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    • Source: Lock hospital
    • A lock hospital was an establishment that specialised in treating sexually transmitted diseases. They operated in Britain and its colonies and territories from the 18th century to the 20th.


      History


      The military had a close association with a number of the hospitals. By the mid-19th century most of the larger army bases in India were home to a lock hospital. There were more military than civil lock hospitals in India, due to the prevalence of venereal diseases amongst British troops. In 1858 the Admiralty paid to have one opened in Portsmouth and in 1863 another in Plymouth.
      The earliest lock hospitals in India were established around 1797 at Berhampur, Kanpur, Danapur, and Fatehgarh. They were usually within bazaars, surrounded by a mud wall and staffed by a doctor and a female nurse. The local police were in charge of rounding up women suspected of being diseased, who could return home only after obtaining a certificate of discharge.
      Lock Hospital operated in Hong Kong from 1858 to 1894 to deal with venereal diseases.
      The term "lock hospital" originates from their use as leprosariums, after the "locks", or rags, which covered the lepers' lesions.


      See also


      London Lock Hospital
      Birmingham Skin and Lock Hospital
      Westmoreland Lock Hospital, Dublin
      Contagious Diseases Acts
      Glasgow Lock Hospital


      References




      External links


      Reports on Lock hospitals in India
      Australian news article about Bernier and Dorre Island history

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