pay-beds in general wards
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have to be out at work all day-and here there willclearly be plenty of opportunity for voluntaryeffort in looking after the children out of schoolhours. At farms allowance must be made for the
necessity in wartime of housing additional labourin order to increase agricultural production. Localauthorities are asked to make suggestions for theuse of empty houses and other buildings, such ashotels and boarding-houses, which might provideaccommodation for large numbers, schools beingexcepted. Potential or existing facilities in campsand hostels must also be noted. Should an emer-
gency arise school-children will as far as possiblebe moved school by school, and will be accompaniedby teachers or other helpers up to a maximum ofabout one per ten children. Householders will be
paid 10s. 6. a week for board and lodging whereone school-child is taken, or 8s. 6d. a week for eachchild where there is more than one. Childrenunder school age will be accompanied by theirmother or some other responsible person. Forthese householders will be asked to provide lodgingonly, and will be paid 5s. a week for each adult and38. a week for each child. The Government willarrange for the necessary transport and forincreased supplies at the local shops, and theBoard of Education has under considerationthe measures that must be taken for continuingthe education of the displaced children.The epidemiological repercussions of removing
large numbers of children from cities to rural areasare difficult to foretell. There is, of course, muchto be said in favour of keeping together mothersand their children of pre-school age, as well as ofdispersing them as widely as possible. Accommo-dation in private houses seems the best way ofdealing with this group. In the case of school-children, however, the situation is somewhatdifferent. There would be great administrativeadvantages in providing for them fairly large-scale
accommodation in camps and hostels under the careof teachers and other helpers. Also there are
many small country houses that would willinglybe offered and would comfortably take thirty orforty children, with three or four teachers, althoughon a strict count of their rooms their assignmentwould be much smaller. Where substantial numberswere grouped together, educational facilities couldbe more satisfactorily arranged, feeding would beeasier, and supervision, medical and other, wouldbe simplified. Indeed the evacuation of school-children to an area where they would be cared forin a school camp, in the neighbourhood ofwhich the mothers and pre-school children couldbe billeted, would seem to be an ideal arrangement.Systematic immunisation should banish the riskof such diseases as smallpox and diphtheria, andadequate spacing of beds in dormitories would
help to keep droplet infections within manageableproportions. Hospital accommodation and labora-tory facilities would be a necessary part of anyscheme of evacuation, and local public healthstaffs would have to be greatly strengthened. Theconcentration of children in school camps wouldmake for the more efficient utilisation of all
categories of staff.It is easy to ask local authorities to make surveys
and to promise to pay householders certain sumsfor every lodger received by them should an
emergency arise. It is more difficult to prepare a
really constructive scheme of evacuation and
temporary settlement for large numbers of people.For one thing such a scheme would involve capitalexpenditure, and until it is recognised that air-raidprecautions are just as much part of our nationaldefence as is the provision of weapons of offencewe shall not get anywhere. It is right that we shouldhave our surveys ; they are a necessary first step.But we shall need something more than that ifthe anxieties of the nation are to be allayed.
ANNOTATIONS
PAY-BEDS IN GENERAL WARDS
VOLUNTARY hospitals now expect in-patients tocontribute towards their keep according to their
means, and in 1937 about a third of the total incomeof the London voluntary hospitals was derived fromthis source. Those who can afford it are chargedthe full cost of their maintenance, which in Londongeneral hospitals ranges from E3 3 lls. lOd. a week at
University College to i:5 lls. lOd. at Guy’s, and thereis usually an income limit of about E400 a yearbeyond which patients are admitted only in excep-tional circumstances. At Guy’s forty curtainedcubicles are now being reserved in the general wardsfor patients who can pay for their keep but whoseincomes do not exceed E275 for single people, E325for married people, and E450 for married people withchildren. Most wards have two cubicles and some,including the maternity ward, have four. Patientsmust satisfy the inquiry officer that their income doesfall within these limits and must sign a statement tothat effect. The charge is five guineas a week, whichincludes all special investigations, and there are nomedical or surgical fees. For teaching purposescubicle patients may be demonstrated to students in
the same way as those in the general beds, and theymust conform to the ordinary rules of the hospital,except that they are allowed visitors every eveninginstead of only on specified days. Those whoseincome exceeds the limit for the cubicles are admittedto the paying block, Nuffield House, where theminimum charge is six guineas a week and wherefees are of course charged for medical attendanceand investigations.
PROGESTERONE AND THE ADRENAL
ALTHOUGH in certain species pseudo-pregnancytends to prevent adrenal insufficiency, attempts toprolong the life of adrenalectomised animals bygiving them progesterone have hitherto failed. Now,Gaunt and Hays report that they have succeededin maintaining adrenalectomised ferrets for a monthby injections of progesterone in doses of 0.5-5 mg.daily ; the animals died when injections were dis-continued. Whether the failure of previous experi-ments was due to inadequate dosage or whether theferret reacts differently from other animals is stillto be determined. A difference in the behaviour of
1 Gaunt, R., and Hays, H. W., Science, Dec. 16, 1938, p. 576.