Literature DB >> 30078996

"Deliver Me From This Indignity!": Cottage Hospitals, Localism and NHS Healthcare in Central England, 1948-1978.

Elizabeth T Hurren.   

Abstract

Victorian and Edwardian cottage hospitals, compared to infirmaries and workhouse institutions, have been neglected by social historians. Yet, they provided an infrastructure dedicated to localism and healthcare for the aged under the new National Health Service (NHS) after World War Two. This article focuses on two renowned Midlands cottage hospitals built in mid-Northamptonshire at Pitsford. In their patient case-histories we can engage with: dignity standards, medical regime, ward designs, staffing levels, budget provisions, and patient voices. These popular institutions had a well-deserved reputation for delivering high-quality geriatric medicine from 1948 to 1978. Human vignettes detailing the physical indignities of ageing nonetheless proliferate in the records. The longevity of these basic issues was to prove to be a recurring tension in NHS financial planning. Budget models lacked enough funds for aged patients to receive 'stable' bedside care. Instead, NHS accountants allocated resources to ensure the future 'sustainability' of the system itself. A new paradigm highlights the inherent financial contradictions and empty political promises that those needing geriatric care often experienced, and still do. Throughout, the rediscovered cottage hospital records contain important historical lessons for the present impasse about how to define, deliver and secure dignity for elderly patients in today's NHS.

Entities:  

Year:  2018        PMID: 30078996      PMCID: PMC6067659          DOI: 10.1080/14631180.2016.1216349

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Fam Community Hist        ISSN: 1463-1180


  12 in total

1.  Hospitals, geriatric medicine, and the long-term care of elderly people 1946-1976.

Authors:  P Bridgen
Journal:  Soc Hist Med       Date:  2001-12       Impact factor: 0.973

2.  Drugs in the treatment of old people.

Authors:  M WARREN
Journal:  Br Med J       Date:  1960-06-18

3.  Beyond National Health Insurance. The voluntary hospitals and hospital contributory schemes: a regional study.

Authors:  S Cherry
Journal:  Soc Hist Med       Date:  1992-12       Impact factor: 0.973

4.  The historiography of medicine in the U.K.

Authors:  R Porter
Journal:  Med Secoli       Date:  1998

5.  An expanding service: municipal acute medicine in the 1930s.

Authors:  M Powell
Journal:  20 Century Br Hist       Date:  1997

6.  The evolution of a geriatric unit from a public assistance institution, 1935-1947.

Authors:  M WARREN
Journal:  Proc R Soc Med       Date:  1948-05

7.  Activity in advancing years.

Authors:  M W WARREN
Journal:  Br Med J       Date:  1950-10-21

8.  Thinking in time: does health policy need history as evidence?

Authors:  Virginia Berridge
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2010-03-06       Impact factor: 79.321

9.  From cottage to community hospitals: Watlington Cottage Hospital and its regional context, 1874-2000.

Authors:  John Hall
Journal:  Local Popul Stud       Date:  2012

10.  Dangerous yardstick? Early cost estimates and the politics of financial management in the first decade of the National Health Service.

Authors:  Tony Cutler
Journal:  Med Hist       Date:  2003-04       Impact factor: 1.419

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