Abstract
Following the shift in therapy of tuberculosis in the mid-19th century, by the beginning of the 20th century numerous tuberculosis sanatoria were established in Western Europe. Being an institutional novelty in the medical practice, sanatoria spread within the first 20 years of the 20th century to Central and Eastern Europe, including the southern region of the Panonian plain, the present-day Province of Vojvodina in Serbia north of the rivers Sava and Danube. The health policy and regulations of the newly built state - the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenians/Yugoslavia, provided a rather liberal framework for introducing the concept of sanatorium. Soon after the World War I there were 14 sanatoria in this region, and the period of their expansion was between 1920 and 1939 when at least 27 sanatoria were founded, more than half of the total number of 46 sanatoria in the whole state in that period. However, only two of these were for pulmonary diseases. One of them was privately owned the open public sanatorium the English-Yugoslav Hospital for Paediatric Osteo-Articular Tuberculosis in Sremska Kamenica, and the other was state-run (at Iriski venac, on the Fruska Gora mountain, as a unit of the Department for Lung Disease of the Main Regional Hospital). All the others were actually small private specialized hospitals in 6 towns (Novi Sad, Subotica, Sombor, Vrbas, Vrsac, Pancevo,) providing medical treatment of well-off, mostly gynaecological and surgical patients. The majority of sanatoria founded in the period 1920-1939 were in or close to the city of Novi Sad, the administrative headquarters of the province (the Danube Banovina at that time) with a growing population. A total of 10 sanatoria were open in the city of Novi Sad, with cumulative bed capacity varying from 60 to 130. None of these worked in newly built buildings, but in private houses adapted for medical purpose in accordance with legal requirements. The decline of sanatoria in Vojvodina began with the very outbreak of the World War II and they never regained their social role. Soon after the Hungarian fascist occupation the majority of owners/ founders were terrorized and forced to close their sanatoria, some of them to leave country and some were even killed or deported to concentration camps.
Highlights
The idea of sanatorium* was widely spread in Europe by the end of the 19th century, due to medical advances in treating infectious diseases, tuberculosis in the first place
Received: The majority of sanatoria founded in the period 1920–1939 were in or close to the city of Novi Sad, the administrative Provisionally accepted: headquarters of the province with a growing population
In the southern region of the Panonian plain, in the present-day Province of Vojvodina in Serbia north of the rivers Sava and Danube, the first sanatorium was open in Pancevo, around 1907, by an exceptional multitalented visionary, V
Summary
UDC: 616.24-002.5:725.515 tuberculosis sanatoria were established in Western Europe. (497.113Vojvodina)” 19th/20thC”:93/94:61 sanatoria spread within the first 20 years of the 20th century to Central and Eastern Europe, including the southern. Received: The majority of sanatoria founded in the period 1920–1939 were in or close to the city of Novi Sad, the administrative Provisionally accepted: headquarters of the province (the Danube Banovina at that time) with a growing population. Accepted: open in the city of Novi Sad, with cumulative bed capacity varying from 60 to 130. None of these worked in newly built. Vrnjačka Banja 2012 Key words: History of Medicine; Health Resorts; History, 20th Century; Hospitals, Chronic Diseases; Tuberculosis; Hospital, Private; Non MeSH Vojvodina
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