Hay fever.

Date:
1953
  • Film

About this work

Description

Short documentary film describing the causes and symptoms of hay fever and showing how pollen is collected and made into desensitising sets for sufferers. Grasses are grown for their pollen at a Pollenarium. Dr John Freeman describes how he and Leonard Noon devised a potential treatment for sufferers of hay fever. A detailed sequence shows how the grasses are cut and the pollen collected and dried before being weighed and put into bottles, then taken to the laboratory at St. Mary's Hospital in London. Dilutions of the extracts of the pollens are sealed in small bottles that make up the desensitising sets, used by hospitals, clinics and GPs. We are shown how a Hay Fever sufferer has different extracts tested on their forearm to see which pollens they get an allergic reaction to. The relevant desensitising set is then prescribed so that the patient can treat herself. The final shot shows a girl who is now able to walk in the countryside, free from her usual Hay Fever symptoms.

Publication/Creation

England, 1953.
UK : Wright-Fleming Institute of Microbiology, 1953.

Physical description

1 film reel (18 min.) : black and white, 16 mm

Creator/production credits

Made for the Wright-Fleming Institute of Microbiology by the Photographic Department, St Mary's Hospital Medical School. Narrated by Dr A. W. Frankland. Music by the Three Hospitals Orchestra, London University.

Type/Technique

Languages

Where to find it

  • LocationStatusAccess
    Closed stores
    1193F
    By appointmentManual request

Permanent link