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After the London Fever Hospital was established in 1802, six more hospitals were established in London by the Metropolitan Asylums Board.These were designed with two separate buildings – one for smallpox patients and one for sufferers from other infectious diseases: cholera, diphtheria, dysentery, measles, scarlet fever, typhoid fever, typhus and whooping cough.
In 1932 Miss Jane Cairns Campbell, SRN, became matron of Belvidere. Campbell trained at Knightswood Fever Hospital and the Glasgow Royal Infirmary. She was a first assistant matron at Belvidere and matron at Shieldhall hospital, Glasgow. She was a member of the College of Nursing. [24] Campbell was matron for 14 years and died in 1946. [25]
Sir Ronald Ross Institute of Tropical and Communicable Diseases, also known as Fever Hospital, is a hospital in Nallakunta, India, [1] which treats diseases such as diphtheria, diarrhea, measles, mumps, cholera, and hepatitis. [2] The hospital is affiliated with Osmania Medical College.
The council agreed to receive and treat any patients with infectious diseases, including Erysipelas, and for the first four years it was agreed that the medical staff of the infirmary could instruct students in the fever wards. [4] It became the Monsall Fever Hospital in 1897 and the Monsall Hospital for Infectious Diseases in 1925. [1]
After analyzing his records from Chester, he published a treatise on rheumatic fever and on gout. He continued publishing medical papers in the journal of the Royal Society, Philosophical Transactions. Haygarth also promoted free, universal education, a position he supported in his Letter to Bishop Porteous (1812). He also helped found banks ...
Santokba Durlabhji Memorial Hospital is a hospital in Jaipur city of Rajasthan state in India. The hospital was inaugurated by the then prime minister of India Late Smt. Indira Gandhi in 1971 and was then the first [citation needed] private hospital of State. It is a trust-managed, autonomous, fee-for-services and not-for-profit hospital.
The new hospital, which was designed by Charles Fowler, opened in 1848. [3] By 1924 it had about 150 beds. [4] A new wing was opened by the Duchess of York in 1928 and a new isolation block was opened by the Duke of Kent in 1938. [2] In 1948, the hospital joined the National Health Service under the same management as the Royal Free Hospital. [2]
The Leeds Road Fever Hospital in Bradford, West Yorkshire, England, was a founded in 1867. In 1962, it was one of the hospitals that were quarantined during an epidemic of smallpox in Bradford . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ]