1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910455405903321

Titolo

Permeable walls [[electronic resource] ] : historical perspectives on hospital and asylum visiting / / edited by Graham Mooney and Jonathan Reinarz

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Amsterdam ; ; New York, NY, : Rodopi, 2009

ISBN

1-282-50518-1

9786612505188

90-420-2632-4

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (369 p.)

Collana

Clio medica, , 0045-7183 ; ; 86

The Wellcome Institute series in the history of medicine

Altri autori (Persone)

MooneyGraham

ReinarzJonathan

Disciplina

362.11

Soggetti

Hospitals - History

Psychiatric hospitals - History

Visiting the sick - History

Electronic books.

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Preliminary material / Editors Permeable Walls -- List of Figures / Editors Permeable Walls -- List of Tables / Editors Permeable Walls -- Acknowledgements / Editors Permeable Walls -- Hospital and Asylum Visiting in Historical Perspective: Themes and Issues / Graham Mooney and Jonathan Reinarz -- Receiving the Rich, Rejecting the Poor: Towards a History of Hospital Visiting in Nineteenth-Century Provincial England / Jonathan Reinarz -- ‘Family-Centred Care’ in American Hospitals in Late-Qing China / Michelle Renshaw -- Care, Nurturance and Morality: The Role of Visitors and the Victorian London Children’s Hospital / Andrea Tanner -- Pariahs or Partners? Welcome and Unwelcome Visitors in the Jenny Lind Hospital for Sick Children, Norwich, 1900–50 / Bruce Lindsay -- Visiting Children with Cancer: The Parental Experience of the Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, 1995–2005 / Robin L. Rohrer -- Infection and Citizenship: (Not) Visiting Isolation Hospitals in Mid-Victorian Britain / Graham Mooney -- Stage-



Managing a Hospital in the Eighteenth Century: Visitation at the London Lock Hospital / Kevin Siena -- ‘The Keeper Must Himself be Kept’: Visitation and the Lunatic Asylum in England, 1750–1850 / Leonard Smith -- ‘A Disgrace to a Civilised Community’: Colonial Psychiatry and the Visit of Edward Mapother to South Asia, 1937–8 / James H. Mills and Sanjeev Jain -- ‘In View of the Knowledge to be Acquired’: Public Visits to New York’s Asylums in the Nineteenth Century / Janet Miron -- ‘Amusements are Provided’: Asylum Entertainment and Recreation in Australia and New Zealand c.1860–c.1945 / Dolly MacKinnon -- Challenging Institutional Hegemony: Family Visitors to Hospitals for the Insane in Australia and New Zealand, 1880's–1910's / Catharine Coleborne -- Notes on Contributors / Editors Permeable Walls -- Index / Editors Permeable Walls.

Sommario/riassunto

Visiting relatives and friends in medical institutions is a common practice in all corners of the world. People probably go into hospitals as a visitor more frequently than they do as a patient. Permeable Walls is the first book devoted to the history of hospital and asylum visiting and deflects attention from medical history’s more traditionally studied constituencies, patients and doctors. Covering the eighteenth to the late twentieth centuries, and taking case studies from around the globe, the authors demonstrate that hospitals and asylums could be remarkably permeable institutions. However, policies towards visitors have varied from outright exclusion, as in the case of some isolation hospitals in Victorian Britain, to near open access in the first Chinese missionary hospitals. Historical studies of visitors and visiting, as a result, tell us much about the changing relationship between healthcare institutions and the communities they serve. These histories are particularly relevant at a time when service providers seek ways to involve patients’ representatives in healthcare decision making; to control hospital super-bugs; and to make the hospital environment accessible yet safe and secure. With the re-emergence of restricted visiting, the subject remains one of the most emotive topics in the history of institutional medicine. Adopting a wide-ranging definition of visitors, from official inquirers to family members, Permeable Walls provides an innovative perspective on hospitals and asylums historically and will interest historians of medicine, charity and governance, as well as healthcare policy-makers.