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The
1920s and 1930s...
When
Thomas Hanstock wrote to the General Post Office in 1921 seeking permission
to conduct experiments with portable wireless telegraph apparatus, he
was not to know that his initial idea would result in hundreds of hospital
radio stations across the UK and many more world wide. It was his interest
in wireless receivers and his work with the Chief Physician at York County
Hospital that led to him demonstrating to the indomitable Matron Steele,
the potential of broadcasting football commentary, church services and
eventually gramophone recordings to hospital patients. It was to be the
start of a long relationship between hospital broadcasters, the GPO and
British Telecom.
During
1925 and 26 the wiring was installed throughout the hospital. 200 sets
of headphones and 70 loudspeakers fed from a wireless receiving set housed
in a small alcove. In the mid thirties, the facility was to be taken over
by Cussins and Light and the Radio Relay Company, who ran it from their
premises in York's Parliament Street.
The
hospital radio bug was with us, and it was catching. New stations began
to appear, at Oldham in 1933 and Tottenham in 1935 among others. Although
some of these early services featured music, often performed live, much
of the broadcasting was speech orientated, football commentary, church
services, poetry and plays were the favourites, much like today.
What
we would give now for these old hospital radio tapes. Some of the best
non music broadcasting ever relayed to hospitals. Could they have featured
the general strike, the arrival of those most distinctive of dances, the
Charleston and the Rumba? Or, could it be that they would have reported
the abdication of King Edward VIII?
Whatever
the content of these early broadcasts there is no doubt that they were
transmitted with the greatest regard for quality and propriety. Standards
set in the early days which have led to the patient orientated services
now existing over 70 years later.
The
1940s and 1950s...
Stalled
for a period by the demands of World War II, it was not until the 1950s
that we saw a rapid expansion in Hospital Radio. From a total of less
than a dozen stations at the beginning of the war there would be over
70 some 20 years later.
Keeping
true to the early years, most of these stations were sports orientated,
providing commentary from football, rugby and cricket grounds. Even ice
hockey, bowling and wrestling were featured at some stations!
There
was a good reason for the sudden growth of hospital broadcasting. The
unlikely trigger was a director of Portsmouth Football Club. Vernon Stokes
was so impressed by his local volunteers that he enthusiastically promoted
the idea among other football club directors. Consequently, clubs themselves
became involved in encouraging the launch of hospital radio services.
In
1952 there were only half a dozen services offering music to the patient,
but that soon multiplied. It was a time of rapid expansion, more and more
hospitals could boast a hospital radio service of some sort. The arrival
of the gramophone record prompted many a station to be music based and
as the fifties came to a close popular music was accessible to more people
than ever before.
Hospital
radio was rapidly evolving into the service as we know it today. It was
not just the UK that saw the arrival of hospital broadcasting, even in
the fifties there were music services in both Japan and the Netherlands,
while a service in New York was famed for broadcasting plays and live
events to hospital patients.
If
only the technology had been available just think of the opportunities
for outside broadcasts, would they have featured the Coronation, Roger
Bannister running the first sub four minute mile or even the stoicism
of the people of Britain as they endured the horrors of the blitz?
The
1960s...
The
swinging sixties saw hospital broadcasting move up a gear. The huge surge
in record sales ensured that music was more accessible than ever before,
and the arrival of the domestic tape recorder meant that anyone could
record a programme then relay it later to the hospital bedside.
Hospital radio became primarily a music based service as many organisations
realised that the landlines used by the sports team on a Saturday lay
unused for the rest of the week. In some cases, music and sport were supplied
to the same hospital by different stations. Indeed, during the sixties
nearly 70% of the new music services were launched in towns where a sports
service already existed.
If
Vernon Stokes had been the major influence on the development of hospital
radio in the fifties then that influence passed to the Toc H charitable
organisation in the 1960s. Originally responsible for launching about
one third of the sports based services Toc H continued to support hospital
broadcasting throughout the 1960s. It encouraged the foundation of the
music services while encouraging regular football, cricket and rugby broadcasts.
By
the end of the swinging sixties there were over 100 stations in the UK,
at least 90% of which were operating a music service. Radio One had arrived,
and with it a number of local and regional radio stations catering for
the mass appeal of popular music. These stations were to be staffed by
people who were to become household names, Tony Blackburn, Pete Murray,
Emperor Rosko. Many of whom learned their trade at Radio Caroline or some
of the other pirate radio stations around the country.
With
new local radio stations springing up with monotonous regularity, it was
to hospital radio that they turned for a new generation of presenter,
producer and technician. Visit any radio or television studio in Britain
today and you will find a wide selection of their staff with a hospital
radio background, a testament to the training and development taking place
on a voluntary basis across the entire country. No doubt there are several
people broadcasting to hospitals today who will one day become household
names.
The
1970s and 1980s...
The
seventies saw hospital broadcasting reach new heights. From just over
100 stations, numbers rose dramatically to the point where virtually every
hospital of any size, and many of the smaller ones, had their own radio
service.
The
launch of the National Association of Hospital Broadcasting Organisations
(NAHBO) in Hull was the catalyst that at last began to draw these disparate
organisations together and give them one UK voice with which to deal with
the wider world of landlines, insurance, legal and political issues. It
helped to establish and promote good practice throughout the service.
Hundreds
of stations, perhaps as many as 700 at one point, were broadcasting on
a daily basis. However, as the years went on there was rationalisation.
Smaller hospitals closed or amalgamated and with the arrival of the larger
regional hospital came the larger hospital radio station. Often these
stations would serve several hospitals, indeed at one time one Manchester
organisation was broadcasting to 21 separate hospitals. Some hospital
radio services were to close, others merged with neighbours or a local
sports broadcasting organisation; their joint efforts ensuring their survival.
Technology
had moved on too. The CD superseded the record, which had for so long
been the mainstay of the service. Record libraries were indexed on computer
rather than filing cards. Hospital radio was growing up. It was not unusual
to find studios built to the exacting standards usually found at the BBC
or independent local radio.
Organisations
had to work harder than ever before, patients were spending less and less
time in hospital and ward visiting became even more important amid the
anonymous bustle and rush of the modern infirmary. But it was that relationship
with the patient. That ability to speak to the listener, perhaps only
a few moments before the programme went on air that marked hospital broadcasting
as something special. No other media has the ability to get so close to
its public. Over the years that has proved the strength of the movement,
patient orientated programming.
The 1990s and the 21st Century...
As
hospital broadcasting moved into the last decade of the century, it had
never been in a stronger position. Now over 300 stations were members
of NAHBO or, to use its working name, the Hospital Broadcasting Association
or HBA.
While
on the one hand the arrival of the national lottery made fund-raising
more difficult it also brought the opportunity to apply for substantial
help towards financing major projects. Indeed, fund-raising had never
been approached so professionally. Many stations were able to embark on
major projects with substantial funding safely secured.
Technology
had progressed once again. Where once hospital radio had benefited from
the mass production of the tape recorder, many organisations now embraced
digital technology with DAT, mini-disk and recordable CD becoming affordable
studio equipment for all but the smallest stations.
Computers
too played their part. From jingles and promos on computer disk, the arrival
of domestic PCs with huge hard disk capacity allowed more and more stations
to use one or more computers to play-out their programmes. Suddenly it
was possible for hospital radio to be a more substantial service, broadcasting
patient orientated programming 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
Lobbying
of the authorities saw permission granted for some stations to broadcast
on low power FM - and, more recently, AM. The development of reasonably
priced FM link equipment meant that broadcasting to nearby hospitals or
relaying live concerts and events could be carried out without the need
for ever more expensive land lines.
Recent
years have seen the advent of bedside patient entertainment centres; devices
that not only allow a radio service, but television, telephone and even
access to the internet.
But,
just as in the early days, hospital broadcasters are excelling in bringing
the patient top class events from the community; concerts, fun days or
sports commentary. The request shows are still the patients' favourite,
while maintaining the so important personal touch.
As
we explore a new century, there is no doubt that there will remain a need
for hospital broadcasting. No matter how hi-tech the patient entertainment
systems installed throughout hospitals, there will remain a place for
the visitor and broadcaster who cares. In the future, as now and in the
past, the most successful stations will be those which at all times remember
their objectives and their commitment to bring entertainment and cheer
to the patients.
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