408
Table VI.-Showing the number of PRISONERS VACCINATED in VICTORIA GAOL during the Year 1897.
Number of those showing
Prisoners Vaccinated.
marks of previous
Vaccination.
Successful.
Unsuccessful.
Not inspected, owing to early discharge from Gaol.
2,930
2,410
1,678
1,016
136
JOHN C. THOMSON, Medical Officer.
Table VII.-Showing the NUMBER and PERCENTAGE of Prisoners ADMITTED to VICTORIA GAOL HOSPITAL at the FIRST MEDICAL EXAMINATION by the Medical Officer during the Year 1897.
Total number
of Prisoners Admitted to Gaol.
Europeans.
Admitted to Hospital on
Sick in Hospital.
First Medical Examination.
Indians.
Chinese.
Total.
Europeaus.
Indians.
Chinese.
Total.
Percentage of Hospital cases on First Medical Examination.
To Total Gaot Admissions.
To Total Hospital Cases.
Percentage of Hospital cases on First Medical Examination.
Europeans. Chinese.
To Total
Hospital Cases.
To Total Hospital Cases.
5,076
40
7
295 342
8
28
37
0.72
10.81
2,33
8.18
JOHN C. THOMSON,
Medical Officer.
Table VIII.--Showing the RATE of SICKNESS and MORTALITY in VICTORIA GAOL during the Year 1897.
TOTAL NUMBER OF:-
DAILY AVERAGE NUMBER
OF →
RATE PER CENT. OF:-
Prisoners Sick ad-
admitted mitted to
Sick not requiring to be treated
Deaths.
Prisoners Sick in in Gaol. Hospital.
Serious Sick not Sickness to
in Total Ad- Hospital. missions to
Gaol.
Total Sick-
ness to Total Ad- missions to Gaol.
to Gaol. Hospital. in Hospital.
Daily Average number of Sick to Daily
Mortality
to Total
Average num-Admissions
ber of Pri-
soners.
to Gaol.
5,076
342
455
6
462
11.80 8.55
6.73
15.70
4.40
0.11
JOHN C. THOMSON,
Medical Officer.
Enclosure IV.
Report of the Inspecting Medical Officer of the Tung Wa Hospital.
TUNG WA HOSPITAL, HONGKONG, 4th February, 1898.
SIR-I have the honour to report regarding the Tung Wa Hospital during the year 1897; and as this is the first report under the new conditions that have followed the issue of the Report of the Commission appointed in 1896 by His Excellency Sir WILLIAM ROBINSON, G.C.M.G., to enquire into the working and organization of the Hospital, I propose to describe in greater detail than will be necessary in future reports the arrangements which have been made for its more satisfactory working in the future, in order that these may be placed on record.
I assumed the duties of Inspecting Medical Officer on the 1st January, 1897; and on the same date Dr. CHUNG KING UE, who is a Diplomate of the Viceroy's Medical College, Tientsin, and was Resident Surgeon in the Alice Memorial Hospital during a period of eight years, became the first Resident Surgeon with a training in Western medicine, surgery, and midwifery in the Tung Wa Hospital.
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