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Venereal Disease, Hospitals and the Urban Poor
London's 'Foul Wards', 1600-1800
Kevin P. Siena


This book explores how London society responded to the dilemma of the rampant spread of the pox among the poor. Some have asserted that public authorities turned their backs on the "foul" and only began to offer care for venereal patients in the Enlightenment. An exploration of hospitals and workhouses shows a much more impressive public health response. London hospitals established "foul wards" at least as early as the mid-sixteenth century. Reconstruction of these wards shows that, far from banning paupers with the pox, hospitals made treating them one of their primary services. Not merely present in hospitals, venereal patients were omnipresent. Yet the "foul" comprised a unique category of patient. The sexual nature of their ailment guaranteed that they would be treated quite differently than all other patients.
Class and gender informed patients' experiences in crucial ways. The shameful nature of the disease, and the gendered notion of shame itself, meant that men and women faced quite different circumstances. There emerged a gendered geography of London hospitals as men predominated in fee-charging hospitals, while sick women crowded into workhouses. Patients frequently desired to conceal their infection. This generated innovative services for elite patients who could buy medical privacy by hiring their own doctor. However, the public scrutiny that hospitalization demanded forced poor patients to be creative as they sought access to medical care that they could not afford. Thus, Venereal Disease, Hospitals and the Urban Poor offers new insights on patients' experiences of illness and on London's health care system itself.

Kevin Siena is Assistant Professor of History at Trent University

 

DETAILS

12 b/w illustrations
280 pages
Size: 9 x 6 in
10 digit ISBN: 1580461484
13 digit ISBN: 9781580461481
Binding: Hardback
First published: 28/Feb/2004
Last reprinted: 28/Feb/2004
Price: 80.00 USD / 45.00 GBP Imprint: University of Rochester Press
Series: Rochester Studies in Medical History
Subject: History of Science & Medicine

BIC class: AVH

STATUS: Available
Details updated on 03/07/2008
 
Contents
1   The Foul Disease, Privacy, and the Medical Marketplace
2   The Foul Disease in the Royal Hospitals: The Seventeenth Century
3   The Foul Disease in the Royal Hospitals: The Eighteenth Century
4   The Foul Disease and the Poor Law: Workhouse Medicine in the Eighteenth Century
5   The Foul Disease and Moral Reform: The Lock Hospital
6   Rethinking the Lock Hospital
 

Reviews
This is a well-researched, compelling book on a grim topic with some contemporary overtones. CHOICE

Siena has delved into old sources in new ways, producing not only a superbly refined view of the care offered to the venerally diseased poor throughout early modern England, but also a model for future historical efforts directed towards a better understanding of the care sought for and received by this often overlooked, foundational segment of London society. AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW

It is a pleasure to read a book so deeply grounded in archival work; Siena's extensive research offers new perspectives on health care in early modern England. First, he dispels any lingering ideas about the happy, unrepressed, pre-Victorian days of jolly sexuality in which venereal disease was just a minor inconvenience. . . . Second, like other scholars, he shows poor patients to be resourceful players in a jerry-built system that met their needs imperfectly at best. As always, ideas about morality and gender shaped health care for the poor, and especially for the poor with veneral diseases. JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE 2006

Siena's ambitions here extend to the attempt to recover patients' own experience of illness and healthcare; and he has succeeded to a remarkable extent in conveying the desperate human costs of the 'foul disease'. This is a book then that is marked not only by erudition and sound scholarship but also by humanity and empathy. It is a major achievment. Philip Howell, University of Cambridge, JOURNAL OF SOCIAL HISTORY


 

 

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