Belfast Workhouse: report

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BELFAST WORKHOUSE. 

RETURN to an Order of the Honourable The House of Commons, 

dated ag July 1880 ;for}— COPY " of Dr. 
McCabe's recent Report on the State of Belfast 

Workhouse." 
Local Government Board, Dublin,"] B. 
B A N K S, 10th August 1880. 
J Secretary. 

Dr. 
McCabe's Report on the State of Belfast Workhouse. 
Sir, 

2 July 1880. 
I have the honour to forward my report upon the inspection of the Belfast Union Workhouse, which I have thought well to submit in a special form. 
The Belfast Workhouse was inspected on the 28th, 29th, and 30th June. 
The financial condition of the union is satisfactory. 
There is every prospect Financial con-that the assets available up to the close of the current financial year will meet dition. 
all ordinary liabilities. 
The applications for outdoor relief are very moderate, considering the extent and population of the union, and at the date of my inspection the numbers relieved in the workhouse were less by 40 than at the corresponding period of last year. 
The sanitary condition of the workhouse is not, on the whole, quite satisfac-Sanitary con-factory. 
During the six months under review in this report (1st January to dmon and accom-28th June) the average number resident in the workhouse amounted to 2,647, m° and amongst these there were 438 deaths. 
Of infants under 12 months old, 82 died during the six months. 
The rate of infant mortality, an important guide as to the sanitary condition of an establishment, has in this workhouse been very high during the first six months of the present year. 
I am informed that drainage works undertaken in the nursery buildings have greatly improved the sanitary condition of this part of the workhouse, but the infants do not appear to me to present a healthy appearance. 
In connection with the sanitary condition of the establishment, I may add that the Belfast Workhouse seems to me to be haidly adequate to the wants of the union. 
The blocks of buildings which constitute the main body of the house, and some adjacent blocks, are lofty, and have been built in such close proximity to each other, that there is not sufficient air-space between them, and sunlight is too much excluded. 
These defects are now irremediable, but their existence renders it very impor¬ tant that the buildings should not be overcrowded with inmates. 
The wards appear to me to be unduly tilled, and the allowance of cubic space to each inmate is frequently below the standard authorised by the Local Government Board. 
The insufficient allowance of cubic space is especially observable in the probationary wards on both sides in the fever hospital block, in the lying-in wards, in the nursery department, in the female healthy sleeping wards, and in the main buildings throughout. 
The ventilation in the hospital wards has been much improved under the judicious advice of the medical officers, and the master has also introduced important improvements in ven¬ tilating the ordinary warqjs; considering the originally defective arrangement of crowding so many buildings upon a small area, the only course open to the guardians is to allow as much cubic space as may be found possible to each in¬ mate, and at the period of my inspection it was quite clear that tbe allowance was too small. 
It is to be hoped that when the new building for lunatics is completed, the space now occupied by the insane will be so distributed amongst other classes as to increase the cubic and floor space at present available. 

^ 

The hospital for the treatment of acute and contagious diseases is also manifestly overcrowded, and when the measurements and cubic space allowance, sanctioned under a recent limitation order, come into the hands of the. 
medical officers, it 

359—Sess 2. 
A will,