from Part II - Managing the War
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 October 2019
Dr. Brown-Séquard lectured about various forms of wound trauma, injuries to the nerves, spinal cord trauma and fracture, heart disease, tetanus, and epilepsy – a range of conditions that were afflicting the Union troops. He discussed the challenges of diagnosing and treating these conditions, the possibilities of experimental medicine and blood transfusions as a cure, and the groundbreaking research of Dr. Silas Weir Mitchell, a leading researcher and physician at the newly formed Turner’s Lane Hospital – all of which would hopefully provide answers on better managing the conditions of war trauma. This 1864 lecture, one of many during the war, which was attended by more than 100 physicians in the DC area, highlights the unique training and learning environment that was created to manage the quantity, variety, and impact of the diseases encountered during the Civil War.
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