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The Child Surgical Patient in the Early Twentieth Century

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Version 2 2023-08-11, 14:30
Version 1 2022-06-21, 10:40
journal contribution
posted on 2023-08-11, 14:30 authored by Claire Louise Brock

In the second half of the nineteenth century, scientific and technological developments in surgery permitted safer procedures to be carried out. Theoretically, therefore, children whose lives would otherwise have been blighted by disease could be saved by timely operative interference. The reality was more complicated, however, as this article shows. Through an exploration of British and American surgical textbooks and an in-depth analysis of the child surgical patient base at one London general hospital, the tensions between the possibilities and the actualities of surgery on children can be examined for the first time. Hearing the child’s voice through case notes allows both a restoration of these complex patients to the history of medicine and a questioning of the wider application of science and technology to working-class bodies, situations, and environments which resist such treatment.

History

Author affiliation

School of Arts, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences

Volume

78

Issue

2

Pagination

149-170

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

issn

0022-5045

Acceptance date

2022-04-13

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-08-11

Language

en

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