London's Pulse: Medical Officer of Health reports 1848-1972

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Kensington 1938

[Report of the Medical Officer of Health for Kensington Borough]

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19
Health-Visiting Staff.
The council's health-visiting staff for the maternity and child welfare scheme consists of eleven
health officers.
Within twenty-one days of a birth one of the above officers calls at the home, advises the mother
in any difficulty which may have arisen since she left the hospital or was discharged by the midwife,
satisfies herself that the baby is receiving proper care and makes an appointment for the mother
to attend the welfare centre in her district. In all cases the baby, even when attending the
centre, is visited at home at least every two months. Special attention is paid to the early recognition
of physical defects in the pre-school child and their remedy by treatment.
Pre-natal visits are paid to the expectant mother, special attention being paid to first
pregnancies.
The large floating or migrant population of North Kensington which is continually moving in or
out of the borough has rendered it difficult for the health visitors to keep all families under adequate
supervision. For the last two years the council have arranged for these officers to allot a certain
time to the systematic house-to-house visiting of the streets in their area in a search for children
who were unknown to them.
In addition to the routine visiting of expectant mothers, infants and young children and to their
work at the welfare centres, the council's health-visiting staff investigate cases of still-birth and
infantile death ; they visit and report upon cases of ophthalmia neonatorum, puerperal fever and
puerperal pyrexia ; they visit and advise the parents on cases of infectious disease amongst infants
and young children and help to obtain any necessary treatment; they arrange for the admission
of women to the maternity home and to convalescent homes, and they investigate all applications
under the council's scheme for the supply of milk and dinners, home helps and so forth.

The work performed by the health-visiting staff during 1938 in regard to maternity and child welfare is summarised in the following table :—

Description of work.Health Officers.
No. 1No. 2No. 3No. 4No. 5No. 6No. 7No. 8No. 9No. 10No. 11Totals.
First visits to infants (0—1 year)1214521828413812018696951072211,631
Re-visits to infants (0-1 year)9474624625776497425391,1737»J7395887,675
Visits to children be-tween 1 and 6 years1,9551,4199571,2937921,0565991,59477579989612,135
Still-birth enquiries31563444535
Visits to ophthalmia cases231121_212
Return visits to ohthal-mia cases462__1_619
Visits to measles cases901188113023473213469137762
Visits to whooping cough cases5727367982235744493415503
Visits to puerperal fever cases1_11_14
Visits to puerperal pyrexia cases1323242320
Visits to enteritis cases1551810861572481
Infantile death enquiries861716811174141024135
Investigations re milk applications2232146873923192615744412281772273,743
Pre-natal visits3101803422303473411795833462554103,523
Half-days at welfare centres1511571061761811331722852111691731,914
Special visits4171963778176932677032143914744434,992
The visiting in connection with tuberculosis and factories and workshops is dealt with in the sections of this report dealing with those subjects.

Infant Welfare Centres.
There are seven infant welfare centres of which one (South Kensington) has a branch centre
at Campden Hill. Four were conducted by voluntary committees, but on the 1st April, 1938, one
of these came under municipal control, and there are now four municipal centies and three
under voluntary committees. The council's medical officers conduct both pre-natal and infant
consultation sessions at all the infant welfare institutions.