Pratt enrolled to train as a nurse at Ballarat Hospital in 1909, understating her age to be accepted. After qualifying she continued to work at Ballarat Hospital, before moving to Melbourne to the
Women's Hospital. She subsequently served with 3AGH in Abbassia, Egypt, before transferring to No. 1 Australian General Hospital in England. Pratt was posted to the 1st Australian Casualty Clearing Station (1ACCS) at Bailleul in France in May 1917. Two months later, during an air raid in the early hours of 4 July, she was wounded but continued to tend her patients. When she eventually collapsed, it was discovered that shrapnel had lodged in her lungs. She was promoted to sister on 5 July, stabilised and sent to England for treatment. An operation failed to remove the shrapnel but she recovered to resume service at postings in England. For her bravery during the raid, Pratt was awarded the
Military Medal. She was one of only seven Australian nurses to receive the Military Medal in the First World War. She was presented with her award by
King George V at
Buckingham Palace in October 1917, the citation for the medal praising her "conspicuous gallantry displayed in the performance of her duties on the occasion of hostile air raids on Casualty Clearing Stations in the field". Her post-war life was badly affected. Not only did she suffer chronic bronchitis from her wounded lung, but she was also afflicted by severe mental illness. Pratt died at
Heidelberg Repatriation Hospital on 23 March 1954. ==References==