An expert lecture on the lessons learned from healthcare innovations in different eras will be held at a museum in Liverpool this year.
Residents with a fascination for medical history and how it impacts modern methods can attend a talk taking place in the suburb this winter. Presented by the Prince Henry Hospital Nursing and Medical Museum, the event is entitled “Guardians Of Public Health - From Isolation To Innovation: Lessons From Smallpox Versus Covid”.
Institutions organising events like lectures and symposiums often trust professional printing services to supply supporting resources they can offer to attendees that expand their understanding of subjects covered.
Honorary Secretary for the Prince Henry Hospital Trained Nurses Association, Adrienne Pearson, will lead the event and discuss public health responses alongside the lessons learned via equipment like the iron lung of the polio era and vaccine archives.
Pearson will be accompanied by fellow speakers Maria Luff and Leone Dunn, two Prince Henry-trained nurses. They will share their personal experiences looking after patients treated using iron lungs and the way the hospital effectively managed multiple infectious diseases.
The talk will now be held at The Liverpool Regional Museum and Family History Centre on Saturday, June 20. It will begin at 11 am and end at 12:30 pm, with the museum sited at 462 Hume Highway at the Corner of Congressional Drive in Liverpool.
