No One Ailing Except a Physician: Medicine in the Mining West, 1848-1919
Autor Duane A. Smith, Ronald C. Brownen Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 sep 2014 – vârsta de la 19 ani
Co-Winner
of
the
2004
Colorado
Endowment
for
the
Humanities
Publication
Prize
From
burying
scurvy
victims
up
to
their
necks
in
the
earth
to
drinking
kerosene
mixed
with
sugar
to
treat
influenza,
mid-nineteenth
century
medicine
in
the
mining
communities
of
the
West
usually
consisted
of
home
remedies
that
were
often
remarkable
for
their
inventiveness
but
tragically
random
in
their
effectiveness.
Only
as
a
desperate
last
resort
would
people
turn
to
the
medical
community,
which
had
developed
a
deplorable
reputation
for
quackery
and
charlatanism
because
of
its
lack
of
licensing
regulations
and
uniform
educational
standards.No
One
Ailing
Except
a
Physiciantakes
readers
back
to
those
free-wheeling
days
in
the
mining
towns
and
the
dark
recesses
of
the
mines
themselves,
a
time
when
illness
or
injury
was
usually
survived
more
due
to
sheer
luck
than
the
interventions
of
medicine.
In this important new contribution to both mining and medical history, historians Duane A. Smith and Ronald C. Brown present a detailed analysis of the ailments that confronted the miners and the methods with which they and their doctors attempted to "cure" them. The occupational hazards of mining, with its strenuous labor and exposure to the elements, contributed to the miners' vulnerability to disease and injury, which was further worsened by the typical miner's refusal to heed prevailing medical wisdom and common sense, often leading to easily preventable diseases such as scurvy. And because medical science of the era had not progressed much beyond that of the ancient Greeks, such debilitating diseases such as cholera, influenza, dysentery, and malaria proved to be virtual death sentences, to say nothing of occupational accidents with fires and explosions, mine collapses, and safety cage mishaps.
In this important new contribution to both mining and medical history, historians Duane A. Smith and Ronald C. Brown present a detailed analysis of the ailments that confronted the miners and the methods with which they and their doctors attempted to "cure" them. The occupational hazards of mining, with its strenuous labor and exposure to the elements, contributed to the miners' vulnerability to disease and injury, which was further worsened by the typical miner's refusal to heed prevailing medical wisdom and common sense, often leading to easily preventable diseases such as scurvy. And because medical science of the era had not progressed much beyond that of the ancient Greeks, such debilitating diseases such as cholera, influenza, dysentery, and malaria proved to be virtual death sentences, to say nothing of occupational accidents with fires and explosions, mine collapses, and safety cage mishaps.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781607323525
ISBN-10: 1607323524
Pagini: 250
Ilustrații: 29
Dimensiuni: 157 x 236 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University Press of Colorado
Colecția University Press of Colorado
ISBN-10: 1607323524
Pagini: 250
Ilustrații: 29
Dimensiuni: 157 x 236 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University Press of Colorado
Colecția University Press of Colorado
Notă biografică
Duane
A.
Smithis
a
professor
of
history
at
Fort
Lewis
College
in
Durango,
and
is
the
author
or
coauthor
of
more
than
fifty
books
on
Colorado
and
the
West.
He
also
serves
as
chair
of
the
Durango
Parks
and
Forestry
Board
and
on
the
Anima
School
House
Museum
Board.Ronald
C.
Brownis
Professor
of
History
and
Dean
of
University
College
at
Southwest
Texas
State
University.
He
is
a
founding
member
of
the
Mining
History
Association
and
is
the
author
of
Hard-Rock
Miners:
The
Intermountain
West,
1860-1920.
Descriere
No
One
Ailing
Except
a
Physiciantakes
readers
back
to
those
free-wheeling
days
in
the
mining
towns
and
the
dark
recesses
of
the
mines
themselves,
a
time
when
illness
or
injury
was
usually
survived
more
due
to
sheer
luck
than
the
interventions
of
medicine.