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Difference between revisions of "22nd Australian Auxiliary Hospital"

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==General Information==
 
==General Information==
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While at least one website speaks of the 22nd Auxiliary Hospital as being established at "The Rocks" Albany, Pte Raine's military records speak of him being admitted to the 22nd at Wooroloo.  Other returned servicemen with TB were also sent to Wooroloo so it might be that the location changed some time before 1918.
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Wooroloo Sanatorium or Hospital, was established by the State Government in response to the infectious diseases, such as typhoid, diphtheria and tuberculosis, that were widely prevalent in the aftermath of the mass migration that came as a result of the gold rushes in Western Australia in the early part of the twentieth century.
 
Wooroloo Sanatorium or Hospital, was established by the State Government in response to the infectious diseases, such as typhoid, diphtheria and tuberculosis, that were widely prevalent in the aftermath of the mass migration that came as a result of the gold rushes in Western Australia in the early part of the twentieth century.
  
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Returned servicemen suffering TB were admitted to a section known to the military as the 22nd Auxiliary Hospital.
 
Returned servicemen suffering TB were admitted to a section known to the military as the 22nd Auxiliary Hospital.
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==Staff==
 
==Staff==
  

Revision as of 14:16, 4 March 2018

22nd Australian Auxiliary Hospital
22nd Australian Auxiliary Hospital Wooroloo.jpg
Wooroloo Sanitorium for TB patients 1914 LISWA 2001
History
Name 22nd Australian Auxiliary Hospital
Where formed Wooroloo, Western Austalia
Date formed 1 May 1915
Capacity The hospital was built to accommodate up to 200 male patients and 100 females.
Locations Wooroloo

General Information

While at least one website speaks of the 22nd Auxiliary Hospital as being established at "The Rocks" Albany, Pte Raine's military records speak of him being admitted to the 22nd at Wooroloo. Other returned servicemen with TB were also sent to Wooroloo so it might be that the location changed some time before 1918.

Wooroloo Sanatorium or Hospital, was established by the State Government in response to the infectious diseases, such as typhoid, diphtheria and tuberculosis, that were widely prevalent in the aftermath of the mass migration that came as a result of the gold rushes in Western Australia in the early part of the twentieth century.

Emphasis was placed on the treatment of tuberculosis through the provision of fresh air and sunlight. The Wooroloo Sanatorium comprised 36 major buildings constructed between 1914 and 1917 and is the only large scale purpose-built tuberculosis sanatorium in Western Australia.

Returned servicemen suffering TB were admitted to a section known to the military as the 22nd Auxiliary Hospital.

Staff

Patients