Hello Debra,
>>I haven't looked in to the protocol of admissions to the London Hospital. Was admission recorded immediately on entering the hospital for treatment? What I mean is- was there an outpatients department where casualties without a ticket could walk in and be treated and then admitted later to a ward if the case was serious enough?<<
Patients were admitted by the porters who had a large glass office in the middle of the entrance, I have a picture of it somewhere.
"“In the receiving-room a porter is stationed night and day, and when patients are brought in by the police or others, he promptly admits them, and hands them over to the nurses."
Montague Williams, writing about the London hospital in 1894
Presumably, it is these Porter admissions records, everyone is currently accessing.
>>I haven't looked in to the protocol of admissions to the London Hospital. Was admission recorded immediately on entering the hospital for treatment? What I mean is- was there an outpatients department where casualties without a ticket could walk in and be treated and then admitted later to a ward if the case was serious enough?<<
Patients were admitted by the porters who had a large glass office in the middle of the entrance, I have a picture of it somewhere.
"“In the receiving-room a porter is stationed night and day, and when patients are brought in by the police or others, he promptly admits them, and hands them over to the nurses."
Montague Williams, writing about the London hospital in 1894
Presumably, it is these Porter admissions records, everyone is currently accessing.
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