Article ID: CBB000774465

Did J. Marion Sims Deliberately Addict His First Fistula Patients to Opium? (2007)

unapi

American surgeon J. Marion Sims (1813--83) is regarded by many modern authors as a controversial figure because he carried out a series of experimental surgeries on enslaved African American women between 1846 and 1849 in an attempt to cure them of vesicovaginal fistulas, which they had all developed as a result of prolonged obstructed labor. He operated on one woman, Anarcha Westcott, thirty times before he successfully closed her fistula. Sims performed these fistula repair operations without benefit of anesthesia but gave these women substantial doses of opium afterwards. Several modern writers have alleged that Sims did this in order to addict them to the drug and thereby to enhance his control over them. This article examines the controversy surrounding Sims' use of postoperative opium in these enslaved surgical patients. The evidence suggests that although these women were probably tolerant to the doses of opium that he used, there is no evidence that he deliberately tried to addict them to this drug. Sims' use of postoperative opium appears to have been well supported by the therapeutic practices of his day, and the regimen that he used was enthusiastically supported by many contemporary surgeons.

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Authors & Contributors
L. M. Irvine
Black, Sara E.
M. J. West
Xavier Paulès
Blumenthal, Debra
Zweihorn, Chaninah L.
Journals
Medical History
Social History of Medicine
Slavery and Abolition: A Journal of Slave and Post-Slave Studies
Renaissance Studies
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
Journal of the History of Dentistry
Publishers
University of Georgia Press
University of Chicago Press
UBC Press
McGill-Queen's University Press
IASP Press
Harvard University Press
Concepts
Medicine
Surgery
Women in medicine
Opium and opium trade
Addictive behavior
Narcotics and drugs
People
Sims, James Marion
John Peter Mettauer
Nathan Bozeman
Trotula of Salerno
Sforza, Caterina
Hildegard Von Bingen, Saint
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
20th century
18th century
Early modern
Renaissance
Places
United States
France
China
Valencia (Spain)
South America
Latin America
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