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hospital |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.05 sec. |
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hospital, institution for the care of the sick, maintained by private endowment or public funds or both. General hospitals minister to all types of illness, while special hospitals are concerned with only one disease or group of diseases. Many hospitals are maintained solely for the treatment of military personnel and veterans. Once a pesthouse for the care of the indigent and the friendless, with a quality of treatment and nursing from which few emerged alive, the hospital has flourished with the progress of medicine and surgery. Toward the end of the 19th cent. hospital care was revolutionized by the discovery of anesthesia, improvement in sanitation, establishment of hospital nursing schools, and other advances. Hospitals in large cities have become huge medical centers equipped not only to treat the ill but also to further the education of the medical staff, train a nursing staff, perform vital research into the cause and cure of disease, and help the patient with convalescent and social problems. hospitalInstitution for diagnosing and treating the sick or injured, housing them during treatment, examining patients, and managing childbirth. Outpatients, who can leave after treatment, come in for emergency care or are referred for services not available in a private doctor's office. Hospitals may be public (government-owned) or private (profit-making or not-for-profit); in most nations except the U.S., most are public. They may also be general, accepting all types of medical or surgical cases, or special (e.g., children's hospitals, mental hospitals), limiting service to a single type of patient or illness. However, general hospitals usually also have specialized departments, and special hospitals tend to become affiliated with general hospitals. |
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? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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For example, the Boston Lying-in Hospital was reopened in 1873 `for women during childbirth who from misfortune or otherwise had no home,' and for `that class whom maternity makes outcasts. nbsp;available, and in the case of maternity patients, transforming a former religous house in Paris into an up-to-date lying-in hospital and midwifery school. News & World Report, include the Bernard Mitchell Hospital, the University of Chicago Children's Hospital (soon to be replaced by the University of Chicago Comer Children's Hospital, opening later in 2004), the Duchossois Center for Advanced Medicine, and Chicago Lying-in Hospital. |
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