Doll wearing a Denis Browne-type splint/harness, England, 1940-1960

Made:
1940-1960 in England
Fabric infant doll Fabric infant doll

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Fabric infant doll
Science Museum Group Collection
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Fabric infant doll
Science Museum Group Collection
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Fabric infant doll, wearing a Denis Browne type splint for congenital dislocation of the hips, probably used to demonstrate prospective orthopaedic treatment, with wooden model chair, photograph of child patient, and one large and one small descriptive labels, from the Lord Mayor Treloar Orthopaedic Hospital, Alton, Hampshire, England, 1940-1960.

This doll is one of a number used at the Lord Mayor Treloar Orthopaedic Hospital, in Alton, Hampshire, England, to show parents, and in some cases children, the treatment the child will undergo. Founded in 1908, the hospital was originally opened to provide specialised treatment for children with orthopaedic conditions, mainly caused by tuberculosis and, later, polio.

A Denis Browne-type splint/harness is applied to the hips to help correct hip dysplasia – which is usually diagnosed only in young babies. It occurs when the top of the leg bone is not properly located in the hip socket or not located where the hip socket is expected to develop. The splint is named after its inventor, Sir Denis Browne (1892-1967), an Australian paediatric surgeon.

Details

Category:
Orthopaedics
Object Number:
2002-377
Materials:
wood, metal, fabric and paper
Measurements:
overall: 440 mm x 320 mm x 140 mm, .68kg
type:
teaching doll
credit:
North Hampshire Hospitals NHS Trust