About the journal

Cobiss

Srpski arhiv za celokupno lekarstvo 2004 Volume 132, Issue 11-12, Pages: 469-473
https://doi.org/10.2298/SARH0412469M
Full text ( 191 KB)


70 Years of English-Yugoslav children hospital for osteoarticular tuberculosis in Sremska Kamenica

Mikić Želimir (Medicinski fakultet, Novi Sad)
Lešić Aleksandar (Institut za ortopedsku hirurgiju i traumatologiju, Klinički centar Srbije, Beograd)

The development of orthopedic surgery in Novi Sad and Voivodina is related to the name of Dr. Katherine MacPhail, a Scottish physician, who came to Serbia during the World War I, where she worked with her mission in Belgrade and Kragujevac. After the war, she remained in Serbia and, in 1921, founded the first children's, co-called English-Serbian Hospital; then, in 1934, established English-Yugoslav Children's Hospital for Treatment of Osteoarticular Tuberculosis in Sremska Kamenica, which was open until 1941. After the end of World War II, as early as in 1947, Dr. MacPhail returned to Sremska Kamenica, where she reactivated the hospital. After the nationalization of the hospital, she left for Scotland, but the hospital kept working, first under the supervision of the Belgrade Clinic for Orthopedic Surgery and Traumatology, and then as a ward of the Clinic for Orthopedic Surgery and Traumatology of the Novi Sad School of Medicine, until 1992, when it was closed.

Keywords: Dr. Katherine MacPhail, osteoarticular tuberculosis, English-Yugoslav hospital, Sremska Kamenica

More data about this article available through SCIndeks