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NOTICES OF BOOKS. 417
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Notes On Hospitals. By Florence Nighting...
theless dea that th - t rate shoul to in lay d hosp do down the ital such sick s as no compared princi harm p , le it . " with is It quite that was necessary indeed the the never hi sic g k h -
elsewherewhich first led Miss Nightingale to examine among into the defects of , such institutions , and lay before the Social t Science
Association , a paper , which was the germ of the presenvolume , enlarged nominall , y t reprin o be in t , t bu t t , a actuall new t work y t re . -written the defec and tin so exis greatl t y
hos p itals firs and t par the t of evils he resulting book rea ther s efrom , it appearin s g from ing an examination of the statistics concerninthe 106 principal
hosp hosp i tals tals of of London London , , on tha A t pril the 8 number th , 1861 of , was g inma 4214 tes , while the the 24 all collectivel
number of deaths which took place in them y during that same year of 1861 , amoun bed ted in to each 3828 , being tablish
men s ufferer t t becoming ty of 90 in , some ere cent the of , year t nearl hem ends y taken every , a dea individuall th-bed to the som es dea e poor th- - y
rate is so ; nay enormous , that every bed , yields a death once , in about nine monthsThe patients who e this ital misfortune
are are su no fficien t exempt tl . manifes from certain t to the secondary carefu escap l observer ones , the cap who effec " t insensibl s of which y
malaise allies toge wi t th her y res seness tlessness of w , ards languor defec , feverishness tive ven , tilat , and general fective
un struc til t it ure _, is , bad impossible architec to ture resist , and the , adminis conviction trative that arrangemen the , sick are ts ,
suffering from something quite other than the disease inscribed on their bed-ticket . " defects in the
hosp After itals unreservedl and their y arrangements stating at once that that to such it clear is evils to her are chiefly to
meeting be attribu the ted objection , the Authoress that it is proceeds rather due to " contag ground ion " by u infection " that diseases are so often produced in these
establishments cation of ; disease affirming from that one of contagion to —im another plying * the b communi means of - y
person scientific contact—th enquiry ere is , no and proof addu such cing the as woul testimony d be admitted of Dr . Adams in any
that even with regard to the plague , popularly held to be preeminently contagious , " nearly all the all medical the most authorities intelli who of
had to deal with it , and certainly gent specific them , virus held but that in the plague was of communicated the atmosphere not around by any the
acting sick being throug contaminated , the consequence air , by not putrid by effluvia contagion ; " . in As fact , an by infe infection ctious , easilbe
produced state of the by air confining , so virulent a number as to of des perfectl troy life y , health may y persons y together in a very limited space , it is nothing extraordinary
Notices Of Books. 417
NOTICES OF BOOKS . 417
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Citation
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English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), Feb. 1, 1864, page 417, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01021864/page/57/
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