The object of this booklet is to explain in simple terms what it is that special diets set out to do and to explain the ways and means of providing them. It is hoped that it will prove useful to ward sisters and all concerned with catering in hospitals where ...
This booklet gives recipes for `light diets' for patients in general hospitals and stresses that those responsible for the catering should plan menus for light diets with as much, if not more, care than for full diets.
This manual suggests subjects for enquiry and observation when hospital visits are being undertaken to gain first hand knowledge of the hospital and its work. The areas of the hospital covered are : inpatients; casualty patients; outpatients; medical records department; elderly people; operating theatres; x-ray and pathological departments; physiotherapy, occupational ...
This document reports the work of the Hospital Personal Aid Service during 1959. The Service undertook visits, on behalf of hospitals, to elderly people awaiting admission to hospital whose medical condition did not warrant immediate admission to an acute ward.
This document reports the work of the Hospital Personal Aid Service during 1960. The Service undertakes to visit, on behalf of hospitals, elderly people awaiting admission to hospital whose medical condition does not warrant immediate admission to an acute ward although no patient is visited and no action is taken ...
Part I of this directory contains homes within the four Metropolitan Hospital Regions and the Wessex Region arranged alphabetically according to the name of the town or the village in which the home is situated. Where there is more than Home in a particular town, they are arranged in alphabetical ...
This objectives of this study tour were: to look at the training for hospital administration and business management which is taking place at universities in the USA and Canada; to look into the structure and working of the accreditation scheme and to enquire as to any other research projects related ...
In the past few years increasing attention has been paid to the problems of cleansing and sterilising hospital blankets which have come to be considered as actual or potential sources of cross infection, and in consequence many hospitals have decided to launder blankets more frequently than was the case in ...