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Poverty and the pox: Venereal disease in London hospitals, 1600--1800 (England).

机译:贫穷与痘:伦敦医院的性病,1600--1800(英格兰)。

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摘要

This dissertation examines the treatment of venereal disease in London hospitals in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. It argues that gender and class played an important role in determining the scope of medical options available to venereal patients, as well as patients' own experiences of medical care.; My research engages two main assumptions about early modern institutional venereology. First, it has been thought that London hospitals refused venereal patients on moral grounds until the establishment of the Lock Hospital in 1747. Data from St. Bartholomew's and St. Thomas's Hospitals shows that venereal patients found care at these institutions from as early as the mid-sixteenth century. Moreover, the scope of venereology at these hospitals was great; between twenty and thirty percent of all Bart's patients were in the venereal wards through much of the seventeenth century. Secondly, studies have assumed that moral reformation was the primary impetus behind institutionalized VD care. Moral reformation did become important at the very end of our period, and became quite prevalent in Victorian VD hospitals. However, for the majority of two centuries London hospitals did not strive to reform paupers with VD. This revision shows that venereal patients were legitimate objects of charity from a very early date, and that the Lock Hospital emerged not as a result of Enlightenment, but as a result of demography as London's population bulged as a result of migration.; In order to demonstrate the role of gender and class I compare the scope of care available for patients who could afford private treatment. An important public-private gap differentiated the medical experiences of rich and poor. The stigmatized nature of this disease made medical privacy all-important. This study shows that medical confidentiality emerged in this period as a direct result of VD. However, that luxury was not available to paupers who had to utilize hospitals. Wealthy women could also afford to hire female practitioners, while poor women always faced hospital care that was controlled by male administrators and delivered by male doctors. Because of the sexual nature of the pox, gender infused the medical exchange and colored the experiences of venereal patients at every step.
机译:本文研究了十七世纪和十八世纪伦敦性病的治疗方法。它认为,性别和阶级在确定性病患者可用的医疗选择范围以及患者自己的医疗经历方面起着重要作用。我的研究涉及有关早期现代制度性病学的两个主要假设。首先,人们认为伦敦的医院以道德为由拒绝性病患者,直到1747年洛克医院成立。圣巴塞洛缪医院和圣托马斯医院的数据表明,性病患者早在中期就可以在这些机构找到医疗服务-十六世纪。而且,这些医院的性病学研究范围很大。在整个17世纪的大部分时间里,巴特所有患者中有20%至30%在性病病房中。其次,研究假设道德改革是制度化VD护理背后的主要动力。道德改革在我们这个时代的最后阶段确实变得很重要,并且在维多利亚时代的VD医院中变得相当普遍。但是,在两个世纪的大部分时间里,伦敦的医院都没有努力通过VD改造贫民。该修订表明,性病患者从很早的时候就成为慈善的合法对象,而洛克医院的出现并不是由于启蒙运动的出现,而是由于人口统计学的发展,因为伦敦人口由于移民而膨胀。为了证明性别和阶级的作用,我比较了可以负担得起私人治疗的患者的护理范围。一个重要的公私差距使富人和穷人的医疗经历有所不同。这种疾病的耻辱性使医疗隐私变得至关重要。这项研究表明,在此期间,医疗机密性是VD的直接结果。但是,那些不得不利用医院的贫苦者无法获得这种奢侈。富裕的妇女也有能力聘请女性从业人员,而贫穷的妇女总是要面对由男性管理者控制,由男性医生提供的医院护理。由于痘的性本质,性别注入了医学交流,使性病患者的每一步经历都充满了色彩。

著录项

  • 作者

    Siena, Kevin Patrick.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Toronto (Canada).;

  • 授予单位 University of Toronto (Canada).;
  • 学科 History European.; History of Science.; Health Sciences Public Health.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2001
  • 页码 305 p.
  • 总页数 305
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 欧洲史;自然科学史;预防医学、卫生学;
  • 关键词

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