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Post by beachcomber on Apr 14, 2014 8:40:07 GMT
This disease has hit the news - apparently there have been quite a few cases recently.
Now it's described as easily treatable by antibiotics - but our Dad had it when he was about 3 (around 1911) and spent time in the 'fever hospital' along with many other kids, some of whom died, including the lad who lived next door to Dad. Unfortunately Dad was left with a hearing problem, not from the disease, but from the over zealous ward sister who used to clean the kids' ears out with a knitting needle, and perforated Dad's eardrum!!!
I remember the sheer panic at home when they suspected my sister (Blue on here) might have it when she was a baby, even though I was only very small at the time.
Was the fever hospital on Little Green Lane? I've a vague recollection of some low buildings somewhere near the 28 bus route.
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Post by Jerry on Apr 14, 2014 9:01:06 GMT
This disease has hit the news - apparently there have been quite a few cases recently. Now it's described as easily treatable by antibiotics - but our Dad had it when he was about 3 (around 1911) and spent time in the 'fever hospital' along with many other kids, some of whom died, including the lad who lived next door to Dad. Unfortunately Dad was left with a hearing problem, not from the disease, but from the over zealous ward sister who used to clean the kids' ears out with a knitting needle, and perforated Dad's eardrum!!! I remember the sheer panic at home when they suspected my sister (Blue on here) might have it when she was a baby, even though I was only very small at the time. Was the fever hospital on Little Green Lane? I've a vague recollection of some low buildings somewhere near the 28 bus route. Hi Beachcomber, I've just done some deep research ( also known as copy and paste ) EAST BIRMINGHAM HOSPITAL Little Bromwich Hospital The first patients were admitted to the hospital on 29th June 1895. The hospital was built on a 23 acre site at Yardley, purchased by Birmingham Corporation for a cost of £4,975. The original plans drawn up by W.H.Ward included 10 pavilions of 24 beds each but only 4 pavilions were built when the hospital opened. It was known as City Hospital, Little Bromwich, as all hospitals run by the City Corporation were prefixed City Hospital- followed the location, this was dropped with the inception of the NHS in 1948. The hospital was not intended to be constantly occupied, but to be used at times of any smallpox epidemic outbreak; this was later extended to include cases of measles, scarlet fever, whooping cough, diphtheria and tuberculosis. In 1901, the hospital was used during an outbreak of typhoid, cause by the consumption of mussels harvested from river estuaries contaminated with sewage. In 1904 the hospital at Little Bromwich was extended at a cost of £19,765 with the building of 3 further pavilions, an isolation ward and a home for fifty nurses, and again in 1910 further building increased it to 10 ward units with a capacity of about 300 beds. During the Great War the hospital was used for the treatment of soldiers with scarlet fever, measles, diphtheria and tuberculosis, and during 1916 there was a further outbreak of scarlet fever with 1232 cases admitted to the hospital. During the 1930’s the hospital expanded dramatically with the building of another fourteen wards increasing capacity to 750 beds. During the 1940’s and early 50’s due to better health care and living conditions the number of cases admitted declined, however in 1950 366 cases of polio were treated there, 46 of whom died. In 1948, when the NHS was formed Little Bromwich came under the control of Selly Oak Hospital Management Committee along with the Accident and Royal Orthopaedic Hospitals. With the decrease in infectious diseases, ward space at Little Bromwich became available and some services were moved from Selly Oak. In June 1951 a ward was opened for Ophthalmology, using a theatre already available. The same year wards began to be used as convalescent wards for patients recovering from medical and surgical treatment at Selly Oak Hospital. By 1953, 500 beds were available for general hospital use, and the hospital was “generalised”, in collaboration with Selly Oak. In September of that year a gynaecology department was established which remained there until 1971 when it moved to Marston Green. During the period 1959-61, over £380,000 was spent to improve facilities as a general hospital. In 1962, a new management committee was set up to manage Little Bromwich Hospital, together with Yardley Green, Hollymoor, Solihull, Witton and Marston Green Hospitals, and on the 1st April 1963, East Birmingham Hospital was created with the union of Little Bromwich and Yardley Green Hospitals, and by 1964 was dealing with over 10,000 patients per year. Over the next 30 years, the hospital continued to grow with the demolition of the older blocks and the up-grading of others, and on the 1st April 1992, it received trust status and became Birmingham Heartlands Hospital. Yardley Green Hospital In 1901 a further outbreak of smallpox led to the purchase of another plot of land at Yardley Green where a new isolation hospital was built. Yardley Green Hospital treated about 500 cases of smallpox during its first five years but compulsory vaccination reduced the number of cases, and the hospital closed in 1907. The hospital was re-opened on 5th October 1910 with 50 beds for the treatment of tuberculosis. In 1912, the Public Health Committee proposed to enlarge the hospital to accommodate over 200 patients at a capital cost of £31,057 this was financed with the Government paying £90 per bed and the balance of £14,500 paid by Birmingham Corporation The hospital operated as an open-air clinic, with patients spending time outdoors and with sun-ray or artificial light treatment, in 1932 records show 16,376 attendances at Yardley Green Sanatorium for sun-ray treatment. In 1962, the hospitals at Yardley Green and Little Bromwich amalgamated to form East Birmingham Hospital.
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Post by jhedger on Apr 14, 2014 11:27:51 GMT
Thanks for this full account - interesting reading. My mom used to tell me - that her and other kids used to go up to the Fever Hospital (from baker St and around) - to read the notice on the gate - of who had died! Would have been around the year 1925. Not quite like going to the park!
Jan
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Post by beachcomber on Apr 15, 2014 10:12:48 GMT
Thanks for that detailed reply Jerry. I thought it might be on the same site as East Birmingham Hospital, but my recollection of that part of Brum is patchy to say the least.
Hooray for antibiotics!
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