Abstract
Social profiles and clinical characteristics of patients at the London Homoeopathic
Hospital in the period 1889–1923 are described, based on documentary research. The
main sources are 300 volumes of manuscript case notes from this period, discovered
in the LHH basement in 1992. Annual hospital reports from 1899 and 1919 provide further
illustrative material. Examination of these documents revealed rich information related
to medical diagnoses and outcomes of hospital treatment, length of hospital stay and
social characteristics such as occupation. Changes over time were identifiable and
this is of special interest as the period covered the First World War and an era of
marked change in both traditional and homoeopathic medical practice.