Talk:William Stewart Halsted: Difference between revisions
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== References == | == Annotated References == | ||
Rankin JS. William Stewart Halsted: a lecture by Dr. Peter D. Olch. [Biography. Historical Article. Lectures] Annals of Surgery. 243(3):418-25, 2006 Mar. Lecture given by a distinguished surgeon who had interned under Halsted, and went on to become Deputy Chief of the History of Medicine Division, National Library of Medicine of the USA. Lecture delivered when he held that office at the National Library of Medicine. | 1) Rankin JS. William Stewart Halsted: a lecture by Dr. Peter D. Olch. [Biography. Historical Article. Lectures] Annals of Surgery. 243(3):418-25, 2006 Mar. Lecture given by a distinguished surgeon who had interned under Halsted, and went on to become Deputy Chief of the History of Medicine Division, National Library of Medicine of the USA. Lecture delivered when he held that office at the National Library of Medicine. | ||
UI: 16495709 | UI: 16495709 - extended quote from close of this article: "I would like to close with this frequently quoted summation of Halsted's life by H.L. Mencken, certainly somebody who did not find it necessary to admire many men: | ||
''“He was one of the first surgeons to employ courtesy in surgery, to show any consideration for the insides of a man he was operating on. The old method was to slit a man from the chin down, take out his bowels, and spread them on a towel while you sorted them. Halsted held that if you touched an intestine with your finger you injured it and the patient suffered the effects of the injury. That was a new doctrine when he began. Halsted introduced rubber gloves. He invented the technique of shutting off the area of operation, blocking it with shots of cocaine in the surrounding nerves so there would be less general shock. He was gentle and a little inhuman. He had to be because he was so sensitive. | |||
''He married a Johns Hopkins nurse, the Confederate General Wade Hampton's daughter [actually it was his niece]. They lived a strange sequestered life in a great big house where each had his own quarters and neither saw anybody. Halsted had an odd detached way always, even when he was operating. He would start an operation, go on for a bit, and then seem to get tired and say to his assistant, ‘You see what I want to do, you finish it,’ and walk away. But Max Brödle, who worked with them all, always said Halsted was the pick of the Big Four. He knew ‘things.’” | |||
''After his death, Dr. Halsted's influence spread throughout the United States, and indeed the world. Many important surgical programs, such as the one here at Duke, were started by Halsted's students. In many respects, all of surgery ultimately became “Halstedian.” Thank you." | |||
'''''' | |||
2) Koehler BM. Roderer NK. Ruggere C. A short history of the William H. Welch Medical Library. [Historical Article. Journal Article] Neurosurgery. 54(2):465-78; discussion 478-9, 2004 Feb. | |||
UI: 14744293 | |||
3) Rutkow IM. Moments in surgical history: William Stewart Halsted. Archives of Surgery. 135(12):1478, 2000 Dec. UI: 11115357 | |||
4) Cameron JL. Gordon TA. Kehoe MW. McCall N. William Stewart Halsted: letters to a young female admirer. Annals of Surgery. 234(5):702-7, 2001 Nov. | |||
5)Haas LF. William Stewart Halsted (1852-1922). Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry. 69(5):641, 2000 Nov. UI: 11032617 (Brief article-states that of 3 additional colleagues who began experimenting with Halsted using cocaine as regional anesthetic all 3 died-no reference given) | |||
6) Cameron JL. William Stewart Halsted. Our surgical heritage. Annals of Surgery. 225(5):445-58, 1997 May. UI: 9193173 | |||
7) Rutkow IM. William Halsted, his family and 'queer business methods'. Archives of Surgery. 131(2):123-7, 1996 Feb. UI: 8611065 (makes case that move to Baltimore also prompted by father's business failure and possibility of financial irregularities) | |||
8) Watkins L Jr. Cornwell EE 3rd. Department of surgery, The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions. Archives of Surgery. 138(3):239-40, 2003 Mar. | |||
UI: 12611565 |
Latest revision as of 22:38, 15 November 2007
Annotated References
1) Rankin JS. William Stewart Halsted: a lecture by Dr. Peter D. Olch. [Biography. Historical Article. Lectures] Annals of Surgery. 243(3):418-25, 2006 Mar. Lecture given by a distinguished surgeon who had interned under Halsted, and went on to become Deputy Chief of the History of Medicine Division, National Library of Medicine of the USA. Lecture delivered when he held that office at the National Library of Medicine. UI: 16495709 - extended quote from close of this article: "I would like to close with this frequently quoted summation of Halsted's life by H.L. Mencken, certainly somebody who did not find it necessary to admire many men: “He was one of the first surgeons to employ courtesy in surgery, to show any consideration for the insides of a man he was operating on. The old method was to slit a man from the chin down, take out his bowels, and spread them on a towel while you sorted them. Halsted held that if you touched an intestine with your finger you injured it and the patient suffered the effects of the injury. That was a new doctrine when he began. Halsted introduced rubber gloves. He invented the technique of shutting off the area of operation, blocking it with shots of cocaine in the surrounding nerves so there would be less general shock. He was gentle and a little inhuman. He had to be because he was so sensitive. He married a Johns Hopkins nurse, the Confederate General Wade Hampton's daughter [actually it was his niece]. They lived a strange sequestered life in a great big house where each had his own quarters and neither saw anybody. Halsted had an odd detached way always, even when he was operating. He would start an operation, go on for a bit, and then seem to get tired and say to his assistant, ‘You see what I want to do, you finish it,’ and walk away. But Max Brödle, who worked with them all, always said Halsted was the pick of the Big Four. He knew ‘things.’” After his death, Dr. Halsted's influence spread throughout the United States, and indeed the world. Many important surgical programs, such as the one here at Duke, were started by Halsted's students. In many respects, all of surgery ultimately became “Halstedian.” Thank you." '
2) Koehler BM. Roderer NK. Ruggere C. A short history of the William H. Welch Medical Library. [Historical Article. Journal Article] Neurosurgery. 54(2):465-78; discussion 478-9, 2004 Feb. UI: 14744293
3) Rutkow IM. Moments in surgical history: William Stewart Halsted. Archives of Surgery. 135(12):1478, 2000 Dec. UI: 11115357
4) Cameron JL. Gordon TA. Kehoe MW. McCall N. William Stewart Halsted: letters to a young female admirer. Annals of Surgery. 234(5):702-7, 2001 Nov.
5)Haas LF. William Stewart Halsted (1852-1922). Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry. 69(5):641, 2000 Nov. UI: 11032617 (Brief article-states that of 3 additional colleagues who began experimenting with Halsted using cocaine as regional anesthetic all 3 died-no reference given)
6) Cameron JL. William Stewart Halsted. Our surgical heritage. Annals of Surgery. 225(5):445-58, 1997 May. UI: 9193173
7) Rutkow IM. William Halsted, his family and 'queer business methods'. Archives of Surgery. 131(2):123-7, 1996 Feb. UI: 8611065 (makes case that move to Baltimore also prompted by father's business failure and possibility of financial irregularities)
8) Watkins L Jr. Cornwell EE 3rd. Department of surgery, The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions. Archives of Surgery. 138(3):239-40, 2003 Mar. UI: 12611565