dbo:abstract
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- The Platt Report, formerly known as the Welfare of Sick Children in Hospital (Ministry of Health, 1959), was a report that was the result of research into the welfare of children who were undergoing medical treatment within the UK and to make suggestions that could be passed on to the hospital authorities that would improve their welfare during hospital visits. The report was named after Sir Harry Platt, who was the President of the Royal College of Surgeons. Platt produced the report at the behest of the Ministry of Health in the UK government. The recommendations in the Platt Report, provided the means by which a child trauma ward of a hospital should be planned for children. Established on 12 June 1956, the committee that was to produce the report defined their remit as: To make a special study of the arrangements made in hospitals for the welfare of ill children – as distinct from the medical and nursing treatment – and to make suggestions which could be passed on to hospital authorities. The findings of the report by the committee was that hospitals were miserable places for children, and while in hospital, they had to follow strict ward routines, and were not allowed to play. Moreover, the most grievous of the findings, was that parents were under no circumstances, allowed to visit their children outside visiting hours. (en)
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rdfs:comment
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- The Platt Report, formerly known as the Welfare of Sick Children in Hospital (Ministry of Health, 1959), was a report that was the result of research into the welfare of children who were undergoing medical treatment within the UK and to make suggestions that could be passed on to the hospital authorities that would improve their welfare during hospital visits. The report was named after Sir Harry Platt, who was the President of the Royal College of Surgeons. Platt produced the report at the behest of the Ministry of Health in the UK government. The recommendations in the Platt Report, provided the means by which a child trauma ward of a hospital should be planned for children. Established on 12 June 1956, the committee that was to produce the report defined their remit as: (en)
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