Lectures for Attendants and Nurses, 1921 book

to be returned to chief attendant

Picture of the front cover. Click picture to open the book.

This book is now scanned and available for you to read. This extremely rare publication contains the information for staff at the Mental Diseases Hospital, New Norfolk to carry out their work role.

Subjects include:

Anatomy and Physiology

Contagions and infectious diseases

Ethics of nursing

Nursing of Mental Diseases

The publication was printed in Tasmania for the Hospital and contain language, theories and practices of the time and should be read in this context

“Idiots and Imbeciles. They should be sent to special hospital, where they may, as far as possible, be educated or specially nursed and cared for.”

 

 

Click lectures for nurses and attendants 1921 full to read the full book in a separate tab.  (this will take sometime to download, due to the size of the file)

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Evelyn Rose Morey

Pages 1 and 32 of Matron’s publicly available first world war records are only part of the display at Willow Court for Heritage Month. Along with original uniforms and the equipment used in the Hospital to treat ex-solders who returned needing the services of either the Hospital or Millbrook Rise. Matron Morey returned to the Hospital after her Military Service and after a short break became Sub-Matron and later Matron. She served the Patients for many years and died shortly after her retirement. The display will be in the Masonic Lodge which will also have open days and is in partnership with the RSL at New Norfolk and some funding received from the Derwent Valley Council, entry to the display is via Humphrey Street and cost $5. morey enlist page 1 morey enlist page 32

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Christmas appeal

This article in “The Examiner” news paper is appealing for donations of gifts for Patients at the Lachlan Park Mental Diseases Hospital so they can receive some of the basics at Christmas time. Calling for gifts from a sympathetic Tasmanian public was the order of the day when this article was written on the 13th November 1950 and sat well with in a Charity Model of Care which was predominant around the world at this time. This show how far we have/or haven’t come in the last 64 years as we now sit in a rights movement for people living with mental health issues or with an intellectual disability as set out by all the signatories of the World Health Organisation, part of the United Nations, which Australia is a signatory. The right to have a life that is free for someone else s benevolent actions based on sympathy is inscribed in the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. While there is a difference today as there was 64 years ago this article is part of the rich history that is important to record and needs to be read in the context of the ideology of the time and the good will of the Tasmanian’s who were moved and personally effected by the States Institution designed for the care and health provision of those people with disabilities and or mental health issues.  Want to read more about the rights movement, social movement, medical model and the social movement? This simply website can explain the difference is a clear one page document. RIGHT CLICK HERE and open in a new window. It could be said that Willow Court/Royal Derwent Hospital closed down because there was a different approach from an emerging Social Model as opposed to the then current Medical discourse.

Lachlan park christmas appeal

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