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Surgery, Success, and the Role of the Patient in Cleft Palate Operations, circa 1800–1930

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posted on 2022-03-10, 06:41 authored by Claire Louise Brock
In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, scientific and technological developments made surgery safer, more reliable, and, with the corresponding increase in experimentation permitted, more exploratory and successful than ever before. The age of the heroic surgeon, however, obscured procedures that relied on the patient’s cooperation for a final, positive outcome. This essay focuses on the debates surrounding cleft palate surgery in Britain, Europe, and North America between about 1800 and 1930, where the constancy of failure dogged the surgeon, even with improved operative surroundings. Although an anatomical correction could eventually be secured by surgery, without the patient’s participation in learning “normal” speech, the ultimate result was unsuccessful. Patient responsibility and self-control became, therefore, the key to success. By exploring what this meant for patients, their families, and surgeons, a new way of thinking about surgical outcomes, even during a period of increasing confidence in surgery, can be posited.

History

Citation

Isis, Volume 113, Number 1, March 2022

Author affiliation

School of Arts

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Isis: international review devoted to the history of science and its cultural influences

Volume

113

Issue

1

Publisher

University of Chicago Press

issn

0021-1753

Acceptance date

2021-05-14

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2023-03-01

Language

en

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