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To Do The Sick No Harm: A Study of the British Voluntary Hospital System to 1875 [Hardback]

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What part did the British voluntary hospital system play in the health of the community in the 18th and 19th centuries? Originally published in 1974, this study investigates this question through a pioneering examination of the extant hospital records, and by an analysis of the contemporary literature.



What part did the British voluntary hospital system play in the health of the community in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries? Did hospitals kill or cure? Originally published in 1974, this study investigates these questions through a pioneering examination of the extant hospital records, ranging from admissions registers to annual reports, and by an analysis of the contemporary literature. It relates the hospital system to the changing economic and social environment and is primarily concerned with the patients themselves and their experiences. The lack of medical treatment for the bulk of the population is emphasised, and the influence of the reformers on the foundation of the first voluntary hospitals in the beginning of the 18th century is assessed. Staffing and administrative procedures are studied as a prelude to examining the patients – their social background and physical and surgical complaints. Important aspects of the hospitals’ work and their influence on the rate of mortality are explored. They are admissions policy regarding fever cases; the nature and number of surgical cases and the incidence of sepsis. The effect of growing urbanization and industrialization on the success of the voluntary hospitals in the 19th century is also examined.

Recenzijas

In the hands of John Woodward, the early history of the British hospital comes alive. Malcolm Johnson, Journal of Social Policy, Volume 6, Issue 1, (1977).

1.Medical Care and Social Policy
2. To Prove A Need
3. Philanthropy or
Social Enhancement
4. Hospital Staff
5. Admissions Policy
6. On the Books
7.
Fever Cases
8. Surgery
9. Hospital Diseases
10. Gateways to Death?
11.
Hospitals and Population Growth Appendix 1: The Voluntary Hospitals of the
Eighteenth Century Appendix 2: An Account of the Establishment of the County
Hospital at Winchester Appendix 3: Mortality in Selected Voluntary Hospitals
to 1875 Appendix 4: Summary of Patients Admitted to the Glasgow Royal
Infirmary, 180070 Appendix 5: Cases Admitted to the Newcastle and Manchester
Infirmaries in the 1750s Appendix 6: A Comparison of the Mortality Rates
Presented by Florence Nightingale and Fleetwood Buckle Appendix 7: Surgical
Operations, 1863 Appendix 8: Deaths from Pyaemia.