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Great Feuds in MedicineGreat Feuds in Medicine

Great Feuds in Medicine2001

Harold Hellman, Hal Hellman

About this book

Documents 10 dramatic medical disputes. British anatomist William Harvey's 1628 discovery of blood circulation challenged anatomical theory and caused his ostracism by the scientific community. In the late 18th-century, electrical disputes raged between Galvani whose "animal electricity" theory, to modern sensibilities, borders on the occult, though it garnered immediate support and prefigured current studies of electricity and paralysis and Volta, who worked to disprove Galvani. Claude Bernard's experiments on animals, in his studies of the nervous system, caused outrage among antivivisectionists and led to his being disowned by his family. Hungarian obstetrician Ignaz Semmelweis was committed to a mental hospital after the Viennese medical establishment rejected his hypothesis that unsanitary conditions in his workplace (doctors went from an autopsy to a birth without washing their hands) caused the high infection and death rate among patients. Other chapters address "Freud.

Details

First published
2001
OL Work ID
OL2727180W

Subjects

HistoryHistory of Medicine, ModernMedicineMiscellaneaModern History of MedicineVandettaCase studiesVendettaMedicine, miscellaneaMedicine, historyHistory, Modern 1601-MédecineMiscellanéesHistoireMEDICALGeneeskundeTheorieënControversen

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