Lecture Two: Colonial Medicine
Lecture Two for HIST 30626
The Social Contract of Profession
- The State of Massachusetts allows the Medical Society of ... A monopoly over the practice of Medicine
- Rationale: Because consumers are unable to judge quality, medical services cannot be a market commodity; it is in the public interest to allow a self-policing independent profession
American Medical Profession
- England
- Physicians (RCP)
- Surgeons (RCS 1745)
- Apothecaries
- Barbers
- Chemists/Druggists
- Scottish doctors
- Quacks
- Licensed Midwives
- Colonies
- Doctors
- Healers
First Wave of Professionalization
- 1760-1840: The Doctor as Midwife
- The rise of forceps delivery
- Who is a real doctor?
- How do the real doctors get the gift of profession?
Forms of Medical Training
- College and medical training (very rare)
- College (30% of 18th century Massachusetts practitioners)
- Edinburgh
- Apprenticeship (7 years in UK, max of 5 MA; 36% of 18th century Massachusetts practitioners)
- Family (20% of 18th century Massachusetts practitioners)
- Informal - "social medicine"
Diseases in Colonial America
- Epidemic
- Smallpox, Diptheria, Scarlet Fever, Measles
- versus European: typhus (typhoid), plague, dysentary, influenza, consumption
- Endemic
- worms, itch, burns
- versus European: the stone, gout, melancholia
Cotton Mather (1663-1728)
- Mather is not a doctor, so why is he writing a medical text?
- Prosperity: soul or health?
- Health as the most important temporal prosperity
- Consider Mather's spiritual-physical analogies
- Consider Mather's view on the relation of spiritual to the physical
- Mather's rhetorical method and appeal to authority
Mather's Diseases of the Eye
- Moral Diseases: Envious, haughty, unchaste
- The centrality of tears
- Eyes as danger portals: last to form, first to go
- The grace of blindness
- Eye cures
- Spectacles
- Eyebright
- Celandine
- copperas
- oysters
- betony (nose)
- millipedes
Mather and Boylston VS. Douglass and the Doctors
- Smallpox, deadliest of the childhood diseases: 90% infected, 20-30% case mortality
- Boston in 1721:population of 10,700, ~6,000 cases and 850 deaths, (of 242 inoculated, 6 deaths)
- Sources of intellectual authority - old wives (slave?) tales
- Sources of political authority - justices, select-men, town meetings
- Sources of propriety - who speaks for God?
- Sources of acrimony - newspapers
- Underlying tensions?
2007,
by the Contributing Authors.
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Cite/attribute Resource.
Hamlin, C. (2007, December 06). Lecture Two: Colonial Medicine. Retrieved February 12, 2012, from Notre Dame OpenCourseWare Web site: http://ocw.nd.edu/history/medicine-and-public-health-in-american-history/lecture-notes/lecture-two-colonial-medicine.






















