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First
rule of nursing, to keep the air within as pure as the air
without.
The very first canon of nursing,
the first and the last thing upon which a nurse's attention
must be fixed, the first essential to a patient, without which
all the rest you can do for him is as nothing, with which
I had almost said you may leave all the rest alone, is this:
TO KEEP THE AIR HE BREATHES AS PURE AS THE EXTERNAL AIR, WITHOUT
CHILLING HIM. Yet what is so little attended, to? Even where
it is thought of at all, the most extraordinary misconceptions
reign about it. Even in admitting air into the patient's room
or ward, few people ever think, where that air comes from.
It may come from a corridor into which other wards are ventilated,
from a hall, always unaired, always full of the fumes of gas,
dinner, of various kinds of mustiness; from an underground
kitchen, sink, washhouse, water-closet, or even, as I myself
have had sorrowful experience, from open sewers loaded with
filth; and with this the patient's room or ward is aired,
as it is called--poisoned, it should rather be said. Always,
air from the air without, and that, too, through those windows,
through which the air comes freshest. From a closed court,
especially if the wind do not blow that way, air may come
as stagnant as any from a hall or corridor.
Again, a thing I have often
seen both in private houses and institutions. A room remains
uninhabited; the fireplace is carefully fastened up with a
board; the windows are never opened; probably the shutters
are kept always shut; perhaps some kind of stores are kept
in the room; no breath of fresh air can by possibility enter
into that room, nor any ray of sun. The air is as stagnant,
musty, and corrupt as it can by possibility be made. It is
quite ripe to breed small-pox, scarlet-fever, diphtheria,
or anything else you please.[1]
Yet the nursery, ward, or
sick room adjoining will positively be aired (?) by having
the door opened into that room. Or children will be put into
that room, without previous preparation, to sleep.
A short time ago a man walked
into a back-kitchen in Queen square, and cut the throat of
a poor consumptive creature, sitting by the fire. The murderer
did not deny the act, but simply said, "It's all right."
Of course he was mad.
But in our case, the extraordinary
thing is that the victim says, "It's all right,"
and that we are not mad. Yet, although we nose" the murderers,
in the musty unaired unsunned room, the scarlet fever which
is behind the door, or the fever and hospital gangrene which
are stalking among the crowded beds of a hospital ward, we
say, "It's all right."
Without
chill.
With a proper supply of windows,
and a proper supply of fuel in open fire places, fresh air
is comparatively easy to secure when your patient or patients
are in bed. Never be afraid of open windows then. People don't
catch cold in bed. This is a popular fallacy. With proper
bed-clothes and hot bottles, if necessary, you can always
keep a patient warm in bed, and well ventilate him at the
same time.
But a careless nurse, be her
rank and education what it may, will stop up every cranny
and keep a hot-house heat when her patient is in bed,-- and,
if he is able to get up, leave him comparatively unprotected.
The time when people take cold (and there are many ways of
taking cold, besides a cold in the nose,) is when they first
get up after the two-fold exhaustion of dressing and of having
had the skin relaxed by many hours, perhaps days, in bed,
and thereby rendered more incapable of re-action. Then the
same temperature which refreshes the patient in bed may destroy
the patient just risen. And common sense will point out, that,
while purity of air is essential, a temperature must be secured
which shall not chill the patient. Otherwise the best that
can be expected will be a feverish re-action.
To have the air within as
pure as the air without, it is not necessary, as often appears
to be thought, to make it as cold.
In the afternoon again, without
care, the patient whose vital powers have then risen often
finds the room as close and oppressive as he found it cold
in the morning. Yet the nurse will be terrified, if a window
is opened.[2]
Open
windows.
I know an intelligent humane
house surgeon who makes a practice of keeping the ward windows
open. The physicians and surgeons invariably close them while
going their rounds; and the house surgeon very properly as
invariably opens them whenever the doctors have turned their
backs.
In a little book on nursing,
published a short time ago, we are told, that, "with
proper care it is very seldom that the windows cannot be opened
for a few minutes twice in the day to admit fresh air from
without." I should think not; nor twice in the hour either.
It only shows how little the subject has been considered.
What
kind of warmth desirable.
Of all methods of keeping
patients warm the very worst certainly is to depend for heat
on the breath and bodies of the sick. I have known a medical
officer keep his ward indows hermetically closed. Thus exposing
the sick to all the dangers of an infected atmosphere, because
he was afraid that, by admitting fresh air, the temperature
of the ward would be too much lowered. This is a destructive
fallacy.To attempt to keep a ward warm at the expense of making
the sick repeatedly breathe their own hot, humid, putrescing
atmosphere is a certain way to delay recovery or to destroy
life.
Bedrooms
almost universally foul.
Do you ever go into the bed-rooms
of any persons of any class, whether they contain one, two,
or twenty people, whether they hold sick or well, at night,
or before the windows are opened in the morning, and ever
find the air anything but unwholesomely close and foul? And
why should it be so? And of how much importance it is that
it should not be so? During sleep, the human body, even when
in health, is far more injured by the influence of foul air
than when awake. Why can't you keep the air all night, then,
as pure as the air without in the rooms you sleep in? But
for this, you must have sufficient outlet for the impure air
you make yourselves to go out; sufficient inlet for the pure
air from without to come in. You must have open chimneys,
open windows, or ventilators; no close curtains round your
beds; no shutters or curtains to your windows, none of the
contrivances by which you undermine your own health or destroy
the chances of recovery of your sick.[3]
When
warmth must be most carefully looked to.
A careful nurse will keep
a constant watch over her sick, especially weak, protracted,
and collapsed cases, to guard against the effects of the loss
of vital heat by the patient himself. In certain diseased
states much less heat is produced than in health; and there
is a constant tendency to the decline and ultimate extinction
of the vital powers by the call made upon them to sustain
the heat of the body. Cases where this occurs should be watched
with the greatest care from hour to hour, I had almost said
from minute to minute. The feet and legs should be examined
by the hand from time to time, and whenever a tendency to
chilling is discovered, hot bottles, hot bricks, or warm flannels,
with some warm drink, should be made use of until the temperature
is restored. The fire should be, if necessary, replenished.
Patients are frequently lost in the latter stages of disease
from want of attention to such simple precautions. The nurse
may be trusting to the patient's diet, or to his medicine,
or to the occasional dose of stimulant which she is directed
to give him, while the patient is all the while sinking from
want of a little external warmth. Such cases happen at all
times, even during the height of summer. This fatal chill
is most apt to occur towards early morning at the period of
the lowest temperature of the twenty-four hours, and at the
time when the effect of the receding day's diets is exhausted.
Generally speaking, you may
expect that weak patients will suffer cold much more in the
morning than in the evening. The vital powers are much lower.
If they are feverish at night, with burning hands and feet,
they are almost sure to be chilly and shivering in the morning.
But nurses are very fond of heating the foot-warmer at night,
and of neglecting it in the morning, when they are busy. I
should reverse the matter.
All these things require common
sense and care. Yet perhaps in no one single thing is so little
common sense shown, in all ranks, as in nursing.[4]
Cold air not ventilation,
nor fresh air a method of chill.
The extraordinary confusion
between cold and ventilation, even in the minds of well educated
people, illustrates this. To make a room cold is by no means
necessarily to ventilate it. Nor is it at all necessary, in
order to ventilate a room, to chill it. Yet, if a nurse finds
a room close, she will let out the fire, thereby making it
closer, or she will open the door into a cold room, without
a fire, or an open window in it, by way of improving the ventilation.
The safest atmosphere of all for a patient is a good fire
and an open window, excepting in extremes of temperature.
(Yet no nurse can ever be made to understand this.) To ventilate
a small room without draughts of course requires more care
than to ventilate a large one.
Night air.
Another extraordinary fallacy
is the dread of night air. What air can we breathe at night
but night air? The choice is between pure night air from without
and foul night air from within. Most people prefer the latter.
An unaccountable choice. What will they say if it is proved
to be true that fully one-half of all the disease we suffer
from is occasioned by people sleeping with their windows shut?
An open window most nights in the year can never hurt any
one. This is not to say that light is not necessary for recovery.
In great cities, night air is often the best and purest air
to be had in the twenty-four hours. I could better understand
in towns shutting the windows during the day than during the
night, for the sake of the sick. The absence of smoke, the
quiet, all tend to making night the best time for airing the
patients. One of our highest medical authorities on Consumption
and Climate has told me that the air in London is never so
good as after ten o'clock at night.
Air from the outside. Open
your windows, shut your doors.
Always air your room, then,
from the outside air, if possible. Windows are made to open;
doors are made to shut--a truth which seems extremely difficult
of apprehension. I have seen a careful nurse airing her patient's
room through the door, near to which were two gaslights, (each
of which consumes as much air as eleven men,) a kitchen, a
corridor, the composition of the atmosphere in which consisted
of gas, paint, foul air, never changed, full of effluvia,
including a current of sewer air from an ill-placed sink,
ascending in a continual stream by a well-staircase, and discharging
themselves constantly into the patient's room. The window
of the said room, if opened, was all that was desirable to
air it. Every room must be aired from without--every passage
from without. But the fewer passages there are in a hospital
the better.
Smoke.
If we are to preserve the
air within as pure as the air without, it is needless to say
that the chimney must not smoke. Almost all smoky chimneys
can be cured--from the bottom, not from the top. Often it
is only necessary to have an inlet for air to supply the fire,
which is feeding itself, for want of this, from its own chimney.
On the other hand, almost all chimneys can be made to smoke
by a careless nurse, who lets the fire get low and then overwhelms
it with coal; not, as we verily believe, in order to spare
herself trouble, (for very rare is unkindness to the sick),
but from not thinking what she is about.
Airing damp things in a
patient's room.
In laying down the principle
that this first object of the nurse must be to keep the air
breathed by her patient as pure as the air without, it must
not be forgotten that everything in the room which can give
off effluvia, besides the patient, evaporates itself into
his air. And it follows that there ought to be nothing in
the room, excepting him, which can give off effluvia or moisture.
Out of all damp towels, &c., which become dry in the room,
the damp, of course, goes into the patient's air. Yet this
"of course" seems as little thought of, as if it
were an obsolete fiction. How very seldom you see a nurse
who acknowledges by her practice that nothing at all ought
to be aired in the patient's room, that nothing at all ought
to be cooked at the patient's fire! Indeed the arrangements
often make this rule impossible to observe.
If the nurse be a very careful
one, she will, when the patient leaves his bed, but not his
room, open the sheets wide, and throw the bed-clothes back,
in order to air his bed. And she will spread the wet towels
or flannels carefully out upon a horse, in order to dry them.
Now either these bed-clothes and towels are not dried and
aired, or they dry and air themselves into the patient's air.
And whether the damp and effluvia do him most harm in his
air or in his bed, I leave to you to determine, for I cannot.
Effluvia from excreta.
Even in health people cannot
repeatedly breathe air in which they live with impunity, on
account of its becoming charged with unwholesome matter from
the lungs and skin. In disease where everything given off
from the body is highly noxious and dangerous, not only must
there be plenty of ventilation to carry off the effluvia,
but everything which the patient passes must be instantly
removed away, as being more noxious than even the emanations
from the sick.
Of the fatal effects of the
effluvia from the excreta it would seem unnecessary to speak,
were they not so constantly neglected. Concealing the utensils
behind the vallance to the bed seems all the precaution which
is thought necessary for safety in private nursing. Did you
but think for one moment of the atmosphere under that bed,
the saturation of the under side of the mattress with the
warm evaporations, you would be startled and frightened too!
Chamber utensils without
lids.
The use of any chamber utensil
_without a lid_[5] should be utterly abolished, whether among
sick or well. You can easily convince yourself of the necessity
of this absolute rule, by taking one with a lid, and examining
the under side of that lid. It will be found always covered,
whenever the utensil is not empty, by condensed offensive
moisture. Where does that go, when there is no lid?
Earthenware, or if there is
any wood, highly polished and varnished wood, are the only
materials fit for patients' utensils. The very lid of the
old abominable close-stool is enough to breed a pestilence.
It becomes saturated with offensive matter, which scouring
is only wanted to bring out. I prefer an earthenware lid as
being always cleaner. But there are various good new-fashioned
arrangements.
Abolish slop-pails.
A slop pail should never be
brought into a sick room. It should be a rule invariable,
rather more important in the private house than elsewhere,
that the utensil should be carried directly to the water-closet,
emptied there, rinsed there, and brought back. There should
always be water and a cock in every water-closet for rinsing.
But even if there is not, you must carry water there to rinse
with. I have actually seen, in the private sick room, the
utensils emptied into the foot-pan, and put back unrinsed
under the bed. I can hardly say which is most abominable,
whether to do this or to rinse the utensil _in_ the sick room.
In the best hospitals it is now a rule that no slop-pail shall
ever be brought into the wards, but that the utensils, shall
be carried direct to be emptied and rinsed at the proper place.
I would it were so in the private house.
Fumigations.
Let no one ever depend upon
fumigations, "disinfectants," and the like, for
purifying the air. The offensive thing, not its smell, must
be removed. A celebrated medical lecturer began one day, "Fumigations,
gentlemen, are of essential importance. They make such an
abominable smell that they compel you to open the window."
I wish all the disinfecting fluids invented made such an "abominable
smell" that they forced you to admit fresh air. That
would be a useful invention.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] Why
are uninhabited rooms shut up?
The common idea as to uninhabited
rooms is, that they may safely be left with doors, windows,
shutters, and chimney-board, all closed-- hermetically sealed
if possible--to keep out the dust, it is said; and that no
harm will happen if the room is but opened a short hour before
the inmates are put in. I have often been asked the question
for uninhabited rooms.--But when ought the windows to be opened?
The answer is--When ought they to be shut?
[2] It is very desirable that
the windows in a sick room should be such that the patient
shall, if he can move about, be able to open and shut them
easily himself. In fact, the sick room is very seldom kept
aired if this is not the case--so very few people have any
perception of what is a healthy atmosphere for the sick. The
sick man often says, "This room where I spend 22 hours
out of the 24, is fresher than the other where I only spend
2. Because here I can manage the windows myself." And
it is true.
[3] An
air-test of essential consequence.
Dr. Angus Smith's air test,
if it could be made of simpler application, would be invaluable
to use in every sleeping and sick room. Just as without the
use of a thermometer no nurse should ever put a patient into
a bath, so should no nurse, or mother, or superintendent,
be without the air test in any ward, nursery, or sleeping-room.
If the main function of a nurse is to maintain the air within
the room as fresh as the air without, without lowering the
temperature, then she should always be provided with a thermometer
which indicates the temperature, with an air test which indicates
the organic matter of the air. But to be used, the latter
must be made as simple a little instrument as the former,
and both should be self-registering. The senses of nurses
and mothers become so dulled to foul air, that they are perfectly
unconscious of what an atmosphere they have let their children,
patients, or charges, sleep in. But if the tell-tale air test
were to exhibit in the morning, both to nurses and patients,
and to the superior officer going round, what the atmosphere
has been during the night, I question if any greater security
could be afforded against a recurrence of the misdemeanor.
And oh, the crowded national
school! where so many children's epidemics have their origin,
what a tale its air-test would tell! We should have parents
saying, and saying rightly, "I will not send my child
to that school, the air-test stands at 'Horrid.'" And
the dormitories of our great boarding schools! Scarlet fever
would be no more ascribed to contagion, but to its right cause,
the air-test standing at "Foul."
We should hear no longer of
"Mysterious Dispensations," and of "Plague
and Pestilence," being "in God's hands," when,
so far as we know, He has put them into our own. The little
air-test would both betray the cause of these "mysterious
pestilences," and call upon us to remedy it.
[4] With private sick, I think,
but certainly with hospital sick, the nurse should never be
satisfied as to the freshness of their atmosphere, unless
she can feel the air gently moving over her face, when still.
But it is often observed that
the nurses who make the greatest outcry against open windows,
are those who take the least pains to prevent dangerous draughts.
The door of the patients' room or ward _must_ sometimes stand
open to allow of persons passing in and out, or heavy things
being carried in and out. The careful nurse will keep the
door shut while she shuts the windows, and then, and not before,
set the door open, so that a patient may not be left sitting
up in bed, perhaps in a profuse perspiration, directly in
the draught between the open door and window. Neither, of
course, should a patient, while being washed, or in any way
exposed, remain in the draught of an open window or door.
[5]
Don't make your sick room into a sewer.
But never, never should the
possession of this indispensable lid confirm you in the abominable
practice of letting the chamber utensil remain in a patient's
room unemptied, except once in the 24 hours, i.e., when the
bed is made. Yes, impossible as it may appear, I have known
the best and most attentive nurses guilty of this; aye, and
have known, too, a patient afflicted with severe diarrhoea
for ten days, and the nurse (a very good one) not know of
it, because the chamber utensil (one with a lid) was emptied
only once in 24 hours, and that by the housemaid who came
in and made the patient's bed every evening. As well might
you have a sewer under the room, or think that in a water-closet
the plug need be pulled up but once a day. Also take care
that your _lid_, as well as your utensil, be always thoroughly
rinsed.
If a nurse declines to do
these kinds of things for her patient, " because it is
not her business," I should say that nursing was not
her calling. I have seen surgical "sisters," women
whose hands were worth to them two or three guineas a-week,
down upon their knees scouring a room or hut, because they
thought it otherwise not fit for their patients to go into.
I am far from wishing nurses to scour. It is a waste of power.
But I do say that these women had the true nurse-calling--the
good of their sick first, and second only the consideration
what it was their " place" to do--and that women
who wait for the housemaid to do this, or for the charwoman
to do that, when their patients are suffering, have not the
_making_ of a nurse in them.
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