| Feverishness
a symptom of bedding.
A few words upon bedsteads
and bedding; and principally as regards patients who are entirely,
or almost entirely, confined to bed.
Feverishness is generally
supposed to be a symptom of fever--in nine cases out of ten
it is a symptom of bedding.[1] The patient has had re-introduced
into the body the emanations from himself which day after
day and week after week saturate his unaired bedding. How
can it be otherwise? Look at the ordinary bed in which a patient
lies.
Uncleanliness
of ordinary bedding.
If I were looking out for
an example in order to show what _not_ to do, I should take
the specimen of an ordinary bed in a private house: a wooden
bedstead, two or even three mattresses piled up to above the
height of a table; a vallance attached to the frame--nothing
but a miracle could ever thoroughly dry or air such a bed
and bedding. The patient must inevitably alternate between
cold damp after his bed is made, and warm damp before, both
saturated with organic matter[2], and this from the time the
mattresses are put under him till the time they are picked
to pieces, if this is ever done.
Air
your dirty sheets, not only your clean ones.
If you consider that an adult
in health exhales by the lungs and skin in the twenty-four
hours three pints at least of moisture, loaded with organic
matter ready to enter into putrefaction; that in sickness
the quantity is often greatly increased, the quality is always
more noxious --just ask yourself next where does all this
moisture go to? Chiefly into the bedding, because it cannot
go anywhere else. And it stays there; because, except perhaps
a weekly change of sheets, scarcely any other airing is attempted.
A nurse will be careful to fidgetiness about airing the clean
sheets from clean damp, but airing the dirty sheets from noxious
damp will never even occur to her. Besides this, the most
dangerous effluvia we know of are from the excreta of the
sick--these are placed, at least temporarily, where they must
throw their effluvia into the under side of the bed, and the
space under the bed is never aired; it cannot be, with our
arrangements. Must not such a bed be always saturated, and
be always the means of re-introducing into the system of the
unfortunate patient who lies in it, that excrementitious matter
to eliminate which from the body nature had expressly appointed
the disease?
My heart always sinks within
me when I hear the good house-wife, of every class, say, "I
assure you the bed has been well slept in," and I can
only hope it is not true. What? is the bed already saturated
with somebody else's damp before my patient comes to exhale
in it his own damp? Has it not had a single chance to be aired?
No, not one. "It has been slept in every night."
Iron
spring bedsteads the best.
Comfort
and cleanliness of _two_ beds.
The only way of really nursing
a real patient is to have an _iron_ bedstead, with rheocline
springs, which are permeable by the air up to the very mattress
(no vallance, of course), the mattress to be a thin hair one;
the bed to be not above 3-1/2 feet wide. If the patient be
entirely confined to his bed, there should be _two_ such bedsteads;
each bed to be "made" with mattress, sheets, blankets,
&c., complete--the patient to pass twelve hours in each
bed; on no account to carry his sheets with him. The whole
of the bedding to be hung up to air for each intermediate
twelve hours. Of course there are many cases where this cannot
be done at all--many more where only an approach to it can
be made. I am indicating the ideal of nursing, and what I
have actually had done. But about the kind of bedstead there
can be no doubt, whether there be one or two provided.
Bed
not to be too wide.
There is a prejudice in favour
of a wide bed--I believe it to be a prejudice. All the refreshment
of moving a patient from one side to the other of his bed
is far more effectually secured by putting him into a fresh
bed; and a patient who is really very ill does not stray far
in bed. But it is said there is no room to put a tray down
on a narrow bed. No good nurse will ever put a tray on a bed
at all. If the patient can turn on his side, he will eat more
comfortably from a bed-side table; and on no account whatever
should a bed ever be higher than a sofa. Otherwise the patient
feels himself "out of humanity's reach;" he can
get at nothing for himself: he can move nothing for himself.
If the patient cannot turn, a table over the bed is a better
thing. I need hardly say that a patient's bed should never
have its side against the wall. The nurse must be able to
get easily to both sides of the bed, and to reach easily every
part of the patient without stretching--a thing impossible
if the bed be either too wide or too high.
Bed
not to be too high.
When I see a patient in a
room nine or ten feet high upon a bed between four and five
feet high, with his head, when he is sitting up in bed, actually
within two or three feet of the ceiling, I ask myself, is
this expressly planned to produce that peculiarly distressing
feeling common to the sick, viz., as if the walls and ceiling
were closing in upon them, and they becoming sandwiches between
floor and ceiling, which imagination is not, indeed, here
so far from the truth? If, over and above this, the window
stops short of the ceiling, then the patient's head may literally
be raised above the stratum of fresh air, even when the window
is open. Can human perversity any farther go, in unmaking
the process of restoration which God has made? The fact is,
that the heads of sleepers or of sick should never be higher
than the throat of the chimney, which ensures their being
in the current of best air. And we will not suppose it possible
that you have closed your chimney with a chimney-board.
If a bed is higher than a
sofa, the difference of the fatigue of getting in and out
of bed will just make the difference, very often, to the patient
(who can get in and out of bed at all) of being able to take
a few minutes' exercise, either in the open air or in another
room. It is so very odd that people never think of this, or
of how many more times a patient who is in bed for the twenty-four
hours is obliged to get in and out of bed than they are, who
only, it is to be hoped, get into bed once and out of bed
once during the twenty-four hours.
Nor
in a dark place.
A patient's bed should always
be in the lightest spot in the room; and he should be able
to see out of window.
Nor
a four poster with curtains.
I need scarcely say that the
old four-post bed with curtains is utterly inadmissible, whether
for sick or well. Hospital bedsteads are in many respects
very much less objectionable than private ones.
Scrofula
often a result of disposition of bed clothes.
There is reason to believe
that not a few of the apparently unaccountable cases of scrofula
among children proceed from the habit of sleeping with the
head under the bed clothes, and so inhaling air already breathed,
which is farther contaminated by exhalations from the skin.
Patients are sometimes given to a similar habit, and it often
happens that the bed clothes are so disposed that the patient
must necessarily breathe air more or less contaminated by
exhalations from his skin. A good nurse will be careful to
attend to this. It is an important part, so to speak, of ventilation.
Bed
sores.
It may be worth while to remark,
that where there is any danger of bed-sores a blanket should
never be placed _under_ the patient. It retains damp and acts
like a poultice.
Heavy
and impervious bed clothes.
Never use anything but light
Whitney blankets as bed covering for the sick. The heavy cotton
impervious counterpane is bad, for the very reason that it
keeps in the emanations from the sick person, while the blanket
allows them to pass through. Weak patients are invariably
distressed by a great weight of bed clothes, which often prevents
their getting any sound sleep whatever.
NOTE.--One word about pillows.
Every weak patient, be his illness what it may, suffers more
or less from difficulty in breathing. To take the weight of
the body off the poor chest, which is hardly up to its work
as it is, ought therefore to be the object of the nurse in
arranging his pillows. Now what does she do and what are the
consequences? She piles the pillows one a-top of the other
like a wall of bricks. The head is thrown upon the chest.
And the shoulders are pushed forward, so as not to allow the
lungs room to expand. The pillows, in fact, lean upon the
patient, not the patient upon the pillows. It is impossible
to give a rule for this, because it must vary with the figure
of the patient. And tall patients suffer much more than short
ones, because of the _drag_ of the long limbs upon the waist.
But the object is to support, with the pillows, the back _below_
the breathing apparatus, to allow the shoulders room to fall
back, and to support the head, without throwing it forward.
The suffering of dying patients is immensely increased by
neglect of these points. And many an invalid, too weak to
drag about his pillows himself, slips his book or anything
at hand behind the lower part of his back to support it.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] Nurses
often do not think the sick room any business of theirs, but
only, the sick.
I once told a "very good
nurse" that the way in which her patient's room was kept
was quite enough to account for his sleeplessness; and she
answered quite good-humouredly she was not at all surprised
at it--as if the state of the room were, like the state of
the weather, entirely out of her power. Now in what sense
was this woman to be called a "nurse?"
[2] For the same reason if,
after washing a patient, you must put the same night-dress
on him again, always give it a preliminary warm at the fire.
The night-gown he has worn must be, to a certain extent, damp.
It has now got cold from having been off him for a few minutes.
The fire will dry and at the same time air it. This is much
more important than with clean things.
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