redesigned the nursing stations. She started the first intensive care, coronary care and renal dialysis units. Eno designed the charting system, medication carts and the disaster plan.
She was chiefly responsible for the on-site child care at Blessing since 1974. The day care was ahead of its time by developing a preschool environment. It was a model for the nation. When Eno retired in 1980, the Blessing Child Care Center was listed in the top 10 day care centers in the United States.
Arlis Dittmer is a retired medical librarian. During her years with Blessing Health System, she became interested in medical and nursing history--both topics frequently overlooked in history.
Sources:
Bradshaw, B. (1980, March 31). "Former Navy, Blessing Nurse Retires." The Quincy Herald-Whig, p. 8B.
Busen, J. "American Hero." The Quincy Herald-Whig, Feb. 1, 1998, p. 1, Suppl.
"Lauretta Eno Conversations." (Unpublished Manuscript) Blessing Health System Archives, 1998.
Eno, Lauretta. "Speech Given to Women's City Club, Cleveland Heights, Ohio." (Unpublished Manuscript) Blessing Health System Archives, 1944.





