Forum Activity for @docteur-panacek

Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
06 Dec 2014 02:33:20PM
69 posts

Une Grande Dame est passée.


History

La Reine Fabiola Mora y Aragn

(Madrid , 11 juni 1928 Laken , 5 december 2014 )

Reine de Belqique

Queen of Belgium (1960 - 1993).

A Great Dame is passed away.

Biography:

Doa Fabiola, Fernanda, Maria de las Victorias, Antonia, Adelada de MORA y ARAGN, was born in Madrid on 11 June 1928. From a family of seven children, Doa Fabiola was the third daughter of Don Gonzalo Mora Fernandez, Riera del Olmo, Comte de Mora, Marquis de Casa Riera and Doa Blanca de Aragn y Carrillo de Albornoz, Barroeta-Aldamar y Elio.

From her earliest youth, her concerns were mainly social and cultural. After training as a nurse, she worked in a hospital in Madrid. In addition to Spanish, Queen Fabiola speaks fluent French, Dutch, English, German and Italian.

On 15 December 1960, she married King Baudouin of Belgium. Since then, Queen Fabiola has shared all the joys and sufferings of the people of her adopted country, and their social and cultural life.

After the death of Queen Elisabeth, widow of King Albert I, in November 1965, she took under her High Protection the charity which organises the Queen Elisabeth of Belgium International Music Competition, of which she is Honorary President. Queen Fabiola keeps a close eye on this annual international music competition, attending the majority of the elimination rounds and the finals of each session.

In September 1993, she accepted the Presidency of the King Baudouin Foundation, established at the wish of the King in 1976 to mark the 25th anniversary of his reign. The Foundation aims at improving the living conditions of the population.

She devotes her personal action to the social field, particularly working with youth and children. She set up a Social Secretariat of the Queen at the Royal Palace, with the task of answering the many requests for help.

Queen Fabiola encouraged various medical and social charities working with children and through the Queen Fabiola Fund for Mental Health, she supports actions to help people with mental problems and the mentally handicapped.

The charity a.s.b.l. Les Oeuvres de la Reine Fabiola enables her to support various socially useful projects serving as an example, and to help persons in difficulty. In recent years, Queen Fabiola has supported study programmes aimed at prevention and treatment of dyslexia among young children. This was done in close liaison with the management of primary education, both Flemish and French-speaking.

Queen Fabiola is also pursuing activities reflecting the preferred option that the King and Queen had to help the most disadvantaged in society. These include an initiative that King Baudouin asked her to take to heart, and which started in February 1992, when she presided the Summit on Economic Progress of Rural Women at the Palais des Nations in Geneva, a meeting which brought together 64 wives of Heads of State and Government. The objective of the International Steering Committee (ISC) for the Economic Promotion of Rural Women is to create and run a movement of First Ladies wanting to respond to the call for help from the most deprived women in the Third World. Her numerous trips around the world and the speeches that she gives constitute the most visible aspect of Queen Fabiola's contribution. In 1997, the ISC obtained consultative status at the United Nations.

May She never be Forgotten


updated by @docteur-panacek: 09 Jan 2017 09:36:19PM
Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
09 Aug 2014 03:13:49PM
69 posts

The Yellow Jack: facts and figures.


History

With the Yellow Fever raging over Rocca Sorrentina past week, i think its useful to publish the facts that are known now adays about this disease. I know this will be a boring article, but believe me, an outbreak isn't boring at all. On the contrary. Recently we are withnessing an outbreak of Ebola in Western Africa. I guess its about the same.

General description:

What is Yellow fever, known historically as yellow jack or yellow plague? Its an acute viral disease. caused by the yellow fever virus and is spread by the bite of the female mosquito.
A mosquito bites an infected person, and the virus is absorbed, along with the persons blood. Then the mosquitoe bites a healthy person, and transfers the virus. It only infects humans, other primates and several species of mosquito.

The disease originated in Africa, where it spread to South America through the slave trade in the 17th century. Since then, several major outbreaks of the disease have occurred in the Americas, Africa, and Europe. In the 18th and 19th century, yellow fever was seen as one of the most dangerous infectious diseases, causing massive deaths and misery.

Now adays, a safe and effective vaccine against yellow fever exists, but in the early days no one had any idea what was the cause. Some countries require vaccinations for travelers.

Once infected, management is symptomatic with no specific measures effective against the virus. In other words, there is still no cure, even not today in the 21sth century. In those with severe disease, death occurs in about half of people without treatment. That means massive numbers of people died in the past when an epidemy struck. In our time yellow fever causes about 200,000 infections and 30,000 deaths every year. Nearly 90% of these occur in Africa.

Not everyone gets the disease with the same strenght or intensity. Yellow fever begins after an incubation period of three to six days. Most cases only cause a mild infection. The afflicted initially experienced pains in the head, back and limbs accompanied by a high fever. Other symptoms are: headache, chills, back pain, loss of appetite, nausea, and vomiting.
In these cases the infection lasts only three to four days. These symptoms would often disappear, leaving a false sense of security.
In fifteen percent of cases, however, the disease would announce its return with an even more severe fever, and turn the victim's skin a ghastly yellow, while he vomits black clots of blood. The yellow colored skin (jaundice) is the result of liver damage, Bleeding in the mouth, the eyes, and the gastrointestinal tract will cause vomit containing blood, hence the Spanish name for yellow fever, vomito negro ("black vomit"). I can assure you, that is not a pleasant sight. Death soon followed as the victim slipped into a helpless stupor.

The toxic phase is fatal in approximately 20% of cases. In severe epidemics, the mortality may exceed 50%. Luckily, surviving the infection provides lifelong immunity, and normally there is no permanent organ damage.

Now adays we know there is no cure. We have to treath the patients symptomatically.
In the 18th century on the other hand the most commonly used treatments were bloodletting and purging.
An widely used remedy was calomel or Mercury chloride. Mercury became a popular remedy for a variety of physical and mental ailments during the age of "heroic medicine." It was used by doctors in America throughout the 18th century, and during the revolution, to make patients regurgitate and release their body from "impurities". Dr. Benjamin Rush used calomel to treat sufferers of yellow fever during its outbreak in Philadelphia in 1793.
Calomel was given to patients as a purgative or cathartic until they began to salivate and was often administered to patients in such great quantities that their hair and teeth fell out.
A war of words erupted in the press concerning the best treatment for yellow fever; bleeding or calomel. Anecdotal evidence indicates calomel was more effective than bleeding.
These days we know that Mercury is highly toxic (no offense to you Mr. Gandt).

History of the 'Yellow Plague':

The first accurate description of yellow fever seems to be the one written in the year 1495, after the battle known as Vega Real or Santo Cerro, fought by Columbus in Hispaniola against the Indians.

Yellow fever did not originate in Europe. Hippocrates does not mention it. There are no descriptions of this striking disease entity by any European writer of the Pre-Columbian period. Nothing about yellow fever appeared on paper until the discovery of America.

Santo Domingo, the Island of Guadeloupe, The Island of Cuba, Barbados, Santa Lucia, Martinique, all were scourged in the 17th century.
It appeared in New York in 1668, in Boston in 1691, in Philadelphia in 1669 and in Charleston in 1699.
However, from the 18th century on, because of the great military expeditions and the facilities in the passenger routes, intensive yellow fever epidemics broke out. Spain paid a high price for its trading monopoly. Malaga suffered five epidemics, causing the death of more than 3,000 human beings in 1741. Cadiz was scourged several times, and the Canary Islands suffered their first severe attack in 1771.

New York underwent no less than seven important epidemics from 1702 to 1800. Philadelphia was scourged on eleven occasions and we all know about the 1793 epidemic, so well described by Mathew Carey in his excellent exposition of the horrors suffered by the inhabitants of that city.
Indeed, during the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1793 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 5000 or more people were listed in the official register of deaths between August 1 and November 9. The vast majority of them died of yellow fever, making the epidemic in the city of 50,000 people one of the most severe in United States' history.

The 19th century had major outbreaks in The America's as in Afrika and Europe.
We find Madrid shaken in 1878, and the epidemics recorded in that century in the cities of Cadiz, Cartagena, Jerez de la Frontera, Malaga and Barcelona were indeed horrible,

This brief historic outline of yellow fever epidemics brings us to the year 1878, when the disease invaded more than 100 cities and villages in the United States, mainly in the States of Louisiana, Mississippi and Tennessee. The number of cases reached the figure of 120,000 out of which 20,000 were lost.


The Congress of the United States passed a law in March 1879, setting up the National Board of Sanitation. The first resolution passed by the Board was to organize a Commission to visit the West Indies, with the object of studying Black Vomit in the supposed source areas of the disease.
Finally the cause was identified: transmission my Mosquitoes. Sir William Reed has to take the most credits in unraffling this widespread plague.

End of lecture. (I hope you found this a bit interesting).

Panacek, Retired War Surgeon


updated by @docteur-panacek: 06 Oct 2016 06:30:18AM
Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
11 Jun 2013 11:14:01AM
69 posts

"To heale a burn without a scarr"


Bloggers' Corner

I am glad you ladies are interested in the meaning of the words "Yellow scurk". I looked it up and didn't found the actual word. But i found this:

scurf (skrf) n.

1. Scaly or shredded dry skin, such as dandruff.
2. A loose scaly crust coating a surface, especially of a plant.

So i think they misprinted the word in the original text. The "k" probably should have been an "f"
Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
04 Jun 2013 10:28:45AM
69 posts

"To heale a burn without a scarr"


Bloggers' Corner

My dear fellow courtiers, dear actual and future patients,

We all burned ourselves in our lives: handling a too hot kettle for instance, putting on the fireplace or trying to smoke a pipe while enjoying the sun dawn. Yes, accidents do happen. And we all know, burning wounds can leave nasty scars. That's why today i offer you a simple but very effective recipe to heal those wounds without leaving such an ugly mark on your delicate skin.

Again i am using a recipe found in that very useful notebook compiled by members of the family of Rev. William Twigge, archdeacon of Limerick from 1705 to 1726.


-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

To heale a burn without a scarr.


Take a handfull of the yellow scurk that grows on old walls and halfe as much of the white of hen's dung and as much fresh hog's lard as will make it into an ointment.
Let it boile well and then strain thro a fine cloth and keep it for use.
It must be annointed with it twice a day with a fether and in a short time it will heal it.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

18th-century patient attended by family and physick

Oil of swallows, juice of snail and a pinch of hens dung may sound more like a witchs brew than a list of cures. But these were some of the common remedies used by people in the 17th and 18th centuries. We can hardly imagine using those ingredients in modern medicinal cures.

I found a reference online about a work outlining the nations early medicine " Physick and the Family: Health, Medicine and Care in Wales, 1600-1750", by medical historian Dr Alun Withey.

According to the author, lotsa families had their own store of remedies either written down or handed down verbally, generation by generation. Just like the little work owned by the Archdeacon's family, of which i am quoting from. There were no modern drugs like antibiotics, but there was a vast store of knowledge about the health benefits of certain plants, and other commonly available materials.

Remedies commonly used between 1600 and 1750 included:
* Skin of dead puppies used in an ointment for the skin
* Oil of swallows used for shrunken sinews (withered limbs)
* Juice of snail a pin was stuck into the snail and the juice was dropped into eyes for eye conditions
* Hens dung also used to cure eye problems.

According to the author the use of those substances is understandable if you keep the so-called " Doctrine of Sympathies " in mind. This meant that something in nature that looked like an organ which needed help (a snail was held to be similar in texture to a human eye) could be used as a cure. Alternatively there was also the " Doctrine of Opposites " which meant for instance that a high temperature could be cured by a cold bath. Echo's of these doctrines still can be found in homoeopathic medicine.

Anyway, i don't recommend the above recipe for actual use any more...

Next month: what has tobacco smoke and saving someone from drowning to do with each other? Take care, and please stay healthy.

Dr. Panacek, War Surgeon.

Physick and the Family: Health, Medicine and Care in Wales, 1600-1750 by Dr Alun Withey is published by Manchester University Press, 60 (RRP)


updated by @docteur-panacek: 09 Jan 2017 09:35:25PM
Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
13 Mar 2013 01:20:48AM
69 posts

Royal Court of Naples: Closed temporarily for Abuse Behaviors!


Communty News & Events

Dear Serenya, in times of trouble one learns the true meaning of the nature of humanity. There are lots of stupid, egocentric and bad people in the world. Yes. But there are also a lot of good, trustworthy people, who really love and care for each other. I am sure you feel how many people in both your lives (SL and RL) are supporting you. Times of trouble bring out the worst, AND the best in people. Don't give up. Live your dream, one day it will be there again, restored in all it's glory. Remember, if you need us, we are just a mouse-click away.

Hugsz, Pekel

Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
10 Mar 2013 11:05:12PM
69 posts

ZART good news


Marketplace Archive ** CLOSED **

  • i see you have a men's line of clothing now. that's wonderful. Can't wait to come and get myself a new outfit.
Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
05 Feb 2013 12:48:46AM
69 posts

Remains of Richard III Found


History

So that happens when you don't pay your parking ticket in England? Daannngggggggg.

Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
21 Dec 2012 08:06:25AM
69 posts

*Winter* gown from Trefusis Desigsn


Marketplace Archive ** CLOSED **

I am getting jealous, we men don't have such warm furry clothes ... (Where is Monsieur Trasgo when you need him?)

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