Hand Writing?

Morbus coxae:
Code:
http://www.hharp.org/medical-terms/Morbus%20coxae
Extremely helpful.... NOT! Other Google results suggest it's connected to tuberculosis.
Poor little mite, only five years old and he was in hospital nine months, he moved from one hospital to another. I cant imagine he would get many if any visitors as it was far from home.
 
Morbid coxae senilis=deformity of the femoral head. There is more but I didn't read it. Hope that helps.
Yes, but I think that is a disease of/in the elderly (senilis) and is linked with osteoarthritis.
All morbid/morbus coxae means is a disease of the hip bone or hip joint.
[I hated Latin at school, but it's come in useful in later life]
 
I should have taken a breath but I got excited, the three admissions I am seeing are all for 1888. We saw him as a patient in 1891 on the census. I haven't found a record for this admission. Presumably the little lad was readmitted. I have no doubt they are all one and the same person. I will look with a bit more detail at spelling variations. I did also see an admission for a Frank Dolby, he only stayed in two days with a neck abscess. This one was the right age for Wiiliam's brother Frank but the address given was in Middlesex? Such a lot to think about!
 
OK Now I have seen the 1891 admission, this one gives more information and says the cause of his condition was an accident? Now a couple of years after the other records, it is recorded he had great deformity and an abscess, his stay this time was nearly two years.
 
That's helpful - from a research point of view, not so good for him of course. Was that on the HHARP site too? I didn't spot it.
 
That explains it - but far better anyway for you to explore the site first hand so you can discover this kind of thing.
 
His condition was recorded as Morbus coxae

Mm, my husband's 3rd great grandfather died of the disease, otherwise known as hip joint disease. Usually affects children - it is tubercular, and it can be halted by complete rest. 3rd g-grandfather was in his early 20s when he died - as an ag lab he would have carried on working to provide for his baby daughter.
 
That explains it - but far better anyway for you to explore the site first hand so you can discover this kind of thing.
Sorry - that didn't come out quite right. What I meant was that because you know more about your family than I do, then if you are able to look at it yourself, you're far more likely to spot things that are relevant to them.
 
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