Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA)

 - Class of 1945

Page 15 of 176

 

Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 15 of 176
Page 15 of 176



Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 14
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Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 16
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Page 15 text:

important to research and education in physical medicine than the establishment of a type of service to the sick which utilizes fundamental advances in knowledge, and applies all available quantitative measures designed to evaluate critically the results achieved. To this end it has significantly expanded the clinical facilities of its Hospital Divisions which serve white and negro patients. By the summer of 1945 both hospital units will be furnished with the latest equipment for the practice of all accepted forms of physical medicine, as well as various precision devices permitting the introduction of quantitative methods. The Clinics are being staffed and organized in a manner which will enable them to take their rightful place in a teaching hospital and maintain it on a high academic plane. The curative and diversional services of occupational therapy are to be incorporated into and integrated with the physical therapy prescription. Thus, the influence and results of the Baruch Center ' s research and educational plan should reflect ultimately in the better use of physical forms of treatment to give solace to the sick, to aid in healing, to expedite the return of function, and to engender healthy and vigorous attitudes toward the responsibilities of everyday living. (Please turn to page 14) The paraffin bath as an effective means of applying thermotherapy Hubbard tank for underwater massage and exercise in the newly equipped physical therapy de- partment of St. Phillip Hospital

Page 14 text:

Underwater exercise in the pool at the Medical College of Vir- ginia Hospital as a part of the convalescent program for patients with infantile paralysis Electrodesiccation being per- formed with the Oudin current from a teaching model of the spark gap diathermy machine donated to the Medical College of Vir- ginia by Dr. James C. Elsom, ' 86 function in military installations and would like to equip themselves to better apply it in civilian practice. To enhance general appreciation of the place of physical forms of treatment in the manage- ment of the patient as a whole, a new approach to undergraduate teaching is to be made. This will commence with a fundamental study of the physics and physiological effects of the therapeutic agents used in physical medicine, and then progress to observation of their clinical application on a high scientific plane. Since a technical assistant commonly serves as the agent of the physician in the actual administra- tion of physical forms of treatment, serious attention has already been given the organization of a sound and well rounded Physical Therapy Tech- nician Training Program. This will go into effect with the beginning of the next school year. For those eligible for graduate study, the Medical College of Virginia will offer a second degree. Army technicians whose training and experience have been limited to military physical therapy will be accommodated in Vocational Rehabilitation Courses, which may be pursued under the G. I. Bill of Rights, their object being to expedite the assumption of civilian duties in hospitals requiring professional registration. III. SERVICE TO THE SICK The Medical College of Virginia believes that from the practical point of view nothing is more



Page 16 text:

stiffness, swelling, or disuse atrophy. In fact, the patient ' s general condition following injury may be allowed to deteriorate to such an extent that he returns home less resistant to the normal hazards of his usual physical work than when he entered the hospital. In the years prior to the war there was manpower enough to compensate easily for the stresses of ordinary living. There was no particular premium on physical fitness, and no real interest in making the disabled employable as quickly as possible. All this changed precipitously with the onset of the war. Manpower shortages in the military services and in industry became the impetus to several significant contributions in the field of physical medicine. They focused attention on two elemental needs previously neglected, the securing of quicker and the securing of better return of function, subsequent to the disabling injury. Because of sheer necessity, bold experiments on the hastening of convalescence were instituted in England and then in this country. A new attack was made on disability evaluation with emphasis on the assessment of residual capacity and the fitting of the physically handi- capped into useful jobs, rather than on the awarding of compensation for residual impairment. The Army demonstrated that enforced leisure due to hospitalization could be constructively utilized to further the technical education of the injured man, so that upon discharge from the hospital he was not only physically fit but returned to duty as a better informed individual. In the aggregate, these experiences have led to a broadened concept of physical medicine, embracing areas which previously attracted little medical attention. Rehabilitation now begins as soon as the patient arrives in the hospital. The concept of keeping the whole man fit following injury is second only in importance to the early institution of physical therapy procedures. The establishment of (12) Using the galvanic current in the treatment of hypertrichosis One of the extremity whirlpools in use at the Medical College of Virginia Hospital

Suggestions in the Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) collection:

Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Medical College of Virginia - X Ray Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948


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