Browse Items (19 total)

  • Tags: healthcare

http://www.iub.edu/~lodzdsc/images/PL_39_610_141.jpg
The first home for children endangered by tuberculosis was set up in Tuszynek in 1927. The home boasted six sleeping wards and a large dining area (pictured here). In the photo, several dozen girls being treated at the facility sit around a large…

http://www.iub.edu/~lodzdsc/images/PL_39_610_17.jpg
During the interwar period, two buildings in a complex of the "Tivoli" factory formerly used to house workers' families were given to the Sick Fund (Kasa Chorych) for its use. This photograph features the dispensary unit, where two nurses are drawing…

http://www.iub.edu/~lodzdsc/images/PL_39_610_178.jpg
A dentist's office providing services under the auspices of the Sick Fund (Kasa Chorych). In the photo, female dentists treat two women reclining in dentist's chairs.

http://www.iub.edu/~lodzdsc/images/PL_39_606_L-I8-115.jpg
The Municipal Sanatorium for Patients with tuberculosis in Chojny (then a village southwest of Łódź) was created in 1918 on Dr. Seweryn Sterling's initiative. 80 patients in the initial stages of tuberculosis could be treated at the facility…

http://www.iub.edu/~lodzdsc/images/PL_39_610_4.jpg
At the Institute for Physical Therapy children were exposed to light treatments using UV lamps. Here eight young patients stand in a circle, their bare chests illuminated. Three large specialized lamps provide the source of light. The children are…

http://www.iub.edu/~lodzdsc/images/PL_39_606_W-I5-54.jpg
World War I was a difficult time for Łódź inhabitants. Food and supplies aid for the poorest residents was overseen and coordinated by local government—initially by the Main Citizens' Council and later by the City Hall and City Council. These local…

http://www.iub.edu/~lodzdsc/images/PL_39_606_W-I5-55.jpg
This delousing facility was but one of many in Łódź at the time of the First World War. Official policy required boys and men being treated at such facilities to have their heads shaved. Here we see this service rendered by a man in medical garb.

http://www.iub.edu/~lodzdsc/images/PL_39_606_W-I5-56.jpg
During World War I, the material and medical conditions in which Łódź residents lived were dire. The lack of detergents, especially of regular soap, made proper upkeep of personal hygiene nearly impossible. Communicable diseases such as cholera,…

http://www.iub.edu/~lodzdsc/images/PL_39_606_W-I5-7.jpg
This photograph presents one of the many delousing facilities in Łódź at the time of the First World War. Official policy required girls and women being treated at such facilities to have their heads shaved. Here we see this service rendered by a man…