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1700 - 1900: 18th and 19th centuries |
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| Medicine comes of age |
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Medicine also made great advances during this time. Edward Jenner pioneered the earliest vaccinations and discoveries by Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch led to the understanding that infections were caused by certain bacteria or germs. The study of microbes, or microbiology, was born and the increased knowledge of pathogenic microbes led to the development of new medicines to tackle infectious diseases. The pharmaceutical industry was born.
The ideas of an earlier physician,Thomas Sydenham, were applied and this led to a great advance in the treatment of patients. He recognised the importance of detailed observation, record-keeping and the influence of the environment on the health of the patient.
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The importance of hygiene
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Perhaps the most famous nurse ever, Florence Nightingale, worked in a military hospital during the Crimean war. Conditions were poor and 80% of soldiers died from infections they caught in the hospital rather than their original wounds. Florence Nightingale improved standards of hygiene and sanitation which dramatically reduced the infections in her hospital. When she returned from the war, Florence Nightingale embarked on a campaign to modernise and improve hospitals. She set the foundations of hospital design and nursing practice that are still seen today.
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Picture 17. Operating theatres in 1900 were not the sterile environments we know today.
Wellcome Library, London. |
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| Under the surgeon's knife |
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Surgery also made great advances. Industry could produce better surgical instruments and operations were often performed in open theatres with interested members of the public invited to view them. There were no anaesthetics and surgeons prided themselves in the speed with which they operated; just a few minutes for a leg amputation. From the 1840's onwards, the discovery of the anaesthetics ether, chloroform and cocaine allowed surgeons to take more time and care over operations. Modern anaesthetics mean that operations lasting several hours are now commonplace.
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| Antiseptics |
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Joseph Lister realised that infections caught during an operation often lead to death by septicaemia. He pioneered the use of carbolic acid as the first antiseptic to clean wounds and surgical instruments. Operations were performed with a fine spray of carbolic acid passed over the patient to kill any microbes in the air. In one Newcastle hospital, use of Lister's antiseptic technique reduced deaths from infection from nearly 60% down to just 4%.
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