| Light
essential to both health and recovery.
It is the unqualified result
of all my experience with the sick, that second only to their
need of fresh air is their need of light; that, after a close
room, what hurts them most is a dark room. And that it is
not only light but direct sun-light they want. I had rather
have the power of carrying my patient about after the sun,
according to the aspect of the rooms, if circumstances permit,
than let him linger in a room when the sun is off. People
think the effect is upon the spirits only. This is by no means
the case. The sun is not only a painter but a sculptor. You
admit that he does the photograph. Without going into any
scientific exposition we must admit that light has quite as
real and tangible effects upon the human body. But this is
not all. Who has not observed the purifying effect of light,
and especially of direct sunlight, upon the air of a room?
Here is an observation within everybody's experience. Go into
a room where the shutters are always shut (in a sick room
or a bedroom there should never be shutters shut), and though
the room be uninhabited, though the air has never been polluted
by the breathing of human beings, you will observe a close,
musty smell of corrupt air, of air _i.e._ unpurified by the
effect of the sun's rays. The mustiness of dark rooms and
corners, indeed, is proverbial. The cheerfulness of a room,
the usefulness of light in treating disease is all-important.
Aspect,
view, and sunlight matters of first importance to the sick.
A very high authority in hospital
construction has said that people do not enough consider the
difference between wards and dormitories in planning their
buildings. But I go farther, and say, that healthy people
never remember the difference between _bed_-rooms and _sick_-rooms
in making arrangements for the sick. To a sleeper in health
it does not signify what the view is from his bed. He ought
never to be in it excepting when asleep, and at night. Aspect
does not very much signify either (provided the sun reach
his bed-room some time in every day, to purify the air), because
he ought never to be in his bed-room except during the hours
when there is no sun. But the case is exactly reversed with
the sick, even should they be as many hours out of their beds
as you are in yours, which probably they are not. Therefore,
that they should be able, without raising themselves or turning
in bed, to see out of window from their beds, to see sky and
sun-light at least, if you can show them nothing else, I assert
to be, if not of the very first importance for recovery, at
least something very near it.
And you should therefore look
to the position of the beds of your sick one of the very first
things. If they can see out of two windows instead of one,
so much the better. Again, the morning sun and the mid-day
sun-- the hours when they are quite certain not to be up,
are of more importance to them, if a choice must be made,
than the afternoon sun. Perhaps you can take them out of bed
in the afternoon and set them by the window, where they can
see the sun. But the best rule is, if possible, to give them
direct sunlight from the moment he rises till the moment he
sets.
Another great difference between
the _bed_-room and the _sick_-room is, that the _sleeper_
has a very large balance of fresh air to begin with, when
he begins the night, if his room has been open all day as
it ought to be; the _sick_ man has not, because all day he
has been breathing the air in the same room, and dirtying
it by the emanations from himself. Far more care is therefore
necessary to keep up a constant change of air in the sick
room.
It is hardly necessary to
add that there are acute cases (particularly a few ophthalmic
cases, and diseases where the eye is morbidly sensitive),
where a subdued light is necessary. But a dark north room
is inadmissible even for these. You can always moderate the
light by blinds and curtains.
Heavy, thick, dark window
or bed curtains should, however, hardly ever be used for any
kind of sick in this country. A light white curtain at the
head of the bed is, in general, all that is necessary, and
a green blind to the window, to be drawn down only when necessary.
Without
sunlight, we degenerate body and mind.
One of the greatest observers
of human things (not physiological), says, in another language,
"Where there is sun there is thought." All physiology
goes to confirm this. Where is the shady side of deep vallies,
there is cretinism. Where are cellars and the unsunned sides
of narrow streets, there is the degeneracy and weakliness
of the human race--mind and body equally degenerating. Put
the pale withering plant and human being into the sun, and,
if not too far gone, each will recover health and spirit.
Almost
all patients lie with their faces to the light.
It is a curious thing to observe
how almost all patients lie with their faces turned to the
light, exactly as plants always make their way towards the
light; a patient will even complain that it gives him pain
" lying on that side." "Then why _do_ you lie
on that side?" He does not know,--but we do. It is because
it is the side towards the window. A fashionable physician
has recently published in a government report that he always
turns his patient's faces from the light. Yes, but nature
is stronger than fashionable physicians, and depend upon it
she turns the faces back and _towards_ such light as she can
get. Walk through the wards of a hospital, remember the bed
sides of private patients you have seen, and count how many
sick you ever saw lying with their faces towards the wall.
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