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Cleanliness
of carpets and furniture.
It cannot be necessary to
tell a nurse that she should be clean, or that she should
keep her patient clean,--seeing that the greater part of nursing
consists in preserving cleanliness. No ventilation can freshen
a room or ward where the most scrupulous cleanliness is not
observed. Unless the wind be blowing through the windows at
the rate of twenty miles an hour, dusty carpets, dirty wainscots,
musty curtains and furniture, will infallibly produce a close
smell. I have lived in a large and expensively furnished London
house, where the only constant inmate in two very lofty rooms,
with opposite windows, was myself, and yet, owing to the above-mentioned
dirty circumstances, no opening of windows could ever keep
those rooms free from closeness; but the carpet and curtains
having been turned out of the rooms altogether, they became
instantly as fresh as could be wished. It is pure nonsense
to say that in London a room cannot be kept clean. Many of
our hospitals show the exact reverse.
Dust
never removed now.
But no particle of dust is
ever or can ever be removed or really got rid of by the present
system of dusting. Dusting in these days means nothing but
flapping the dust from one part of a room on to another with
doors and windows closed. What you do it for I cannot think.
You had much better leave the dust alone, if you are not going
to take it away altogether. For from the time a room begins
to be a room up to the time when it ceases to be one, no one
atom of dust ever actually leaves its precincts. Tidying a
room means nothing now but removing a thing from one place,
which it has kept clean for itself, on to another and a dirtier
one.[1] Flapping by way of cleaning is only admissible in
the case of pictures, or anything made of paper. The only
way I know to _remove_ dust, the plague of all lovers of fresh
air, is to wipe everything with a damp cloth. And all furniture
ought to be so made as that it may be wiped with a damp cloth
without injury to itself, and so polished as that it may be
damped without injury to others. To dust, as it is now practised,
truly means to distribute dust more equally over a room.
Floors.
As to floors, the only really
clean floor I know is the Berlin _lackered_ floor, which is
wet rubbed and dry rubbed every morning to remove the dust.
The French _parquet_ is always more or less dusty, although
infinitely superior in point of cleanliness and healthiness
to our absorbent floor.
For a sick room, a carpet
is perhaps the worst expedient which could by any possibility
have been invented. If you must have a carpet, the only safety
is to take it up two or three times a year, instead of once.
A dirty carpet literally infects the room. And if you consider
the enormous quantity of organic matter from the feet of people
coming in, which must saturate it, this is by no means surprising.
Papered,
plastered, oil-painted walls.
As for walls, the worst is
the papered wall; the next worst is plaster. But the plaster
can be redeemed by frequent lime-washing; the paper requires
frequent renewing. A glazed paper gets rid of a good deal
of the danger. But the ordinary bed-room paper is all that
it ought _not_ to be.[2]
The close connection between
ventilation and cleanliness is shown in this. An ordinary
light paper will last clean much longer if there is an Arnott's
ventilator in the chimney than it otherwise would.
The best wall now extant is
oil paint. From this you can wash the animal exuviae.[3]
These are what make a room
musty.
Best
kind of wall for a sick-room.
The best wall for a sick-room
or ward that could be made is pure white non-absorbent cement
or glass, or glazed tiles, if they were made sightly enough.
Air can be soiled just like
water. If you blow into water you will soil it with the animal
matter from your breath. So it is with air. Air is always
soiled in a room where walls and carpets are saturated with
animal exhalations.
Want of cleanliness, then,
in rooms _and_ wards, which you have to guard against, may
arise in three ways.
Dirty
air from without.
1. Dirty air coming in from
without, soiled by sewer emanations, the evaporation from
dirty streets, smoke, bits of unburnt fuel, bits of straw,
bits of horse dung.
Best
kind of wall for a house.
If people would but cover
the outside walls of their houses with plain or encaustic
tiles, what an incalculable improvement would there be in
light, cleanliness, dryness, warmth, and consequently economy.
The play of a fire-engine would then effectually wash the
outside of a house. This kind of _walling_ would stand next
to paving in improving the health of towns.
Dirty
air from within.
2. Dirty air coming from within,
from dust, which you often displace, but never remove. And
this recalls what ought to be a _sine qua non_. Have as few
ledges in your room or ward as possible. And under no pretence
have any ledge whatever out-of sight. Dust accumulates there,
and will never be wiped off. This is a certain way to soil
the air. Besides this, the animal exhalations from your inmates
saturate your furniture. And if you never clean your furniture
properly, how can your rooms or wards be anything but musty?
Ventilate as you please, the rooms will never be sweet. Besides
this, there is a constant _degradation_, as it is called,
taking place from everything except polished or glazed articles--_E.g._
in colouring certain green papers arsenic is used. Now in
the very dust even, which is lying about in rooms hung with
this kind of green paper, arsenic has been distinctly detected.
You see your dust is anything but harmless; yet you will let
such dust lie about your ledges for months, your rooms for
ever.
Again, the fire fills the
room with coal-dust.
Dirty
air from the carpet.
3. Dirty air coming from the
carpet. Above all, take care of the carpets, that the animal
dirt left there by the feet of visitors does not stay there.
Floors, unless the grain is filled up and polished, are just
as bad. The smell from the floor of a school-room or ward,
when any moisture brings out the organic matter by which it
is saturated, might alone be enough to warn us of the mischief
that is going on.
Remedies.
The outer air, then, can only
be kept clean by sanitary improvements, and by consuming smoke.
The expense in soap, which this single improvement would save,
is quite incalculable.
The inside air can only be
kept clean by excessive care in the ways mentioned above--to
rid the walls, carpets, furniture, ledges, &c., of the
organic matter and dust--dust consisting greatly of this organic
matter--with which they become saturated, and which is what
really makes the room musty.
Without cleanliness, you cannot
have all the effect of ventilation; without ventilation, you
can have no thorough cleanliness.
Very few people, be they of
what class they may, have any idea of the exquisite cleanliness
required in the sick-room. For much of what I have said applies
less to the hospital than to the private sick-room. The smoky
chimney, the dusty furniture, the utensils emptied but once
a day, often keep the air of the sick constantly dirty in
the best private houses.
The well have a curious habit
of forgetting that what is to them but a trifling inconvenience,
to be patiently "put up" with, is to the sick a
source of suffering, delaying recovery, if not actually hastening
death. The well are scarcely ever more than eight hours, at
most, in the same room. Some change they can always make,
if only for a few minutes. Even during the supposed eight
hours, they can change their posture or their position in
the room. But the sick man who never leaves his bed, who cannot
change by any movement of his own his air, or his light, or
his warmth; who cannot obtain quiet, or get out of the smoke,
or the smell, or the dust; he is really poisoned or depressed
by what is to you the merest trifle.
"What can't be cured
must be endured," is the very worst and most dangerous
maxim for a nurse which ever was made. Patience and resignation
in her are but other words for carelessness or indifference
--contemptible, if in regard to herself; culpable, if in regard
to her sick.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] How
a room is _dusted_.
If you like to clean your
furniture by laying out your clean clothes upon your dirty
chairs or sofa, this is one way certainly of doing it. Having
witnessed the morning process called "tidying the room,"
for many years, and with ever-increasing astonishment, I can
describe what it is. From the chairs, tables, or sofa, upon
which the "things" have lain during the night, and
which are therefore comparatively clean from dust or blacks,
the poor "_things_" having "caught" it,
they are removed to other chairs, tables, sofas, upon which
you could write your name with your finger in the dust or
blacks. The _other_ side of the "things" is therefore
now evenly dirtied or dusted. The housemaid then flaps everything,
or some things, not out of her reach, with a thing called
a duster--the dust flies up, then re-settles more equally
than it lay before the operation. The room has now been "put
to rights."
[2]
Atmosphere in painted and papered rooms quite distinguishable.
I am sure that a person who
has accustomed her senses to compare atmospheres proper and
improper, for the sick and for children, could tell, blindfold,
the difference of the air in old painted and in old papered
rooms, _coeteris paribus._ The latter will always be dusty,
even with all the windows open.
[3] How
to keep your wall clean at the expense of your clothes.
If you like to wipe your dirty
door, or some portion of your dirty wall, by hanging up your
clean gown or shawl against it on a peg, this is one way certainly,
and the most usual way, and generally the only way of cleaning
either door or wall in a bed room!
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