William Osler: A Life in MedicineOxford University Press, 18. nov. 1999 - 632 sider William Osler was born in a parsonage in backwoods Canada on July 12, 1849. In a life lasting seventy years, he practiced, taught, and wrote about medicine at Canada's McGill University, America's Johns Hopkins University, and finally as Regius Professor at Oxford. At the time of his death in England in 1919, many considered him to be the greatest doctor in the world. Osler, who was a brilliant, innovative teacher and a scholar of the natural history of disease, revolutionized the art of practicing medicine at the bedside of his patients. He was idolized by two generations of medical students and practitioners for whom he came to personify the ideal doctor. But much more than a physician, Osler was a supremely intelligent humanist. In both his writings and his personal life, and through the prism of the tragedy of the Great War, he embodied the art of living. It was perhaps his legendary compassion that elevated his healing talents to an art form and attracted to his private practice students, colleagues, poets (Walt Whitman for example) politicians, royalty, and nameless ordinary people with extraordinary conditions. William Osler's life lucidly illuminates the times in which he lived. Indeed, this is a book not only about the evolution of modern medicine, the training of doctors, holism in medical thought, and the doctor-patient relationship, but also about humanism, Victorianism, the Great War, and much else. Meticulously researched, drawing on many new sources and offering new interpretations, William Osler: A Life in Medicine brings to life both a fascinating man and the formative age of twentieth-century medicine. It is a classic biography of a classic life, both authoritative and highly readable. |
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Side 6
... nurses & sisters.4 British medical students no longer had to procure their own corpses for dissection . Graverobbing had become specialized : the recently dead were raised from their resting places and sold to the medical schools by ...
... nurses & sisters.4 British medical students no longer had to procure their own corpses for dissection . Graverobbing had become specialized : the recently dead were raised from their resting places and sold to the medical schools by ...
Side 9
... nurse , to save herself the trouble of giving me the medicine , threw away all I should have taken , and after a month's illness , I so far recovered that I was able to rejoin my ship . ' When a chest problem recurred , Featherstone ...
... nurse , to save herself the trouble of giving me the medicine , threw away all I should have taken , and after a month's illness , I so far recovered that I was able to rejoin my ship . ' When a chest problem recurred , Featherstone ...
Side 13
... nurse a dear friend who was suffering from the terrible skin disease , pemphigus . When the doctor said each day that he thought the girl was better , Ellen finally exclaimed , ' Oh , doctor , how many " betters " does it take to make a ...
... nurse a dear friend who was suffering from the terrible skin disease , pemphigus . When the doctor said each day that he thought the girl was better , Ellen finally exclaimed , ' Oh , doctor , how many " betters " does it take to make a ...
Side 52
... nurses , and lay trustees who cared about making hos- pitals cleaner and better institutions were helping reduce suffering . It was a great thing to learn how to treat the insane without having to chain and imprison them . If you were a ...
... nurses , and lay trustees who cared about making hos- pitals cleaner and better institutions were helping reduce suffering . It was a great thing to learn how to treat the insane without having to chain and imprison them . If you were a ...
Side 61
Du har nået visningsgrænsen for denne bog.
Du har nået visningsgrænsen for denne bog.
Indhold
3 | |
36 | |
3 The Baby Professor | 80 |
Philadelphia | 122 |
5 Starting at Johns Hopkins | 168 |
6 We All Worship Him | 208 |
Illustrations | 210 |
7 The Great American Doctor | 259 |
10 Sir William | 369 |
11 All the Youth and Glory of the Country | 402 |
12 Never Use a Crutch | 441 |
13 Oslers Afterlife | 477 |
Notes and Sources | 505 |
Acknowledgments | 557 |
Illustration Credits | 561 |
Index | 563 |
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