Bloodletting and Germs: A Doctor in Nineteenth Century Rural New York
Bloodletting and Germs: A Doctor in Nineteenth Century Rural New York
When competing medical society doctors rebuff his license application, Dr. Jabez Allen conceals his medical practice by opening the first drugstore in rural New York. Dr. Allen and his Underground Railroad activist wife endure a lifetime defined by service, and challenged by loss. Consumption, Anthrax, Cholera, The Civil War and Melancholia. Dr. Allen cares for poor and wealthy alike, including the daughter of a U.S. president, and never abandons the motto painted on his first office window, No Cure, No Pay. Dr. Jabez Allen's drugstore opened in 1834 and still serves the village of East Aurora, NY. Based on actual events, 'Bloodletting and Germs' is the memoir Dr. Allen might have written.
A village doctor and medicine's enlightenment.
In 1799 George Washington was bled for a sore throat. His friend, Dr. Benjamin Rush, claimed aggressive bleeding saved many patients from certain death in the 1793 Philadelphia yellow fever pandemic. Yet, a century earlier Antonie van Leeuwenhoek had written the Royal Society about microscopic 'animalcules' in everything from lake water to the crud between his toes. Finally scores of articles about bacteria began to appear in medical journals during the second quarter of the 1800s. It would be 1878 before germ theory became the main topic of an AMA meeting held in Buffalo, NY. Why did it take so long; and how did nineteenth century village doctors deal with pandemics of cholera, smallpox and typhoid at a time when anesthesia, antisepsis, the Civil War, and germs were transforming basic medicine theory?
The 1885 obituary for village doctor Jabez Allen MD described Dr. Allen as an old resident and prominent physician of our village with a large practice seldom exceeded by a country physician. He possessed in a very marked degree the confidence of his numerous patients. His devotion to the welfare of those under his care could scarcely have been surpassed and his generosity in other matters was well known to all his friends. Dr. Allen was highly respected by his medical brethren in both city and country yet remained devoted to his adopted East Aurora, NY.
Bloodletting and Germs is a historical novel written as Dr. Allen's memoir. Citing over 400 sources, it is true to the events of Dr. Allen's life and to the medical enlightenment of the nineteenth century. Married to an abolitionist wife, his story covers the fugitive slave act, Confederates soldiers dying in Northern prison camps, Union soldiers returning from
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When competing medical society doctors rebuff his license application, Dr. Jabez Allen conceals his medical practice by opening the first drugstore in rural New York. Dr. Allen and his Underground Railroad activist wife endure a lifetime defined by service, and challenged by loss. Consumption, Anthrax, Cholera, The Civil War and Melancholia. Dr. Allen cares for poor and wealthy alike, including the daughter of a U.S. president, and never abandons the motto painted on his first office window, No Cure, No Pay. Dr. Jabez Allen's drugstore opened in 1834 and still serves the village of East Aurora, NY. Based on actual events, 'Bloodletting and Germs' is the memoir Dr. Allen might have written.
A village doctor and medicine's enlightenment.
In 1799 George Washington was bled for a sore throat. His friend, Dr. Benjamin Rush, claimed aggressive bleeding saved many patients from certain death in the 1793 Philadelphia yellow fever pandemic. Yet, a century earlier Antonie van Leeuwenhoek had written the Royal Society about microscopic 'animalcules' in everything from lake water to the crud between his toes. Finally scores of articles about bacteria began to appear in medical journals during the second quarter of the 1800s. It would be 1878 before germ theory became the main topic of an AMA meeting held in Buffalo, NY. Why did it take so long; and how did nineteenth century village doctors deal with pandemics of cholera, smallpox and typhoid at a time when anesthesia, antisepsis, the Civil War, and germs were transforming basic medicine theory?
The 1885 obituary for village doctor Jabez Allen MD described Dr. Allen as an old resident and prominent physician of our village with a large practice seldom exceeded by a country physician. He possessed in a very marked degree the confidence of his numerous patients. His devotion to the welfare of those under his care could scarcely have been surpassed and his generosity in other matters was well known to all his friends. Dr. Allen was highly respected by his medical brethren in both city and country yet remained devoted to his adopted East Aurora, NY.
Bloodletting and Germs is a historical novel written as Dr. Allen's memoir. Citing over 400 sources, it is true to the events of Dr. Allen's life and to the medical enlightenment of the nineteenth century. Married to an abolitionist wife, his story covers the fugitive slave act, Confederates soldiers dying in Northern prison camps, Union soldiers returning from
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