Cards (9)

    • hospitals in 19th century:
      • few toilets and poor sewage system
      • overcrowded with lack of fresh air
      • doctors had lack of cleanliness, so led to spread of infection
      • people did not understand germs to take prevention methods
      • doctors would go from patient to patient without washing their hands
    • Florence Nightingale and Crimea:
      • Nightingale trained to become nurse in Europe
      • she experienced vision from God telling her she had mission to serve mankind
      • was sent to Crimea to look after soldiers and improve hospitals in 1853
    • changes Nightingale made to Crimean hospitals:
      • she demanded for 300 scrubbing brushes to remove dirt near treated patients
      • nurses organised to treat 2000 wounded
      • provided clean bedding and good meals
      • within six months of being in the Crimea, Nightingale dropped the mortality rate from 40% to 2%
    • changes Nightingale made in Britain:
      • she became national hero
      • she improved publicty on conditions of war hospitals
      • gave her credibility and allowed her to make changes to British hospitals
      • she implemented the pavillion plan
      • improved ventiliation with more windows
      • larger rooms
      • seperate isolation wards to stop disease spreading
      • Nightingale wrote Notes on Nursing in 1859
      • set out role of nurse and importance of training
      • she set up the Nightingale School for Nurses
      • trained nurses on sanitary matters
      • trainng made nursing seem like profession - so more women signed up and number and skill of nurses improved
      • made nursing respectable
      • nurses previously were working class, drunk and flirtatious
    • hospitals by 1900:
      • different wards split up infectious patients from those needing surgery
      • operating theatres provided seperate spaces for surgery
      • hospitals cleaned up germs with antiseptics
      • wanted to prevent germs from entering hospital
      • hospitals changes from being place of rest to treating sick
    • continuity:
      • quack remedies still common
      • many sick people still treated at home by family
      • aopthecaries opened as pharmacies
    • change:
      • treatments developed for specific disease
      • hospitals more cleaner
      • government became more involved in sanitation
      • hospitals were more widespread
      • vaccines developed
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