hospitals

    Cards (6)

    • 18th century - good
      • less strict about who they turned away
      • rich people received treatments + surgery at home
      • surgeon visited everyday
      • new hospitals began to appear
      • poor people go to doctors - respected
      • increasingly became a place where sick people got treated(as opposed to prayed for)
      • doctors visited places daily
    • 18th century - bad
      • untrained nurses cared for patients
      • only 5 in the UK - 1700
      • hospitals choose who was treated
      • hospitals were still not a place where people chose to be treated
      • as more people came to hospitals it became less sanitary
      • doctors went from patient to patient without washing hands --
      • disease spread quickly
    • 1900 hospitals
      • used wards to split up infectious patients from those who needed surgery
      • operating theatres and specialist departments for new medical equipment provided separate spaces for certain procedures
      • cleanliness was the upmost important
      • hospitals first focused on cleaning germs with aseptic
      • 1900-tried to get rid of germs to begin with
      • doctors were common (junior)
      • trained nurses lived nearby in prepaid houses
      • modern hospital design -- donations + new student doctors
      • hospitals became a place where people were treated(opposed to where people rested)
    • Florence Nightingale
      wrote Notes on Nursing - 1859 -- set out key role of nursing + importance of thorough training
      1860 - opened Nightingales School for Nurses at St Thomas Hospital, London
      new hospitals were built out of materials that could easily be cleans (tiles) - she believed dirt spread disease
      promoted 'pavilion style' hospitals where separate wards were used to seperate patients
      nursing seemed respectable
      boiled bandages at 100'C
    • nurses before Nightingale
      working class
      had a reputation of being; dunk, flirtatious and uncaring
    • nurses after Nightingale
      middle class
      nursing was seen as a respectable profession -- due to rigorous training