Social Work in Hospitals a Contribution to Progressive Medicine

Cover Social Work in Hospitals a Contribution to Progressive Medicine
Social Work in Hospitals a Contribution to Progressive Medicine
Ida M Ida Maud Cannon
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For seven years one hospital social worker has kept a friendly interest in a young girl with leprosy, who was snatched away from com- munity life to face exile in a leper colony. Every Christmas, every birthday, and many times be- tween, papers, books, or letters are sent to this unfortunate girl, that she may feel that her exist- ence is of some importance to at least one human being. 49 CHAPTER V MEDICAL-SOCIAL PROBLEMS (CONTINUED) THE UNMARRIED MOTHER. THE SYPHILITIC. THE MENTALLY UNBALANCED.... THE NEURASTHENIC. THE SUICIDAL. THE FEEBLE-MINDED THE UNMARRIED MOTHER ONE of the most appealing problems in hos- pital social work is the pathetic plight of young, unmarried girls facing maternity. In the general hospital their numbers are often small compared to those of other groups of pa- tients, but the utter need of the girl makes the problem loom up in all social service departments. The problems of sex universal social problems are the least understood. The social, moral, physical, and psychical factors are so intertwined and deep-seated in human nature and in the or- ganization of society that the medical-social worker must confess herself at the outset unfit adequately to cope with them.

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