Showing 2509 items
matching melbourne hospital
-
Ambulance Victoria Museum
Humidicrib, CIG, Port-O-Cot, The Commonwealth Industrial Gases Limited
Humidicribs are used to transport sick babies from small hospitals to major hospitals for specialist care. They work by maintaining normal body temperature and provide oxygen if needed during ambulance transit. Known by a variety of commercial names, earlier humidicribs were ones heated with water bottles. Not part of an ambulances standard equipment, humidicribs are kept in ambulance stations and carried if babies needed to be transported. In the early days before humidicribs came into use and when air ambulances did not exist, many more babies died during emergency transits than do today Manufactured by the Commonwealth Industrial Gases Limited (better known as CIG), Australian-made Port-O-Cot brand humidicribs came replaced timber home-made humidicribs. They had electrical heating and easy to control oxygen flow and humidity control equipment. CIG also noted that noted that: Once the baby has been placed inside, the cot need not be opened, all nursing operations being carried out through the iris armholes. Even though the baby is in complete isolation nursing is a straight forward matter… The iris armholes allow nurses to feed, weigh, take temperatures, change napkins or, in fact, carry out any procedures without changing or disturbing the atmosphere within the cot. Happily for ambulance officers and nurses, the new Port-O-Cots were also much lighter and easy to carry than their old timber ones! metal box with carry handles and Perspex opening top. Carry handles at each end.PORT-O-COTinfant -
Ambulance Victoria Museum
Humidicrib, CIG, Thermocot, The Commonwealth Industrial Gases Limited, Circa 1970s
Humidicribs are used to transport sick babies from small hospitals to major hospitals for specialist care. They work by maintaining normal body temperature and provide oxygen if needed during ambulance transit. Known by a variety of commercial names, earlier humidicribs were ones heated with water bottles. Not part of an ambulances standard equipment, humidicribs are kept in ambulance stations and carried if babies needed to be transported. In the early days before humidicribs came into use and when air ambulances did not exist, many more babies died during emergency transits than do today The Thermocot Developed from the Port-O-Cot, CIG later produced the Thermocot. The new humidicrib had a number of advantages over the Port-O-Cot. Most importantly it had an over-temperature alarm and cut out. It was also calibrated in degrees Celsius as by then the metric measuring system had been introduced to Australia. It also had a front opening canopy which was easier for nursing staff to use. Metal box with Perspex opening top section. Carry handles at each end.Thermocot portable infant incubator CIGinfant -
Ambulance Victoria Museum
Machine, Electrocardiograph, Both
Cardio phone 12 lead ECG transmission cardiac rhythm over telephone to cardiology department of receiving hospital, mica units had direct admission rights with receiving hospital, the receiving hospital decoded the rhythm and advised the ambulance crew of action required, these units were battery powered.Grey metal box containing built in electrical/medical equipmentBOTH ELECTRO-CARDIOGRAPH -
Ambulance Victoria Museum
Photograph, Ambulance, Horse Drawn
Building in background possibly still exists at Austin hospital siteBlack and white photograph of ambulance wagon with one horse in front of buildingAustin Hospital Ambulance given by William Drummondwilliam drummond -
Ambulance Victoria Museum
Ambulance, Dodge, 1975, 1975
This vehicle was used for patient clinic runs between Morabbin and Kingston Hospital. It then was modified into an ambulance mobile communications vehicle. Found to be too small to fulfil this role it was later allocated to the Healesville State Emergency Service. It then returned to Ambulance Victoria where it was stored at Eltham for ten years. The vehicle was repaired mechanically by Bill Redpath in 2016 and repainted. It will be restored internally by AHSV members and former MICA paramedics to represent Car 208, Victoria's and Australia's first Mobile Intensive Care Ambulance (MICA). The AHSV holds some of the original equipment from Car 208 and this will be refitted into the Dodge.White Dodge Ambulancedodge, mica -
Ambulance Victoria Museum
Certificate, Life Membership for T.N. Knight, Central Victoria District Ambulance Service Life Membership Certificate, 1958
Life Membership Certificate awarded to T.N. Knight on having fulfilled the conditions required under Clause three of the Central Victoria District Ambulance Service Constitution. The Certificate was issued with the approval of the Hospitals and Charities Commission of Victoria.Black and white framed Central Victoria District Ambulance Service Life Membership Certificate for T.N. Knight of Bayne Street Bendigo. Recipient details inscribed by hand. Dated 26 September 1958. Certificate includes black and white Ambulance Victoria logo.certificate, central victoria district ambulance service, life membership certificate, ambulance service victoria, hospitals and charities commission of victoria -
Ambulance Victoria Museum
Certificate, Ambulance Officer Training Centre, Ambulance Officer Grade lll, Laurence Pearce Spelling, 1974
Awarded to Lawrence Pearce Spelling. Laurie Spelling joined the ambulance service in the early 1970s and completed various training courses at the Ambulance Officer's Training Centre. He was employed by the Peninsula Ambulance Service and later qualified as a paramedic and was a MICA coordinator. In the period 1999-2003 he was area manager for Rural Ambulance Victoria.DL sized certificate with Hospital and Charities Commission logo top left and Ambulance Service Victoria logo top right. Ambulance Service Victoria Hospital and Charities Commissionlaurie spelling, laurence pearce spelling, ambulance service victoria, hospitals and charities commission -
Ambulance Victoria Museum
Humidicrib, CIG, Thermocot, The Commonwealth Industrial Gases Limited, Circa 1970s
Humidicribs are used to transport sick babies from small hospitals to major hospitals for specialist care. They work by maintaining normal body temperature and provide oxygen if needed during ambulance transit. Known by a variety of commercial names, earlier humidicribs were ones heated with water bottles. Not part of an ambulances standard equipment, humidicribs are kept in ambulance stations and carried if babies needed to be transported. In the early days before humidicribs came into use and when air ambulances did not exist, many more babies died during emergency transits than do today The Thermocot Developed from the Port-O-Cot, CIG later produced the Thermocot. The new humidicrib had a number of advantages over the Port-O-Cot. Most importantly it had an over-temperature alarm and cut out. It was also calibrated in degrees Celsius as by then the metric measuring system had been introduced to Australia. It also had a front opening canopy which was easier for nursing staff to use. Metal box with Perspex opening top section. Carry handles at each end.Thermocot portable infant incubator CIG -
St Matthews/Wiseman House Archive
Photograph, Ashleigh, with Sawbridgeworth in the background
B&W photograph of Ashleigh, with Sawbridgeworth in the background. The two Wiseman homes "Ashleigh" (Albert Wiseman) and "Sawbridgeworth" (Arthur Wiseman) were used as Army hospitals during World War 1. The houses were built in 1887 and were mirror images of each other.B&W copy photograph of Ashleigh, with Sawbridgeworth in the background. -
St Matthews/Wiseman House Archive
Photograph, Ashleigh as an army hospital, 1919
This is one of the two Wiseman brothers' homes built in Widford Street in 1887. They were named Ashleigh and Sawbridgeworth and were similar. When the Wisemans became bankrupt, with the collapse of the land boom in the 1890s, the houses remained in the estate and were tenanted. At the close of the first world war, both were taken over by the Army as hospitals. This photo is of Ashleigh which became Infectious Diseases Hospital No. 5. Sawbridgeworth was the staff hospital. The photo was taken in 1919. This house was later bought by Thomas Shaw Logan, the well-known auctioneer. On his death, the house was demolished and the property subdivided. The other house, Sawbridgeworth, was bought by the MIssion of St James and St John and then became St. Agnes Girls Home from 1925 until 1963. It was then bought by St. Matthews and is now known as Wiseman House.Black and white photograph (2 copies) of house with hospital flag and people outside. -
Tramways/East Melbourne RSL Sub Branch - RSL Victoria Listing id: 27511
Book, Jersey Museum, THE FIRST CASUALTY (The German Underground Hospital) and Jersey's Occupation Experience. German occupation of Jersey Islands)
-
Tramways/East Melbourne RSL Sub Branch - RSL Victoria Listing id: 27511
Photograph, Vietnam Veterans Day 2014
Photograph taken on Vietnam Veterans Day 2014 at Heidelberg Repatriation Hospital. Pictured are: Major General David MacLachlan Kathleen O'Reilly Audrey Csutoros Emelia Eagling Every Graeme McSolvin Plate on exterior of frame states " Vietnam Veterans Day 201, Heidelberg Repatriation Hospital. Pictured are: Major General David MacLachlan, Kathleen O'Reilly, Audrey Csutoros, Emelia Eagling Every, (Ivanhoe Girls' Grammer School) Graeme McSolvin (Welfare Officer TEM)vietnam veterans day, vietnam, veteran, heidleberg repatriation, david maclachlan, graeme mcsolvin, vietnam war -
Magnet Galleries Melbourne Inc
Photograph of convalescing soldiers during WW1, alban pearce-12.tif
photographworld war i, ww1, aif., world war i, ww1, soldiers, hospital, injured, nurses, doctors -
Magnet Galleries Melbourne Inc
soldiers at Military hospital in England, 1917, alban pearce-29.tif
Convalescent troops mostly suffering heads wounds and nursing staff at an unknown Military hospital in England, 1917.Black and white print of injured soldiers -
Magnet Galleries Melbourne Inc
group soldiers posing
world war 1, anzac, ww1, soldiers, australian, australian imperial forces, uniform, hospital -
Magnet Galleries Melbourne Inc
group soldiers posing with nurse
world war 1, anzac, ww1, nurse, hospital, soldiers, australian, uniform -
8th/13th Victorian Mounted Rifles Regimental Collection
Badge - Woods badges, 1917 circa
These badges were almost certainly issued to Leslie Samuel Woods of Albury who enlisted 10 May 1915 having completed first year medicine at Melbourne University. He served a year at the Convalescent Hospital, Harefield UK, before being ordered home to complete his medical studies. He would have completed his studies near the end on 1918 and attempted to re-enlist but had not entered training before the Armistice. Doctor Leslie Woods was a General Practitioner in Albury till his death. He is buried in Albury Waugh Road Cemetery.Well provenanced object illustrating the WWI experience of a young Albury man.Two lapel badges pinned to a piece of paper with a handwritten notation. One is a Demobilised Soldiers badge issued to new recruits training in Australia at the time of the Armistice on 11 November 1918 or those who had enlisted but had not yet been called into camp for training, and the other a Volunteer Home Service Badge issued to employees of the Department of Defence who had volunteered for active service abroad but who had been denied due to their services being required in Australia. ."14-18 War / 'required for Home Service' / to complete medical course. Pulled / out of camp by Gen Fetherson / DGMS"military, wwi, world war one, woods, enlist, enlistment, non-enlistment -
Department of Health and Human Services
Photograph, Martin Unit opened in 1978 as the Hospital
The Colac, Victoria-based Colanda Centre was one of the last Victorian institutions and offered disability accommodation from 1976, when it was established, until 2019, with its closure.colanda, colac, disability services, residential services, disability, digitised photograph -
Department of Health and Human Services
Ararat Mental Hospital - Prescribed Registers and Non-Prescribed Registers - Provisions Account Book - 1883 to 1890
... Melbourne melbourne Ararat Mental Hospital - Prescribed Registers ... -
Department of Health and Human Services
Page within the Provisions Regiser - Ararat Mental Hospital - Prescribed Registers and Non-Prescribed Registers - Provisions Account Book - 1883 to 1890
-
Department of Health and Human Services
Photograph, Mayday Hills Hospital - Beechworth
Main Entrance 1/4/1980 -
Department of Health and Human Services
Photograph, Mayday Hills Hospital - Beechworth
... Melbourne melbourne Mayday Hills Hospital - Beechworth Photograph ... -
Department of Health and Human Services
Photograph, Mayday Hills Hospital - Beechworth
... Melbourne melbourne Mayday Hills Hospital - Beechworth Photograph ... -
Department of Health and Human Services
Photograph, Mayday Hills Hospital - Beechworth
... Melbourne melbourne Mayday Hills Hospital - Beechworth Photograph ... -
Department of Health and Human Services
Photograph, Mayday Hills Hospital - Beechworth
... Melbourne melbourne Mayday Hills Hospital - Beechworth Photograph ... -
Department of Health and Human Services
Photograph, Mayday Hills Hospital - Beechworth
... Melbourne melbourne Mayday Hills Hospital - Beechworth Photograph ... -
Department of Health and Human Services
Photograph, Mayday Hills Hospital - Beechworth
... Melbourne melbourne Mayday Hills Hospital - Beechworth Photograph ... -
Department of Health and Human Services
Photograph, Beechworth - Mayday Hills Hospital
... Melbourne melbourne Beechworth - Mayday Hills Hospital Photograph ... -
Department of Health and Human Services
Photograph, Mayday Hills Hospital - Beechworth
Digital copy of black and white photograph.none -
Department of Health and Human Services
Photograph, Olivene - Beechworth - Mayday Hills Hospital
handwriting on the back of photograph; showing area of Olivere prior to commencing landscaping.