FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114  
115   >>  
to his quickness. Now there are many mental operations where exactly the same rule holds good with the sick; _coeteris paribus_ their capability of bearing such operations depends directly on the quickness, _without hurry_, with which they can be got through. [14] [Sidenote: Petty management better understood in institutions than in private houses.] So true is this that I could mention two cases of women of very high position, both of whom died in the same way of the consequences of a surgical operation. And in both cases, I was told by the highest authority that the fatal result would not have happened in a London hospital. [Sidenote: What institutions are the exception?] But, as far as regards the art of petty management in hospitals, all the military hospitals I know must be excluded. Upon my own experience I stand, and I solemnly declare that I have seen or know of fatal accidents, such as suicides in _delirium tremens_, bleedings to death, dying patients dragged out of bed by drunken Medical Staff Corps men, and many other things less patent and striking, which would not have happened in London civil hospitals nursed by women. The medical officers should be absolved from all blame in these accidents. How can a medical officer mount guard all day and all night over a patient (say) in _delirium tremens_? The fault lies in there being no organized system of attendance. Were a trustworthy _man_ in charge of each ward, or set of wards, not as office clerk, but as head nurse, (and head nurse the best hospital serjeant, or ward master, is not now and cannot be, from default of the proper regulations), the thing would not, in all probability, have happened. But were a trustworthy _woman_ in charge of the ward, or set of wards, the thing would not, in all certainty, have happened. In other words, it does not happen where a trustworthy woman is really in charge. And, in these remarks, I by no means refer only to exceptional times of great emergency in war hospitals, but also, and quite as much, to the ordinary run of military hospitals at home, in time of peace; or to a time in war when our army was actually more healthy than at home in peace, and the pressure on our hospitals consequently much less. [Sidenote: Nursing in Regimental Hospitals.] It is often said that, in regimental hospitals, patients ought to "nurse each other," because the number of sick altogether being, say, but thirty, and out of these
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114  
115   >>  



Top keywords:

hospitals

 

happened

 

Sidenote

 

charge

 

trustworthy

 

military

 

London

 
hospital
 

patients

 

delirium


medical
 

accidents

 

tremens

 

institutions

 
operations
 
management
 

quickness

 

regulations

 

proper

 

default


organized

 

certainty

 

capability

 

probability

 
system
 

serjeant

 

office

 
coeteris
 

attendance

 

paribus


master

 

Nursing

 

Regimental

 

pressure

 

healthy

 

Hospitals

 

number

 

altogether

 
thirty
 

regimental


exceptional

 

remarks

 

happen

 

ordinary

 

emergency

 

mental

 

understood

 

private

 
exception
 

experience