There were sometimes incidents with patients in the pool, particularly where they could be quite disturbed by paranoia or delusions/hallucinations, but I've no recollection of anyone drowning or anyone attempting to drown themselves, accidentally or otherwise.
I was a Student then Staff Nurse 78 - 87, also did nights "on the lamp" as the Night NO wouldn't do the outside buildings. Lot of history and atmosphere, but never spooked by anything. In fact, I have always felt very attached to the place in a nice way, even though nice things didn't always happen here in the past......
Trackie, that is soooo wrong. Frontal lobotomies were done by drilling through skull in temple region to expose connective fibres between frontal loobes of brain. These were then surgically cut. The idea was that this reduced impulsive violent tendencies. It had the effect of 'cabbaging' the patient (like Jack Nicholson 'One flew ovet the Cuckoos Nest'. You could easily distinguish lobotomised patients by the deep skull depressions to the side of their heads.
ECT, electroconulsive therapy, or shock treatment involved a general anaesthetic, a paralysing agent (suxamethonium) and aftificial respiration. Patient was fully out before shock was administered. Mainly used for depression. Seemed dramatic and some opposed it, but I saw some good outcomes.
I remember taking East 6 patients to swim in the pool, it was actually a nice pool when it was in use. staff could use it out of hours, but I can't remember anyone using it on night shift.
It is a hairdryer, remember the Laurels was a long stay part of the hospital in the main, only East and West 2 were relatively short stay. Only the female patients used this room, the barber for male patients had a room on the Larels East main corrider as I recall.
The prop is a piece of curtainrail, with the curtain hangers bunched at one end, with a bit of burnt curtain material still attached.
Written on the wall in red is just a bunch of ppls names/initials.
Believe it or not, at the time there was some currency to the notion that rose pink (which this is not) had a calming effect on disturbed people. The salmon pink seen here was just one of many colours used during this time, usually at the whim of whoever was in charge of that particular area.
Ordinary drugs (paracetamol, acetaminophen, and lotions) were kept locked in a cupboard below this one. Medicines that were prescribed by a doc (like chlorpromazine) were known as Scheduled Poisons and were kept in this cupboard, but the Controlled Drugs sign in the pic denotes that there is another locked cupboard within this one, where drugs subject to the Misue of Drugs Act were kept (eg morphine). controlled drugs had to measured/counted and signed for by two nurses, one of whom (the giver) must be a Registered Nurse, the other signed as a witness to the giving.