None; infection control was poorly understood
Religious staff such as nuns
Providing care for the poor and homeless
They performed surgical procedures
Charitable donations
Infection due to lack of cleanliness
Bloodletting
They allowed medical students to observe patients
A facility primarily for the poor
Lack of anesthesia
Funded them by dissolution of the monastries and giving the money to start hospitals
They recived a post and was able to build a good reputation with rich clients
The four humors bleeding and purging
dispenseries that would give medicine to the poor for free
Generals hospitals
Mentally ill
Sexually transmitted (venereal)
Maternity
Foundling hospitals (for sickly or poor children)
(1720-1750) 5 new general hospitals in london and 9 more throughout the country
by 1800 20,000 paitients were handled per year
they started focousing in good deeds to the comunity instead of going to church
stopped being seen as a punishment of sin but seeing a more scientific point and curing illness