This edited volume originates in the 2011 conference of the International Network for the History of Hospitals, held in Lisbon and Évora, Portugal. It focuses on how institutions for the care and cure of the sick have organised their activities at every level, from the delegation of medical treatments between groups of practitioners, to the provision of food and supplies and the impact of convalescence on lengths of hospital stays. It draws on new European and North American research which highlights an area of medical history that has not yet had adequate, sustained attention, discussing the…mehr
This edited volume originates in the 2011 conference of the International Network for the History of Hospitals, held in Lisbon and Évora, Portugal. It focuses on how institutions for the care and cure of the sick have organised their activities at every level, from the delegation of medical treatments between groups of practitioners, to the provision of food and supplies and the impact of convalescence on lengths of hospital stays. It draws on new European and North American research which highlights an area of medical history that has not yet had adequate, sustained attention, discussing the tensions between theory and practice and between patients and practitioners. Through detailed case studies and comparative analyses it explores the changing and evolving understanding of the function of hospitals, and their wider relationships with their communities.
Laurinda Abreu is Professor of History at Évora University, Portugal. She was the coordinator (2001-2009) of the ERASMUS Thematic Network PHOENIX TN ¿ European Thematic Network on Health and Social Welfare Policy. Her recent publications include L. Abreu and P. Bourdelais (eds), The Price of Life: Welfare Systems, Social Nets and Economic Growth (2007) and L. Abreu, Pina Manique. Um reformador no Portugal das Luzes (2013). Sally Sheard is Senior Lecturer in the History of Medicine at the University of Liverpool, and Visiting Fellow at the London School of Economics. Her research interests focus on the interface between experts and policymakers, and the political economy of health and social welfare. Her recent publications include S. Sheard and L. Donaldson, The Nation¿s Doctor: the role of the Chief Medical Officer, 1855-1998 (2005); M. Gorsky and S. Sheard (eds) Financing Medicine: the British experience since 1750 (2006); and S. Sheard, The Passionate Economist. How Brian Abel-Smith shaped global health and social welfare (2013).
Inhaltsangabe
Contents: Christopher Bonfield: Therapeutic Regimes for Bodily Health in Medieval English Hospitals - Fritz Dross: Their Daily Bread: Managing Hospital Finances in Early Modern Germany - Sharon T. Strocchia: Caring for the 'Incurable' in Renaissance Pox Hospitals - Jon Arrizabalaga: Medical Theory and Surgical Practice: Coping with the French Disease in Early Renaissance Portugal and Spain - Laurinda Abreu: Training Health Professionals at the Hospital de Todos os Santos (Lisbon) 1500-1800 - Elisabeth Belmas: Patient Care at the Hôtel Royal des Invalides, Paris, 1670-1791 - Anne Løkke: Conspicuous Consumption: The Royal Lying-in Hospital in Copenhagen in the late Eighteenth Century - John Chircop: Management and Therapeutic Regimes in Two Lunatic Asylums in Corfu and Malta, 1837-1870 - Andrea Tanner/Sue Hawkins: Myth, Marketing and Medicine: Life in British Children's Hospitals 1850-1914 - Stephen C. Kenny: Slavery, Southern Medicine and the American Slave Hospital Regime, 1830-1860 - David Theodore: 'The Fattest Possible Nurse': Architecture, Computers, and Post-war Nursing - Sally Sheard: Getting Better, Faster: Convalescence and Length of Stay in British and US Hospitals.
Contents: Christopher Bonfield: Therapeutic Regimes for Bodily Health in Medieval English Hospitals - Fritz Dross: Their Daily Bread: Managing Hospital Finances in Early Modern Germany - Sharon T. Strocchia: Caring for the 'Incurable' in Renaissance Pox Hospitals - Jon Arrizabalaga: Medical Theory and Surgical Practice: Coping with the French Disease in Early Renaissance Portugal and Spain - Laurinda Abreu: Training Health Professionals at the Hospital de Todos os Santos (Lisbon) 1500-1800 - Elisabeth Belmas: Patient Care at the Hôtel Royal des Invalides, Paris, 1670-1791 - Anne Løkke: Conspicuous Consumption: The Royal Lying-in Hospital in Copenhagen in the late Eighteenth Century - John Chircop: Management and Therapeutic Regimes in Two Lunatic Asylums in Corfu and Malta, 1837-1870 - Andrea Tanner/Sue Hawkins: Myth, Marketing and Medicine: Life in British Children's Hospitals 1850-1914 - Stephen C. Kenny: Slavery, Southern Medicine and the American Slave Hospital Regime, 1830-1860 - David Theodore: 'The Fattest Possible Nurse': Architecture, Computers, and Post-war Nursing - Sally Sheard: Getting Better, Faster: Convalescence and Length of Stay in British and US Hospitals.
Rezensionen
«Mit 'Hospital Life' liegt ein wichtiger Band zur Hospital- und Krankenhausgeschichte vor. Er lohnt sich nicht nur wegen des Überblicks über aktuelle Forschungen und zahlreiche bisher wenig genutzte Quellen, sondern auch wegen der innovativen Fragestellungen, welche die herkömmliche Fortschrittsgeschichte der Medizinhistorie zur Disposition stellen.» (Christina Vanja, Vierteljahrschrift für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte 101.4, 2014)
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