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2.
Med Pregl ; 68(7-8): 277-82, 2015.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26591642

RESUMEN

As a peacetime work of Katherine S. Macphail (Glasgow, 1887- St.Andrews, 1974) MB ChB (Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery), the Anglo-Serbian Children's Hospital in Belgrade was established after World War I, and the English-Yugoslav Children's Hospital for Treatment of Osteoarticular Tuberculosis was founded in Sremska Kamenica in 1934. Situated on the Fruska Gora slope, the hospital-sanatorium was a well-equipped medical institution with an operating theatre and x-ray machine providing very advanced therapy, comparable to those in Switzerland and England: aero and heliotherapy, good quality nourishment, etc. In addition, school lessons were organized as well as several types of handwork as the work-therapy. It was a privately owned hospital but almost all the children were treated free of cost. The age for admission was up to 14. During the period from 1934 to 1937, around 458 children underwent hospital treatment, most of them with successful results. During the war years the Sanatorium was closed but after the war it was reactivated. In 1948 by the act of final nationalization of all medical institutions in the communist Yugoslavia, the hospital was transformed into a ward of orthopedic surgery under the supervision of the referent departments in Belgrade and Novi Sad. Today, hospital is out of work and deprived of its humanitarian mission. The building is neglected and in ruins although it has been proclaimed the national treasure by the Regional Institute for Protection of Monuments of Culture.


Asunto(s)
Hospitales de Enfermedades Crónicas/historia , Hospitales Pediátricos/historia , Médicos Mujeres/historia , Tuberculosis Osteoarticular , Primera Guerra Mundial , Historia del Siglo XX , Serbia , Yugoslavia
4.
Med Humanit ; 39(1): 38-46, 2013 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23538398

RESUMEN

This article explores and critically contextualises the photographic production of heliotherapist Auguste Rollier (1874-1954), specifically the 'patient portraits' photographed at his Leysin sanatoria over a substantial period of four decades, c.1903-1944. It argues that these photographs, ignored in secondary literature, were particularly persuasive in communicating the natural healing powers of sunlight and through their international dissemination brought Rollier's work professional acclaim and prestige. Always presenting anonymous patients, and most often children, the images produced for Rollier's work interweave aesthetic and medical interests. Whether through the aesthetics of the photograph, of the positioning and appearance of the patient's body, or of the language used to describe these, issues of beauty and harmony were significant preoccupations for Rollier and the dissemination of his heliotherapeutic practice. The article argues that these aesthetic preoccupations drove his work, that the patient's progress and final cure, and thus the therapy's efficacy, were determined by aesthetic criteria-read through the body itself and its photographic representation. This legibility, of the body and its photography, was crucial to articulating the sun's perceived natural ability to improve, heal and even 'rebuild' individual patients into socially and physically productive citizens. As such, the article contends, Rollier privileged image over word, conceiving the former as possessing an unequalled 'eloquence' to communicate the efficacy and social potential of heliotherapy.


Asunto(s)
Medicina en las Artes , Fotograbar/historia , Fototerapia/historia , Retratos como Asunto/historia , Luz Solar , Tuberculosis/historia , Femenino , Historia del Siglo XX , Hospitales de Enfermedades Crónicas/historia , Humanos , Masculino , Fototerapia/métodos , Suiza , Tuberculosis/terapia
6.
Med Ges Gesch ; 30: 171-205, 2011.
Artículo en Alemán | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22701955

RESUMEN

Up to 1920 Thuringia was separated into many territories some of which were known for their unorthodox pharmaceutical industries. Gotha was the only famous duchy because one of its princes had married the Queen of England in 1840. The country was backward and the state administration was incapable of solving health issues. It was due to the interest of some physicians that the fragile balance between homeopathy, naturopathy, physicians and pharmacists broke down after 1900. But the state bureaucracy was unable to convince the people of its new healthcare approaches that were just based on scientific medicine.


Asunto(s)
Cultura , Industria Farmacéutica/historia , Reforma de la Atención de Salud/historia , Colonias de Salud/historia , Homeopatía/historia , Hospitales de Enfermedades Crónicas/historia , Turismo Médico/historia , Naturopatía/historia , Charlatanería/historia , Automedicación/historia , Femenino , Alemania , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Masculino
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