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Countess of Dufferin Fund

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treated by the doctors the Fund provided. In addition, the Fund was also criticized for not giving the women they were educating enough reason to stay with learning medicine. The Fund paid for their education however their salaries were not high enough so it made more financial sense for the women to marry before they could give back to the hospital that educated them. The Fund set up this cycle of educating women who would then work for them, however, it was ineffective in some cases because the women would not stick with the medical profession for financial reasons. Because of the many criticisms of ineffectiveness, some of the Fund's highest critics like The British Medical Journal called for a reorganization of the Fund. Some also believed vanity, not philanthropy, was the source of motivation for establishing the Fund. They criticized both Lady Dufferin for starting the Fund for her personal image and Queen Victoria for supporting the Fund for Britain's international image.
103:, a widespread issue amongst Indian women at the time. Because the dias’ methods were viewed as violent and extremely harmful, the Fund put forth money to educate them on successful ways to help women before, during, and after childbirth. The Fund also provided medical relief by establishing dispensaries and cottage hospitals for women and children under female superintendence. In addition, it opened female wards in existing hospitals also under female management as well as all women hospitals called 65:, a missionary in India who focused on women's health. During Beilby's mission, she had treated the Maharani of Puna who gave her a message to relay to the Queen of the United Kingdom. The message said that “the women of India suffer when they are sick.” In response, Queen Victoria wrote back to the Maharani saying: 163:
The Fund's major financial basis was donations. Many saw this as a source of instability because donations were based on the popularity of Lady Dufferin and her husband as well as the favors expected by the donors in return. The administration of the Fund consisted of a central committee of members
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There were three major criticisms of the Fund: its teaching, effectiveness, and integrity. Many believed the Fund was inefficient. Some argued that they inadequately taught doctors and employed subpar medical practitioners. By October 1908, only 43 completely qualified women medical professionals
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The Fund continued even after Lady Dufferin's term ended. Lady Lansdowne, who succeeded Lady Dufferin, continued to put work into the Fund which was passed down from vicereine to vicereine until 1947. In 1947, India gained independence from Great Britain and the Fund was taken over by the Central
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The Fund had three primary goals: providing medical tuition, medical relief, and female nurses and midwives to assist in hospitals and private homes. The Fund supplied scholarships for the medical education (medical tuition) of women in India. The education of traditional Indian midwives, called
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wrote in 1908 that, “The Government appears to have a perfect delight in swamping the country with unqualified medical practitioners." The Fund was also criticized as ineffective for placing male doctors in Zenana hospitals. Zenana women's traditions forbade them from seeing, so they could be
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Lady Dufferin established the Fund in 1885 and immediately began creating projects and channeling money towards women's health and teaching in India. The Countess of Dufferin Fund is also known as “The National Association for Supplying Medical Aid to the Women of India” and the “Lady Dufferin
151:, India. The Lady Aitchison Hospital, also known as the Aitchison Memorial Hospital, was a major center for training nurses and tradition midwives like the dias. Many of the hospitals the Fund financed are still functioning today. For example, the 81:, the first female British doctor to practice in India, also mobilized the Queen to act on women's poor health and suffering in India. She met with Queen Victoria and expressed a similar message as the Maharni's: the dire situation of Indian women. 99:
dias, was a major goal of the Fund because many western doctors observed the dais's practices and found their traditions to be harmful. For example, the dais's would massage the abdomen of the mother to speed up labor however that tradition caused
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Indian Government by the Countess of Dufferin's Fund Act, 1957. Once the Fund was taken over by the Central Government, it became obsolete. In 2005 a bill was passed repealing the Countess of Dufferin's Fund Act, 1957, for unclear reasons.
36:. It also financed the construction of female hospitals, dispensaries, and female only wards in preexisting hospitals. The Fund marks the beginning of Western medicine for women in India and global health as a diplomatic concern. 328:"GOVERNMENT BILLS: Discussion On The Countess Of Dufferin'S Fund ... on 5 December 2002." GOVERNMENT BILLS: Discussion On The Countess Of Dufferin's Fund ... on 5 December 2002. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Dec. 2013. 21: 69:“We had no idea it was as bad as this. Something must be done for the poor creatures. We wish it generally known that we sympathize with every effort to relieve the suffering of the women of India.” 258:
Nightingale, Florence. "The Condition of Women in India." Florence Nightingale on Social Change in India. Ed. Lynn McDonald and Gérard Vallée. Waterloo, Ont.: Wilfrid Laurier UP, 2007. 717-21. Print.
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gave Lady Dufferin the task of improving healthcare for women in India. The Fund provided scholarships for women to be educated in the medical field as doctors, hospital assistants, nurses, and
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In 1885, Lady Dufferin set up the Fund after being contacted by Queen Victoria who gave her the task of helping the suffering women of India. Queen Victoria had been recently contacted by
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of the Viceroy's Council and Home Department. It also included many influential Englishmen and Indians such as the Maharja Sir Jotendro Mohun Tagore, Sir Syed Ahmed Khan, and Sir
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Conrad, Lawrence I., and Anne Hardy. "Western Feminism, Western Medicine, and Colonial Medical Practice." Women and Modern Medicine. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2001. 42-46. Print.
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hospitals were built as well as training and teaching hospitals. Many hospitals were also constructing wards for women and learning to treat female-specific diseases.
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Fund.” This Fund marked one of the first diplomatic pushes to improve global health in the world, and the introduction of western medicine for women in India.
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Abraham, Meera. Religion, Caste, and Gender: Missionaries and Nursing History in South India. Bangalore: B.I. Publications Pvt., 1996. Print.
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Forbes, Geraldine Hancock. Women in Colonial India: Essays on Politics, Medicine, and Historiography. N.p.: Orient Blackswan, 2005. Print.
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During the 19th century there was a major push in India to improve healthcare for women, especially maternal health.
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by the Queen who gave her the task of improving healthcare and education for the women of India. A visit from
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Vaughan, Kathleen O. "The Countess of Dufferin's Fund." The British Medical Journal (1908): 1219-220. Web.
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Guha, Supriya, Dr. "Midwifery in Colonial India." Welcome History. N.p., 13 Mar. 2012. Web. 15 Oct. 2013.
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hospitals. The Fund also supplied trained female nurses and midwives in hospitals and in private homes.
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in Karachi is the largest solely female dedicated hospital today in Pakistan.
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were working under the Fund however only 11 held university degrees. The
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Hariot Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood, Marchioness of Dufferin and Ava
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Lady Dufferin then started the Fund after being summoned to
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The Fund financed treatment and teaching hospitals in
67: 375:International medical and health organizations 254: 252: 8: 278: 276: 315: 313: 242: 240: 238: 236: 303: 301: 266: 264: 232: 7: 14: 339:"Memoirs from a woman's notebook" 28:. The Fund was founded after 1: 345:. 6 February 1888. p. 3 401: 216:Charlotte Leighton Houlton 159:Funding and Administration 355:British Newspaper Archive 282:Billington, Mary Frances. 18:Countess of Dufferin Fund 179:British Medical Journal 145:Lady Aitchison Hospital 166:Dinshaw Maneckji Petit 153:Lady Dufferin Hospital 71: 172:Criticism of the Fund 380:Medical missionaries 343:Eastern Evening News 201:Margaret Ida Balfour 186:After Lady Dufferin 139:and in many of the 40:History of the Fund 20:was established by 206:Kadambini Ganguly 195:Notable employees 392: 359: 358: 352: 350: 335: 329: 326: 320: 317: 308: 305: 296: 293: 287: 280: 271: 268: 259: 256: 247: 244: 211:Florence Dissent 141:United Provinces 101:uterine prolapse 63:Elizabeth Bielby 400: 399: 395: 394: 393: 391: 390: 389: 385:Zenana missions 365: 364: 363: 362: 348: 346: 337: 336: 332: 327: 323: 318: 311: 306: 299: 294: 290: 281: 274: 269: 262: 257: 250: 245: 234: 229: 221:Motibai Kapadia 197: 188: 174: 161: 113: 96: 87: 59: 47: 42: 12: 11: 5: 398: 396: 388: 387: 382: 377: 367: 366: 361: 360: 330: 321: 309: 297: 288: 284:Woman in India 272: 260: 248: 231: 230: 228: 225: 224: 223: 218: 213: 208: 203: 196: 193: 187: 184: 173: 170: 160: 157: 112: 109: 95: 92: 86: 83: 79:Mary Scharlieb 75:Windsor Castle 58: 55: 46: 43: 41: 38: 30:Queen Victoria 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 397: 386: 383: 381: 378: 376: 373: 372: 370: 356: 344: 340: 334: 331: 325: 322: 316: 314: 310: 304: 302: 298: 292: 289: 285: 279: 277: 273: 267: 265: 261: 255: 253: 249: 243: 241: 239: 237: 233: 226: 222: 219: 217: 214: 212: 209: 207: 204: 202: 199: 198: 194: 192: 185: 183: 180: 171: 169: 167: 158: 156: 154: 150: 146: 142: 138: 134: 130: 126: 122: 118: 110: 108: 106: 102: 93: 91: 85:Establishment 84: 82: 80: 76: 70: 66: 64: 56: 54: 52: 44: 39: 37: 35: 31: 27: 23: 19: 353:– via 347:. Retrieved 342: 333: 324: 291: 283: 189: 175: 162: 114: 97: 94:Fund’s goals 88: 72: 68: 60: 48: 17: 15: 369:Categories 227:References 45:Background 121:Calcutta 111:Projects 51:Lying-in 34:midwives 129:Karachi 57:Origins 349:7 July 149:Lahore 137:Bombay 125:Madras 105:zenana 133:Delhi 117:Bihar 26:India 351:2024 16:The 147:in 371:: 341:. 312:^ 300:^ 275:^ 263:^ 251:^ 235:^ 168:. 135:, 131:, 127:, 123:, 119:, 357:.

Index

Hariot Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood, Marchioness of Dufferin and Ava
India
Queen Victoria
midwives
Lying-in
Elizabeth Bielby
Windsor Castle
Mary Scharlieb
uterine prolapse
zenana
Bihar
Calcutta
Madras
Karachi
Delhi
Bombay
United Provinces
Lady Aitchison Hospital
Lahore
Lady Dufferin Hospital
Dinshaw Maneckji Petit
British Medical Journal
Margaret Ida Balfour
Kadambini Ganguly
Florence Dissent
Charlotte Leighton Houlton
Motibai Kapadia


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