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Welcome to the Rossbret Hospitals
Website
Each voluntary hospital is dependent
upon its popularity and efficiency, in
large measure, for the financial support
it receives. In this way an ill-managed
voluntary hospital, or one which has
ceased to fulfil any useful public
purpose, is sure to disappear in due
course under the voluntary system.
Voluntary hospitals are always open to,
as well as supported by, the public,
and, owing largely to the example so
prominently set by King Edward VII. and
members of the royal family, more people
every year devote some time in some way
to the cause of the hospitals. Attached
to the voluntary hospitals are the
principal medical and nursing schools
upon which the public depend for the
supply of doctors and nurses. The
education of students and nurses in a
clinical hospital makes that hospital
the most desirable place for everybody
when they are really ill.
Rate-supported hospitals, as a rule, are
administered by permanent officials who
reside in houses usually situated on the
hospital sites, and who are paid
salaries which attract the younger men,
who, once appointed, tend to continue in
office for a long period of years
The poor-law infirmary in large cities,
so far as the buildings and equipment
are concerned, very often leaves little
to desire. Poor-law infirmaries lack,
however, the stimulus and the checks and
advantages which impartial criticism
continuously applied brings to a great
voluntary hospital. Such disadvantages
might be entirely removed if parliament
would decide to throw open every
poor-law infirmary for clinical
purposes, and to have connected with
each such establishment a responsible
visiting medical staff, consisting of
the best qualified men to be fou’hd in
the community which each hospital
serves. The old prejudice against
hospital treatment has disappeared, for
the least intelligent members of the
population now understand that, when a
citizen is sick, there is no place so
good as the wards of a well administered
hospital
Classification of Hospitals.—Having
dealt with hospitals as a whole it may
be well very briefly to classify them in
groups, and explain as tersely as
possible what they represent and how far
it may be desirable to eliminate by
consolidation or to increase by
disintegration the number of special
hospitals
General Hospitals.—These establishments
consist of two kinds, (if) clinical and
(5) non-clinical, each of which, under
the modern system, should include every
department of medicine and surgery, and
every appliance and means for the
alleviation of suffering, the healing of
wounds, the reduction of fractures, the
removal of mal-formations and foreign
growths, the surgical restoration of
damaged and diseased organs and bones,
and everything of every kind which
experience and knowledge prove to be
necessary to the rapid cure of disease.
The clinical hospital means an
institutioii to which a medical school
is attached, where technical instruction
is given by able and qualified teachers
to medical students and others. A
non-clinical hospital is one which is
not attached to a medical school, and
where no medical instruction is
organized.
Special Hospitals.—Up to about 1840 the
general hospital was, speaking
generally, the only hospital in
existence. Twenty years later, as the
population increased and medical science
became more and more active, some of the
more ardent members of the medical
profession, especially amongst the
younger men, pressed continuously for
opportunities to develop the methods of
treatment in regard to special diseases
for which neither accommodation nor
appliances were at that time forthcoming
in general hospitals
Cottage Hospitals.—These hospitals,
established originally in 1859 by Mr
Albert Napper at Cranleigh, Surrey, have
fulfilled a most useful function. Many
of them are very efficient both in
regard to equipment and treatment. They
have become essential to the well-being
and adequate medical care of rural
populations, as they attract to the
country some of the best members of the
profession, who are able, with the aid
of ‘the cottage hospital, to keep
themselves efficient and up-to-date, so
that all classes of the community are
benefited in this way by this type of
hospital.
. There undoubtedly is considerable
overlapping between the voluntary
hospitals and the poor law in Great
Britain. The Royal Commission on the
Poor Laws and Relief of Distress (1909)
deals with this point with a view to set
up a standard of medical relief to be
granted by each class and type of
hospitals, provides for adequate
co-operation between all classes of
institutions; and these reforms may be
commended
We hope you enjoy the site and find the
information you require. If you wish to
add any information or make a comment,
send an email to
admin@rossbret.co.uk
Page updated
August 06, 2007
Copyright © Rossbret 1999-2005. All rights reserved.
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