Author/Editor     Zupanič-Slavec, Zvonka; Jaunig, Senta
Title     Valdoltra and osteoarticular tuberculosis among Slovenians - the 100th Anniversary of the Valdoltra hospital
Type     članek
Source     Coll Antropol
Vol. and No.     Letnik 35, št. 4
Publication year     2011
Volume     str. 1265-72
Language     eng
Abstract     The 100th anniversary of the hospital in Valdoltra, Slovenia, on the northeastern Adriatic coast near the Italian frontier - where borders have frequently changed (the town has belonged to Austria-Hungary, Italy, Yugoslavia, and Slovenia) and which experienced military occupation in the interwar period - offers an opportunity to review the professional path of this institution. The hospital was established in 1909 as an act of charity by the Trieste Friends of Children Society due to the high incidence of scrofula as well as bone and extrapulmonary tuberculosis among Trieste children. With 270 beds, it provided medical assistance to sick children and also later to adults. After the First World War, its management was assumed by the Italian Red Cross, which built an additional wing in 1934 and increased the hospital's capacity to 340 beds. After Italy's capitulation, German soldiers occupied the hospital and left it in shambles at the end of the war. In September 1945, the hospital was renovated and taken over by the Slovenian healthcare system; 400 beds were again available for treating bone tuberculosis patients. This did not last for long. By 1947, after the Treaty of Peace with Italy was signed and Valdoltra became the central Yugoslav institution for treating bone tuberculosis, the hospital had to be relocated to Rovinj, Croatia due to the political division of the Trieste region into Zones A and B. Only in 1952 did the hospital return to Valdoltra and continue its mission. In the twentieth century, tuberculosis was treated similarly everywhere until antitubercular agents were discovered. At first, conservative climatic and hygiene-dietary methods, orthopedic aids, plaster corsets, and physiotherapy were used to treat bone tuberculosis. This was followed by surgical treatment, which came into vogue after 1945, when it was supported by antibiotic treatment, and (postoperative) physiotherapy and rehabilitation. (Abstract truncated at 2000 characters)
Descriptors     HOSPITALS, SPECIAL
TUBERCULOSIS, OSTEOARTICULAR