Hospitals
In: Disability and Social Policy in Britain since 1750, p. 43-65
43679 results
Sort by:
In: Disability and Social Policy in Britain since 1750, p. 43-65
In: My Community: Places
In: My Community: Places Ser.
The hospital is an important place in our communities. Kids will learn about why hospitals are needed, who works there, and what kinds of things happen there. Aligned to Common Core Standards and correlated to state standards. Abdo Kids is a division of ABDO
In: Bridges: A Jewish Feminist Journal, Volume 11, Issue 1, p. 81
ISSN: 1558-9552
In: Bridges: A Jewish Feminist Journal, Volume 11, Issue 1, p. 40-45
ISSN: 1558-9552
Hospital Time is a memoir about friendship, family, and caregiving in the age of AIDS. Amy Hoffman, a writer, lesbian activist, and former editor of Gay Community News, chronicles with fury and unflinching honesty her experience serving as primary caretaker for her friend and colleague, Mike Riegle, who died from AIDS-related complications in 1992. Hoffman neither idealizes nor deifies Riegle, whom she portrays as a brilliant man, devoted prison rights activist, and very difficult friend.Hoffman became central to Riegle's caregiving when he asked her to be his health-care proxy
The spreading cult of Christ the Healer during the Medieval period led to sick-nursing being viewed as a Christian duty. This encouraged royal dignitaries and philantrophic individuals to donate funds towards the institution and maintenance of a hospital or hospice, the management of these institutions being often shared with religious authorities. The Maltese Islands have been serviced by a series of hospitals, the earliest dating to the fourteenth century. In line with the changing governing authorities through the centuries, the "houses of healing" were variously organized to reflect the different attitudes towards management structures and responsibility cascade. The hospital authorities further exercised their control over the various levels of personnel by detailing regulations that governed the work ethos of all hospital staff. These regulations augmented the general legislative measures taken by the government authorities to control medical and surgical, midwifery and apothecary practices. To assist the government and hospital authorities in ensuring efficient management of the various institutions, data collection and analysis tools were introduced to audit the practice. ; peer-reviewed
BASE
In: kma: das Gesundheitswirtschaftsmagazin, Volume 27, Issue 7/08, p. 41-43
ISSN: 2197-621X
In wirtschaftlich schwierigen Zeiten tritt der ökologische Umbau in Konkurrenz zu wirtschaftlichen Zielen. Besser wäre es, die Themen zu verbinden.
In: Space and Culture, Volume 15, Issue 1, p. 18-30
ISSN: 1552-8308
In Kenya, as elsewhere in Africa, it is common for caregivers to live alongside patients who are admitted to hospital. Ethnographic material from the wards of a district hospital in western Kenya shows that in this context proper care for patients required the mobilization of the extended family and the care and attention of hospital staff. Caring practices created biomedical and domestic ward spaces, with patients the objects of two divergent models of care, which the author calls "familial" and "biomedical," aligned to these spaces. Caregivers and hospital staff emphasized the boundary between these models of care to comment on and (re)produce concepts of responsibility and obligation to others and to legitimate restrictions that they placed on the care they gave. The author argues that it is helpful to think about this hospital as an institutional space produced through a composite of mobile spatial practices, including both biomedical and domestic practice.