Fabiola Hospital
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The Fabiola Hospital (also known as, ''Oakland Homeopathic Hospital and Dispensary Association'') is a defunct American hospital in
Oakland, California Oakland is the largest city and the county seat of Alameda County, California, United States. A major West Coast of the United States, West Coast port, Oakland is the largest city in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area, the third ...
. Named after
Saint Fabiola Fabiola was a nurse (physician) and Roman matron of rank of the company of noble Roman women who, under the influence of the Church father Jerome, gave up all earthly pleasures and devoted themselves to the practice of Christian asceticism and ch ...
, it was founded in 1876 by 18 women. The medical staff was composed of representatives from the homeopath and
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schools. This allowed patients entering the hospital to have their choice as to their method of treatment. The hospital association was popular and well supported. They managed the hospital well, free from debt, as well as a training school for nurses, an ambulance system, and district nursing. Nurses were supplied from the hospital for private cases. The hospital closed in 1932 with the headline in the October 16 issue of the '' Oakland Tribune'': "Fabiola Ends Experiment in '
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'". It was donated to Merritt Hospital the following year. In 1942, it was dedicated as the Permanente Hospital. The hospital was demolished in 2005, replaced by a parking lot.


History

In 1877, 40 of the benevolent women of Oakland, realizing the need of a hospital, formed an organization for the purpose of maintaining one, since known as the Fabiola Hospital Association. At that time, the only hospital on the east shore of
San Francisco Bay San Francisco Bay is a large tidal estuary in the U.S. state of California, and gives its name to the San Francisco Bay Area. It is dominated by the big cities of San Francisco, San Jose, and Oakland. San Francisco Bay drains water from a ...
was the County Infirmary away, while the most accessible was in
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at least distant. A small dwelling house was rented and the hospital opened with a working force consisting of a matron and her assistant. The first annual report noted 23 patients cared for at a cost of . Eleven years later, the association acquired a tract of land in the suburbs and moved into a new building, the nucleus of the later hospital. As the work of the hospital increased, new buildings were added, a separate maternity cottage, a children's annex, a cottage where all cases of
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were cared for, and an isolation cottage. From the first, the hospital was designed to admit three classes of patients: # Those who were destitute and unable to pay anything. # Those whose means are too limited to enable them to pay for medical attendance. # Private patients, or those having means to pay who came to the hospital for the skilled serve and better facilities and possibilities for restoration to health. Very little distinction was made between the classes in care and treatment. It may be added that very few hospitals of this class in
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made definite provision for destitute patients. The hospital received patients from outside of Alameda County in wards for simply cost, and in private rooms at moderate rates. There was a health mutual fund to relieve sick subscribers. While the grounds were an attractive feature of Fabiola Hospital, originally, there was a lack of provision for outdoor care of patients. Some provision was made in the new surgical building, so that patients could be taken out on the lawns. The Fabiola Fete occurred on May 1 of each year. The carnival of flowers included decorated carriages of the leading charitably inclined society people of Oakland. The ''Borrowings'' series, issued by the Dodge Publishing Company, comprised six titles: ''Borrowings'', ''More Borrowings'', ''Thoughts'', ''Strength for Every Day'', ''For Thy Good Cheer'', and ''Helps to Happiness''. The series was begun by the "Ladies of the Fabiola Hospital Association of San Francisco", who prepared a compilation of sayings of the world's best writers, for the aid of the sick, which proved so successful that the same association followed it up with a succession of books upon the same lines, under the titles given.


Nurses Training School

During the same year that saw the inauguration of a nurse training school in the wards of St. Luke's Hospital, a similar movement was going on in the Fabiola Hospital. The Nurses Training School was established in 1887, under the direction for three years of the resident physician, a woman. In the year 1889, one nurse was graduated and no further note of graduates was made until two years later, 1889. Since that date, classes were graduated every year. A graduate of the
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was appointed superintendent of nurses in 1890, and but three changes were made in this office during these eighteen years. For several years, the superintendent was Miss Sarah Caig, a graduate of the Fabiola school, class of 1894. The pupil nurses had a good general experience in medical, surgical, and obstetrical work. The curriculum for class work and lectures did not vary very materially from that of other schools. A diet kitchen was maintained, where the nurses were taught to cook and serve appetizing meals to invalids. Miss Katherine Fitch, a
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nurse, was appointed in 1903 and the hospital's new building of 1908 was built in accordance with the plans and suggestions made by her. The school grew rapidly and by 1908, numbered 65 pupils.


Nurses Home

About 1900, a large house surrounded by a garden, conveniently near the hospital, was given to the association for a Nurses Home, and five years later, a two-story addition containing 30 bedrooms and a large assembly hall was built. Three assistants and a night supervisor were added to the staff. A graduate of the Drexel Institute was in charge of the Diet Kitchen, where much of the food was prepared for the patients, and from which all trays are served. The Nurses Home had a courtyard, and their garden was filled year round with flowers. From the windows of the new Nurses Home, there were views of the mountains and the bay.


Surgical building

The new Surgical Building was constructed according to Fitch's plans. It was attractive, with soft-toned walls and red roofs that were associated with the old
Spanish missions in California The Spanish missions in California ( es, Misiones espaƱolas en California) comprise a series of 21 religious outposts or missions established between 1769 and 1833 in what is now the U.S. state of California. Founded by Catholic priests o ...
. This gave the hospital accommodation for 120 patients. The new structure was connected with the main building by a corridor from the second floor, in front of which was a large sun porch. The first floors were arranged for patients and had each ten rooms, with a liberal and well arranged allowance of bath and work rooms. The third floor contained three large operating rooms, two of which had an entrance hall and a "cleaning up" room in common; the third, designed for septic cases, opened from a cross hall and had a separate washroom. Two anaesthetic rooms, four dressing rooms, each with a shower, sterilizing room, instrument room and additional work and store rooms occupied the rest of the space. The building was heated by a system of forced ventilation and had all the modern hospital conveniences of the day, including electrical and mechanical devices.


Legacy

Scrapbooks, account books, and letters of the period 1884 till 1952 are held in the collections of the
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at
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.


Selected works


Ladies of Fabiola Hospital Association

* Yule, Sarah S. B. & Keene, Mary S. (compilers), ''Borrowings'', (New York : Dodge Publishing Company, 1899
(text)
* Freeman, Jessie K. & Yule, Sarah S. B. (compilers), ''Thoughts'', (New York : Dodge Publishing Company, 1901
(text)
* Freeman, Jessie K.; Wilson, Evelyn Stevens, & Yule, Sarah S. B. (compilers), ''For Thy Good Cheer, a Collection of Helpful and Beautiful Thoughts'' (New York : Dodge Publishing Company, 1903
(text)


Notes


References


External links


''Annual report of Fabiola Hospital Association. v.15, 1893''
{{authority control 1876 establishments in California 1932 disestablishments in California Defunct hospitals in California Hospitals in Oakland, California