Books from Birlinn Books from Polygon Books from John Donald
 View cart Your account   
Search the Site
Home / Birlinn Limited / John Donald / Book A-Z / Surgical Revolution, A
 HOME
 
Selected Title

Surgical Revolution, A


Surgery in Scotland, 1837–1901

ISBN: 9780859766845
Author: Peter Jones
Imprint: John Donald
Publication Date: Oct 2007
Format: PB

Price: £20.00
Stock Status: in stock

BUY NOW
  Surgical Revolution, A
Click to enlarge

   Aa Aa Aa

Read an extract.

In the earlier years, an operation was a dreadful experience for both patient and surgeon, but by the 1840s the arrival of general anaesthesia offered relief from the agonies of surgery. However, the discomforts and dangers of infection in surgical wounds persisted until the 1860s, when Joseph Lister in Glasgow and Edinburgh began his life’s work. He established the Antiseptic Principle which soon led to great advances in surgical practice.

To this transformation surgeons in Scotland made outstanding contributions: Lister himself, Alexander Ogston in Aberdeen who discovered the cause of wound sepsis, William Macewen in Glasgow, who revealed previously unrecognised possibilities in orthopaedics and the surgery of the brain, and many others. In the sixty-four years of Queen Victoria’s reign, these pioneers laid the foundations of safe, painless surgery. Today, we directly benefit from their dedicated work.

A Surgical Revolution includes vivid descriptions of the patients treated, as well as the charismatic surgeons themselves. Drawing on a wealth of sources, its stories and anecdotes will appeal as much to the general reader as to historians, medics and scientists.
            

Recommend to a friend
Comments
Read all comments | Add comment

This is a fascinating, sometimes rather uncomfortable read! The author describes the treatment of patients in conditions before the introduction of basics such as anaesthesia and sterile conditions all of which we expect as standard today. The importance of hand-washing and sterile instruments had not been discovered leaving the reader astonished how anyone was able to survive a visit to hospital in Victorian times. The book traces the advances in hospital care in Scotland particularly recounting the influences of Joseph Lister who worked in Glasgow from the 1860s. The book is absorbing because there are many accounts of individual patients which the author has gathered from the doctor and surgeon's own notes. As I say the accounts are sometimes quite difficult to read. Abdominal tumours and ovarian cysts of unbelievable size and causing obvious misery to the patient. The relief and joy when an operation was successful for both the patient and surgeon. Each operation was a new step in the understanding of the treatment of the disease or condition. The reader gains an image from the portrayal of the doctors and surgeons of a small group of caring, dedicated practitioners seeking the best that they could achieve with basic facilities for their patients. The book is 'A Surgical Revolution - surgery in Scotland 1837 - 1901' by Peter Jones published by Birlinn. A real eyeopener. I thank the fact I don't have to face hospital as it was 100 years ago!
Wed Jan 23 20:16:11 2008 | Jo Dear
AUTHOR
Peter Jones
DIARY EVENTS
 
 

  banner#2 banner#3