Academic literature on the topic 'Middlesex Hospital (London, England)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Middlesex Hospital (London, England)"

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Hill, Oscar. "Alfred William Beard, Middlesex Hospital, London." Psychiatric Bulletin 16, no. 01 (January 1992): 63–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/s0955603600106890.

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Coker, R. J., N. Desmond, M. Poznansky, C. Smith, M. S. Shafi, D. Bell, J. F. Riordan, and S. Murphy. "Experience of HIV Disease in a London District General Hospital." International Journal of STD & AIDS 6, no. 1 (January 1995): 47–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/095646249500600110.

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The aim of this paper is to describe and discuss the experience of HIV disease in Central Middlesex Hospital, London up to June 1993. A retrospective study of the total number of HIV-positive patients cared for was performed. In addition, prospectively collected data as part of local epidemiological surveillance from January 1987 to June 1993 on all HIV test requests was analysed. Between January 1987 and June 1993 3695 individuals were tested for HIV-1 antibody at Central Middlesex Hospital. Of these, 101 HIV-1 seropositive individuals were identified and have attended this District General Hospital. Seven HIV-1 seropositive individuals were identified from before December 1986. Sixty (56%) had acquired their infection heterosexually. Thirty-eight (35%) originated from the UK and 47 (44%) from sub-Saharan Africa; the remaining 23 (21%) originated from the rest of Europe, South America and the Caribbean. Thirty-four (31%) of the patient group developed AIDS during follow-up at the hospital and in 26 individuals AIDs developed within 2 months of their first positive HIV result. The mean survival of 20 patients after AIDS-defining diagnoses was 7 months 18 days. This unselected group of HIV-1 seropositive patients present late in the course of their HIV disease and survival following AIDS is poor.
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Buchinsky, Moshe, and Ben Polak. "The Emergence of a National Capital Market in England, 1710–1880." Journal of Economic History 53, no. 1 (March 1993): 1–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022050700012365.

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Was eighteenth-century London's financial market linked to domestic real capital markets? When did English capital markets cease to be regionally segmented? We compare London interest rates with annual registered property transactions in Middlesex and in West Yorkshire. This evidence, though tentative, suggests that London financial markets were weakly linked to local real capital markets in the mid-eighteenth century. By the late eighteenth century those links were strong. Regional markets were still segmented in the mid-eighteenth century but were integrated by the time of the Napoleonic War.
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Baron, J. H. "Frederick Cayley Robinson's Acts of Mercy murals at the Middlesex Hospital, London." BMJ 309, no. 6970 (December 24, 1994): 1723–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.309.6970.1723.

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AIRD, L. A., and P. H. S. SILVER. "Women doctors from The Middlesex Hospital Medical School (University of London) 1947-67." Medical Education 5, no. 3 (January 29, 2009): 232–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2923.1971.tb01828.x.

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McLoughlin, Liam. "Churchill’s fractured neck of femur." Journal of Medical Biography 27, no. 3 (March 14, 2019): 129–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0967772018785858.

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In June 1962 at the age of 87 years, Sir Winston Churchill (1874–1965) fell over in his hotel room at the Hotel de Paris in Monte Carlo and sustained a fracture to the neck of his left femur. He was flown back to London and the fracture operated on at The Middlesex Hospital by two eminent orthopaedic surgeons, Mr Phillip Newman (1911–1994), Consultant to the The Middlesex Hospital and The Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital, Stanmore, and The Institute of Orthopaedics, London, and Professor Herbert Seddon (1903–1977), Consultant to the The Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital, Stanmore, and Director of The Institute of Orthopaedics under whom Churchill was admitted as a private patient. Churchill’s recovery was complicated by the development of deep vein thrombosis. During his convalescence, Churchill befriended Seddon who recorded his time with him in his private papers. On 21 August, Churchill was discharged to his home at 28 Hyde Park Gate which had been modified during his admission and made a return to public life in November 1962 at a dinner at the dining club he had originally founded, The Other Club.
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Parisaei, M., A. Govind, J. Clements, P. Arora, H. Lashkari, and P. Kapila. "Prevalence of vitamin D deficiency in a North London antenatal population." Obstetric Medicine 4, no. 3 (August 23, 2011): 113–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1258/om.2011.110049.

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Objective We evaluated the prevalence of vitamin D deficiency in the antenatal patients attending North Middlesex University Hospital between March 2008 and March 2009. Study design A prospective study of maternal levels of vitamin D at booking. Results The prevalence of both deficient and insufficient levels of 25[OH]D was 87.6% across all included patients. Conclusion There is a high prevalence of asymptomatic vitamin D deficiency in the antenatal booking population.
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Aboud, Zainab, R. Balasubramanian, and R. Vashisht. "Evaluation of lymphoedema at West Middlesex University Hospital and assessment practice across West London Hospitals." European Journal of Surgical Oncology (EJSO) 35, no. 11 (November 2009): 1222. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejso.2009.07.076.

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Katona, C. L. E., and M. M. Robertson. "Who makes it in psychiatry: CV predictors of success in training grades." Psychiatric Bulletin 17, no. 1 (January 1993): 27–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/pb.17.1.27.

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A recent paper by Lewis (1991) found authorship of a publication to be the only variable that significantly predicted whether applicants for a senior registrar (SR) rotation in psychiatry at a London teaching hospital were shortlisted. We have re-examined curriculum vitae (CV) predictors of shortlisting at SR level within a comparable London teaching hospital rotation (University College and Middlesex Medical School, UCMSM), and extended the study to examine applicants for the corresponding SHO/registrar (REG) rotation. We have also compared the two groups in terms of demographic data and academic achievements. Our intention was to replicate Lewis' findings, and to examine in more detail the possible predictive effects of academic achievement and ethnicity.
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Shields, D. A., S. Andaz, R. D. Abeysinghe, J. B. Porter, J. H. Scurr, and P. D. Coleridge Smith. "Plasma Lactoferrin as a Marker of White Cell Degranulation in Venous Disease." Phlebology: The Journal of Venous Disease 9, no. 2 (June 1994): 55–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/026835559400900203.

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Objective: To measure plasma lactoferrin as a marker of neutrophil degranulation in groups of patients with varying severity of venous disease and compare with age- and sex-matched control subjects. Design: Prospective study of patients with varicose veins compared with a group of control subjects with no history or clinical findings of varicose veins. Setting: The Middlesex Hospital Vascular Laboratory, Mortimer Street, London WIN 8AA, UK. Patients: Patients referred to the Middlesex Hospital Vascular Laboratory for investigation of venous disease. Control subjects were obtained from within the laboratory and hospital staff, and from a group of Patients attending the London Foot Hospital for routine chiropody. Neither group had arterial disease nor any other illness or medication known to alter white cell activity. Interventions: 10 ml of blood taken from an arm vein into EDTA for a neutrophil count and measurement of Plasma lactoferrin using an ELISA. Results: Significantly raised plasma lactoferrin was found in all four groups of patients compared with their controls ( p = 0.0156 for uncomplicated varicose veins, P = 0.01 for lipodermatosclerosis, p = 0.0413 for active venous ulceration, and p = 0.0005 for healed ulcers, Mann-Whitney U-test). Differences between medians (95% confidence interval) for the four groups were 269 (62–603), 199 (60–314), 133 (44–218) and 215 (98–349) ng/ml respectively. There was no difference in the neutrophil count between the patient and control groups, and correcting plasma lactoferrin for the neutrophil count did not remove significance in any group. Conclusions: This study shows evidence of increased neutrophil activation as shown by increased degranulation in patients with venous disease.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Middlesex Hospital (London, England)"

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McEwan, Joanne. "Negotiating support : crime and women's networks in London and Middlesex, c. 1730-1820." University of Western Australia. History Discipline Group, 2009. http://theses.library.uwa.edu.au/adt-WU2009.0121.

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[Truncated abstract] This thesis examines the social and legal dynamics of support as it operated around women charged before the criminal courts in the eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century metropolis. It considers the nature and implications of the support made available to, or withheld from, female defendants by individuals to whom they were in some way connected. To this end, it explores the nuances of testimony offered by witnesses and defendants in an attempt to better understand the extent and effect of the support that could be negotiated by and from a range of groups, including family members, fellow household residents, neighbours and wider community members. How narratives were framed in either sympathetic or condemnatory terms was indicative of broader social attitudes and expectations regarding women and crime as well as of women's own relationships to households and neighbourhood. To the extent that this thesis aims to interrogate negotiations of support, it adopts legal narratives as a window through which to gain an insight into the social interactions and mediation of interpersonal relationships by eighteenth-century London women. The printed accounts of trials conducted at the Old Bailey and legal documents from the London and Middlesex Sessions records form the basis of the source material that contributed towards this study. These records provide contemporary narratives in which participants described their involvement in the legal system and articulated their relationships to events and to each other. As a result, they are invaluable for the wealth of qualitative detail they contain. These legal documents have also been complemented by other contemporary sources including newspaper reports and printed pamphlet literature. ... This thesis concludes first that neighbours and fellow household residents were usually in the strongest position to affect the outcome of criminal cases, either by offering assistance or disclosing incriminating information. The importance of household and neighbours rather than kin was closely tied to the domestic context in which many female crimes took place, and the 'insider knowledge' that was gained by living in close proximity to one another. However, if and when women retained links to family and kin who lived within travelling distance, they remained an important source of support. Secondly, the thesis identifies the detection and prosecution of crime as a gendered experience; contemporary social expectations about gender influenced both legal processes and the shaping of witness accounts. Thirdly, in its examination of local responses to female crime, the thesis supports the theory that a notable shift in sentiment towards female nature and legal culpability occurred during this period, which in turn affected the support offered to female defendants. Overall, the thesis demonstrates the paramount importance of witness testimony in articulating the circumstances surrounding female crimes, and the complex negotiations of interpersonal relationships which influenced how this evidence would be contextualised as supportive or not when it was delivered.
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Croxson, Bronwyn. "An economic analysis of a voluntary hospital : the foundation and institutional structure of the Middlesex Hospital, 1745-1900." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 1994. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/272547.

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Andrews, Jonathan. "Bedlam revisited : a history of Bethlem hospital 1634-1770." Thesis, Queen Mary, University of London, 1991. http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/1365.

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This thesis takes issue with a polemical historiography of Bethlem which has tended to 'view the hospital as a nadir in the history of psychiatry, and to accept, too uncritically, the distorted metaphor of 'Bedlam' for the reality. It argues that there was not the radical equivalency that some historians have posited between animalistic conceptions of the insane and the actual practices and policies pursued at early modern Bethiem. Nor was this paradigm of madness the only oae prevailing in the classical period, Bethlem patients also being regarded (e.g.) as 'objects of charity', requiring both mental and bodily relief. Rather than 'brutalized', it is sustained, the inmates of Bethiem were being managed and maintained, although inadequately and inefficiently. What modern commentators have disparaged as maltreatment and squalor at Bethlem, was not merely the result of an attitude to the mad as brutes, but was also the result of a lack of resources and a failure to measure up to the ideals of provision. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that the squalor and brutality of Bethiem was neither as extreme, nor as undifferentiated, as has been alleged. The hospital is located comprehensively within the context of contemporary provision for the sick and insane poor, Bethiem having too often been portrayed as if a separate island of sequestered madness. Rather than describing an immutable monolith of tradition and apathy, significant areas of evolution and innovation in the care and treatment of the insane at the hospital are delineated. Uniquely exposed to public scrutiny, the environment of Bethiem was subject, more than that of any other contemporary hospital, to powerful external forces of arbitratioia. A particular focus of the analysis entails the complex interactions between the hospital's administrators and inhabitants, and the public at large. Inter-relations between Bethlem's visitors, staff and patients, and between the insane and those who supported and committed them, have especially suffered from simplistic interpretations, and from a general ignorance with the hospital's own records and with the records of other administrative and juridical bodies dealing with the poor insane. A major preoccupation of this survey has been to contribute greater nuance and balance to standard readings of responses to the insane, both within and without the hospital.
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Craig, Barbara Helen. "A survey and study of hospital records and record keeping in London (England) and Ontario (Canada) c. 1850 - c. 1950 : with reference to eight institutions." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 1988. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.388801.

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Madibana, Lesetja Francina. "Factors influencing absebteeism [sic] amongst professional nurses in London." Diss., 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4791.

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This quantitative explorative, descriptive study described factors that influenced absenteeism among nurses in a selected NHS hospital in London. The survey used self-completion questionnaires. Roy’s Adaptation Model was used to contextualise the results obtained from fifty completed questionnaires. Four modes used to categorise the data analysis were physiological needs, self-concept, and role function and interdependence relations. Minor ailments, upper respiratory tract infections and exhaustion as a result of working long hours were found to be the most important causes of absenteeism. Parental responsibilities and taking care of sick children/family members, further influenced rates of absenteeism, while a high workload was considered by respondents as a major contributing factor to their absence from work. Nurses who are often absent due to physical, social or psychological problems should receive counselling and be referred to appropriate resource persons such as occupational nurses, social workers or psychologists. Child care facilities should be provided within the workplace. The units should have adequate staff to cover each shift and workloads should be manageable. Units need ongoing monitoring of absenteeism so that factors contributing to absenteeism rates in specific units could be identified and addressed.
Health Studies
M.A. (Health Studies)
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Bridge, Gillian Mary. "The medieval hospitals of St. John the Baptist at Oxford and St. Bartholomew of London from foundation to 1300." 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/1828/671.

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Books on the topic "Middlesex Hospital (London, England)"

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Hospital, Independent Inquiries into Paediatric Cardiac Services at Brompton Hospital and Harefield. The report of the Independent Inquiries into Paediatric Cardiac Services at the Royal Brompton Hospital and Harefield Hospital. [London: Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Trust], 2001.

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Brown, Kevin. St. Mary's Hospital. London: St. Mary's Hospital, 1991.

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Granshaw, Lindsay Patricia. St. Mark's Hospital, London: A social history of a specialist hospital. London: King Edward's Hospital Fund for London, 1985.

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Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons. Committee of Public Accounts. The Chelsea and Westminster Hospital. London: HMSO, 1993.

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Higher Education Quality Council. Quality Assurance Group. The Medical College of St. Bartholomew's Hospital: Quality auditreport. Birmingham: Higher Education Quality Council, 1994.

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Christ's Hospital of London, 1552-1598: A passing deed of pity. Selinsgrove, Pa: Susquehanna University Press, 1995.

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St. Mary's Hospital (London, England). Medical School. Undergraduate prospectus. London: the Hospital., 1988.

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Davidson, Andrew. Bloodlines: Real lives in a great British hospital. London: Little, Brown, 1998.

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Wiltshaw, Eve. A history of the Royal Marsden Hospital. Edgware: Altman, 1998.

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family, Weekes. A medical student at St Thomas's Hospital, 1801-1802: The Weekes family letters. London: Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 1987.

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Book chapters on the topic "Middlesex Hospital (London, England)"

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"742 From Francis Freeman in Middlesex Hospital [St Marylebone], London, 5 March 1813." In Records of Social and Economic History: New Series, Vol. 30: Essex Pauper Letters: 1731–1837, edited by Thomas Sokoll. British Academy, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oseo/instance.00167690.

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"243 From William Holden in Middlesex Hospital [St Marylebone, London] to the overseer of Chelmsford, 2 June 1828." In Records of Social and Economic History: New Series, Vol. 30: Essex Pauper Letters: 1731–1837, edited by Thomas Sokoll, 265. British Academy, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oseo/instance.00167163.

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"Patients, Anatomists and Resurrection Men: Archaeological Evidence for Anatomy Teaching at the London Hospital in the Early Nineteenth Century." In Anatomical Dissection in Enlightenment England and Beyond, 89–106. Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315566962-10.

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Cooper, John. "Victorian and Edwardian Jewish Doctors." In Pride Versus Prejudice, 11–42. Liverpool University Press, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781874774877.003.0002.

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This chapter discusses Jewish doctors of the Victorian and Edwardian period, demonstrating why there were so few of them in England in comparison with their numbers in Continental Europe. If Jews wanted a higher education in the early Victorian period, they had to go to the University of London; elsewhere there were restrictions on the admission of Jews to the universities. Mindful, no doubt, of the potential obstacles, Jewish parents in lower-middle-class families as well as from the Anglo-Jewish elite remained reluctant to allow their sons to study medicine. Accordingly, the number of Jewish doctors remained small in Victorian England, both within and outside London. Notwithstanding some antisemitism facing Jews trying to obtain hospital posts in the mid-nineteenth century, English and Welsh society was more open in the late Victorian and Edwardian years than it was to be between the two world wars, and a number of Jews rose to eminence in the medical profession, holding appointments as consultants in the London teaching hospitals and elsewhere.
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Reports on the topic "Middlesex Hospital (London, England)"

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Bhatt, Mihir R., Shilpi Srivastava, Megan Schmidt-Sane, and Lyla Mehta. Key Considerations: India's Deadly Second COVID-19 Wave: Addressing Impacts and Building Preparedness Against Future Waves. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), June 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/sshap.2021.031.

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Since February 2021, countless lives have been lost in India, which has compounded the social and economic devastation caused by the second wave of COVID-19. The sharp surge in cases across the country overwhelmed the health infrastructure, with people left scrambling for hospital beds, critical drugs, and oxygen. As of May 2021, infections began to come down in urban areas. However, the effects of the second wave continued to be felt in rural areas. This is the worst humanitarian and public health crisis the country has witnessed since independence; while the continued spread of COVID-19 variants will have regional and global implications. With a slow vaccine rollout and overwhelmed health infrastructure, there is a critical need to examine India's response and recommend measures to further arrest the current spread of infection and to prevent and prepare against future waves. This brief is a rapid social science review and analysis of the second wave of COVID-19 in India. It draws on emerging reports, literature, and regional social science expertise to examine reasons for the second wave, explain its impact, and highlight the systemic issues that hindered the response. This brief puts forth vital considerations for local and national government, civil society, and humanitarian actors at global and national levels, with implications for future waves of COVID-19 in low- and middle-income countries. This review is part of the Social Science in Humanitarian Action Platform (SSHAP) series on the COVID-19 response in India. It was developed for SSHAP by Mihir R. Bhatt (AIDMI), Shilpi Srivastava (IDS), Megan Schmidt-Sane (IDS), and Lyla Mehta (IDS) with input and reviews from Deepak Sanan (Former Civil Servant; Senior Visiting Fellow, Centre for Policy Research), Subir Sinha (SOAS), Murad Banaji (Middlesex University London), Delhi Rose Angom (Oxfam India), Olivia Tulloch (Anthrologica) and Santiago Ripoll (IDS). It is the responsibility of SSHAP.
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