Lecture Eight: Hospitals and Surgeons
Lecture Eight for HIST 30626
The American Hospital (1750-1920)
- 1870: < 200 hospitals
- 1927: ~7,000 hospitals
The Voluntary Hospital to 1870
- "this city desperately needs a hospital"
- New York, Philadelphia
- "perish the thought that I or my family should ever be admitted to this place of death"
Why not a medical hospital?
- Concepts of disease and therapy
- Nature of nursing
- Nature of technology
The Voluntary Hospital - Purpose
- The worthy poor; the Civilizing Mission of the Children's hospital; the alternative to the almshouse and the problem of pauperization
- No chronic disease (tuberculosis), no infectious disease (typhus, smallpox), no terminal disease (cancer)
- Temporary, curable conditions (heart, respiratory, digestive)
- Ornament of charity, lure for physicians
- Mainly free (+ sailors, the paying mad)
- The Carceratorial Hospital - walled anarchy
Managed Care in the Voluntary Hospital: the hospital as home
- The board of governors (churchwardens)
- The privilege to recommend
- Oversight of finances
- The master and matron (mom and dad)
- The medical staff (friendly uncles)
- Consultants
- Senior attending staff (admitting privileges)
- House staff (interns, extern, and later [c. 1900] residents)
- Students
- Nurse, admitting officer, and apothecary
Varieties of Hospitals after 1870
- Voluntary hospital (the Pennsylvania; Boston Children's)
- Municipal hospital (Bellevue, epidemics, sailors, lying-in, VD)
- Specialist and proprietary hospitals (c. 1890-1920), including surgical (Hertzler's hospital)
- Catholic (from 1849, St. Vincent's), Jewish, ethnic (St. Francis', 1865), race-based hospitals - Sisters of Charity
- Resort hospitals - our home on the hill
- Regional - municipal gospel hospitals (1890-1920)
- Almshouse
- Public sanatoria
- RR and Industrial (mining hospitals)
Hospitals vs. Dispensaries
- Hospital: inpatient, long-term, high prestige, mainly male, after 1850, site of surgery -- rise after 1870
- Dispensary: outpatient or in-home, oriented toward pharmacy, mainly women, children, site of social activism -- decline after 1920
- The current fate of the dispensary
The Triumph of the Hospital, 1870-1920
- Surgery
- Anesthesia, antisepsis, asepsis
- Nursing
- Civilizing Nightingale
- The conquest of nurse autonomy
- Admitting privileges
- Not just another form of primary care (1870: <2%; 1905: ~10%; 1927: 52%)
- You too can collect fees in the hospital
- Result: People pay
The Fall of the Dispensary, ~1920
- Imputations of socialism
- Settlement house - social worker, professionalization issues
- Competition with general practice - Irv Watters' views
- Lack of specialized services, technology
- Development of other training means
- Dissociation with science and control
- Short life of Sheppard-Towner 1921-1929; Opposition of AMA
The Issue of the Catholic Hospital
- Conversion concers; evangelical concerns
- Entrepreneurial sisters - supply side, finding clients
- Sacramental power
- Ethnic identity
- Middle-class dignity - the paying hospital
- The bargain with the surgeons
Changes in Surgery
- The classic problems of surgery
- Pain
- Infection
- Hemorrhage
- ~1850: 25% surgical mortality good
- Inevitable infection - laudable pus
- The problem of surgical cleanliness as a problem of materials - steel and chemistry
The Emergence of American surgery
- Europe: surgeons, physicians, overlapping, independent (Dr. or Mr.)
- The Irish case
- America: Who gets to cut?
- The problem of fee-splitting
- From medical to surgical appendectomy
Pain
- Pre-1842: pain as good; earlier use of narcotics (opium, marijuana, henbane, wine)
- 1810s: NO, ether
- recreational drugs
- 1842: Crawford Long, ether
- 1844: Wells/Morton, NO/ether
- 1846: John Collins Warren
- 1846: use of chloroform, problem of ethics, suffering vs. life; pain in birth
Infection
- Healing by first intention: the problem of closing the wound
- Healing by second intention: dressing the wound
- Laudible pus
- Ichorous pus
- Late 1860s, Lister: antiseptic surgery
- Early 1880s: germ-free surgery
Crossing the Membranes
- Arachnid, peritoneum, pleural
- From inflammation of the bowels to appendectomy, c. 1886 (Hall, Fitz): First 24 hours
- 1900: 25% of all surgeries in Atlanta
- St. Mary's Rochester
- 1900: 186 appendectomies
- 1905: >1000 appendectomies
- 1890: Exploratory abdominal surgery - If unsure, go in; If maybe cancer, go in
Surgery and Society
- J. Marion Sims and vesicovaginal fistula, 1852; the 30th operation
- silver suture
- 1845: Anarcha, Betsy, and Lucy
- No anesthesia, filthy rags: African-American women bear pain better...
W.W. Mayo (1819-1911)
- Chemist, Manchester, England, to U.S.A.
- Late 1840s: Pharmacist, Bellevue, Buffalo
- 1848-1849: Tailor, Lafayette, Indiana
- 1850: Indiana College of Medicine
- 1854: To Minnesota, via Missouri as iron range mine claim inspector
- 1856: Practice, LeSueur, farmer, boatman, judge, editor-publisher
- 1863: Draft board doctor, Rochester, Minnesota
- Practice evolves toward surgery
- Hospital founder following 1883 tornado
- St. Mary's, 1889; leads ultimately to group practice of Mayo Clinic (run by sons Will and Charlie)
Surgery as the Cash Cow
- 1880: W.W. Mayo, a life in debt
- No bookkeeping, no fees
- Sliding scale
- 1900: Halsted, Kelly, $10,000 per operation
- ~1916: Mayos are millionaires
Gynecological Surgery
- 1905: Laparectomy/Hysterectomy common
- "they went a little wild and were inclined to find in hysterectomy a panacea for all the ills of women" - Clapesattle, 188
- "it was only a step from removing the ovaries for tumor to removing them for pain in menstruation, and then for various nervous symptoms that baffled physicians" - Clapesattle, 189
Other Mayo Surgery
- Even quiet ulcers aren't cured
- 75% require surgery
- Gastroenterostomy: bowel bypass
- Abdominal surgery: St. Mary's hospital
- 1890-1893: 54
- 1900: 612
- 1905: 2,157
- Adenoid-tonsil removal
- 1890: 5
- 1900: 100
The Anti-Mayo
- Arthur Hertzler (1870-1946)
- 1894: earned M.D. at Northwestern
- Practiced in Halsted, Kansas
- Interest in surgery, surgical pathology:
- 1899-1901: postgraduate study in pathology, in Berlin
- 1901: professor of Pathology at University of Missouri, Kansas City
- 1907: professor of Surgery at University of Kansas Medical School
- c. 1905: founder of Halsted hospital and Hertzler clinic
- Maximum operation fee: $150
- 1938: The Horse and Buggy Doctor
- 1942: The Doctor and his Patients
2007,
by the Contributing Authors.
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Cite/attribute Resource.
Hamlin, C. (2007, December 06). Lecture Eight: Hospitals and Surgeons. Retrieved May 22, 2012, from Notre Dame OpenCourseWare Web site: http://ocw.nd.edu/history/medicine-and-public-health-in-american-history/lecture-notes/lecture-eight-hospitals-and-surgeons.






















